{"title":"通过OER为多样化和全球化的世界重拾经典","authors":"J. Bird, Marirose Osborne, Brittany Blagburn","doi":"10.18357/kula.219","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In the 2019–20 academic year, I redesigned a course on the classics to make both the texts and the context in which they were taught more accessible for and relevant to the predominantly female students of Saint Mary’s College, Notre Dame. The course was re-centered on the dialogue between the ever-evolving and diverse cultures within Greece and the Roman empire and surrounding regions such as Egypt, Ethiopia, and Persia; issues caused by slavery and economic inequality; conceptions of gender roles and sexuality, race and ethnicity, and migration and citizenship; the troubling appropriation of classical motifs and texts by fascist groups in the twentieth century and some alt-right groups and sexual predators in the twenty-first century; and on recent initiatives meant to demonstrate the diversity of both Greek and Roman cultures through documentary, artistic, and archaeological evidence (particularly in the digital humanities and in museums and libraries). I also wanted to make the course close to zero cost for students and to shift to digital texts which lent themselves to interactivity and social scholarship. Our librarian, Catherine Pellegrino, obtained multi-user e-books for modern reinterpretations of classical works still in copyright. A LibreTexts grant enabled the co-authors of this article—the course instructor (and lead author) and two paid student researchers—and a team of summer-employed student collaborators to edit, footnote, and create critical introductions and student activities for various key texts for the course. Many of these texts are now hosted on the LibreTexts OER platform. Beta versions of enriched OER texts and activities were user tested in a synchronous hybrid virtual/physical classroom of twenty-five students, who were taking the course (HUST 292) in the fall semester of 2020.","PeriodicalId":425221,"journal":{"name":"KULA: Knowledge Creation, Dissemination, and Preservation Studies","volume":"21 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-01-12","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Reclaiming the Classics for a Diverse and Global World Through OER\",\"authors\":\"J. Bird, Marirose Osborne, Brittany Blagburn\",\"doi\":\"10.18357/kula.219\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"In the 2019–20 academic year, I redesigned a course on the classics to make both the texts and the context in which they were taught more accessible for and relevant to the predominantly female students of Saint Mary’s College, Notre Dame. 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Our librarian, Catherine Pellegrino, obtained multi-user e-books for modern reinterpretations of classical works still in copyright. A LibreTexts grant enabled the co-authors of this article—the course instructor (and lead author) and two paid student researchers—and a team of summer-employed student collaborators to edit, footnote, and create critical introductions and student activities for various key texts for the course. Many of these texts are now hosted on the LibreTexts OER platform. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
在2019-20学年,我重新设计了一门关于经典文学的课程,让以女生为主的圣母大学圣玛丽学院(Saint Mary 's College, Notre Dame)的学生更容易理解、更贴近这些经典文学的教学背景。课程重新集中在希腊和罗马帝国及其周边地区(如埃及、埃塞俄比亚和波斯)不断发展和多样化的文化之间的对话;奴隶制和经济不平等造成的问题;性别角色和性、种族和民族、移民和公民身份的概念;20世纪的法西斯团体和21世纪的一些另类右翼团体和性侵犯者对经典主题和文本的盗用令人不安;以及最近旨在通过文献、艺术和考古证据(特别是在数字人文学科和博物馆和图书馆)展示希腊和罗马文化多样性的倡议。我还想让这门课程对学生来说接近零成本,并转向数字文本,这有利于互动性和社会学术研究。我们的图书管理员凯瑟琳·佩莱格里诺(Catherine Pellegrino)获得了多用户电子书,用于对仍受版权保护的经典作品进行现代重新诠释。LibreTexts的资助使本文的共同作者——课程讲师(和主要作者)和两个付费的学生研究人员——以及一个暑期雇佣的学生合作者团队对课程的各种关键文本进行编辑、脚注和创建重要的介绍和学生活动。这些文本中的许多现在都托管在LibreTexts OER平台上。丰富的OER文本和活动的测试版在一个同步的虚拟/物理混合教室中进行了用户测试,共有25名学生参加了2020年秋季学期的课程(HUST 292)。
Reclaiming the Classics for a Diverse and Global World Through OER
In the 2019–20 academic year, I redesigned a course on the classics to make both the texts and the context in which they were taught more accessible for and relevant to the predominantly female students of Saint Mary’s College, Notre Dame. The course was re-centered on the dialogue between the ever-evolving and diverse cultures within Greece and the Roman empire and surrounding regions such as Egypt, Ethiopia, and Persia; issues caused by slavery and economic inequality; conceptions of gender roles and sexuality, race and ethnicity, and migration and citizenship; the troubling appropriation of classical motifs and texts by fascist groups in the twentieth century and some alt-right groups and sexual predators in the twenty-first century; and on recent initiatives meant to demonstrate the diversity of both Greek and Roman cultures through documentary, artistic, and archaeological evidence (particularly in the digital humanities and in museums and libraries). I also wanted to make the course close to zero cost for students and to shift to digital texts which lent themselves to interactivity and social scholarship. Our librarian, Catherine Pellegrino, obtained multi-user e-books for modern reinterpretations of classical works still in copyright. A LibreTexts grant enabled the co-authors of this article—the course instructor (and lead author) and two paid student researchers—and a team of summer-employed student collaborators to edit, footnote, and create critical introductions and student activities for various key texts for the course. Many of these texts are now hosted on the LibreTexts OER platform. Beta versions of enriched OER texts and activities were user tested in a synchronous hybrid virtual/physical classroom of twenty-five students, who were taking the course (HUST 292) in the fall semester of 2020.