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Crafting Communities Resources: This list shares sources that Vanessa Warne, Andrea Korda and Mary Elizabeth Leighton have authored (together or apart) or contributed to / supported through our shared work on the Crafting Communities project

 Co-authored with librarians Heather Dean and Elizabeth Bassett and published in, this article explores how a digital exhibit supported our students creation of collages and also, in some cases, cut-up poetry, to explore Victorian-era scrapbooks and the nineteenth-century periodical press.

 Published in, this article describes how the Getty Museums 2020 challenge to recreate artworks at home provides an adaptable model of hands-on learning for instructors seeking experiential learning opportunities. 

Experiential Learning in the Victorian: What Can We Learn from the Object Lesson? This essay, solo-authored by Andrea Korda, appeared in 2022 in  (edited by Kevin A. Morrison, Palgrave Macmillan, 2022). NB. This collection includes several notable essays on hands-on learning. We especially like Helana Brigmans essay on Cooking the Victorian Recipe.

Forthcoming in summer 2023: Making Things Together: Collaborating and Mentoring on an OER Project. Co-authored with Denae Dyck and a group of ten student collaborators, this article links our hands-on crafting work to our teams experiences with mentoring, professionalization, and collaboration. 

: This trio of blog posts explores the origins of our project and different facets of it from digital exhibit development to podcasting to online teaching and learning, and - notably-  on crafting as a form of experiential learning with relevance to humanities classrooms.

: This recorded presentation delivered at the 2022 Festival of Teaching and Learning at the University of Alberta; it shares a record of what two students learned from crafting in the classroom.

Featuring Leith Davis, Claire Battershill, and Tommy Mayberry, this episode of the Victorian Samplingspodcast shares insights and reflections about innovative teaching, including hands-on teaching: 

Suggested Reading: these resources have supported work done by the Crafting Communities team and enriched our experimentation with hands-on learning; many of these sources are cited in the publications listed above. We are grateful to Leith for introducing us to Andrew Griffins very useful and interesting essay.

 

On Making

Davidson, Hilary. The Embodied Turn: Making and Remaking Dress as an Academic Practice Fashion Theory. Vol. 23, 2019, pp. 329-362. 

Foutch, E. E. Bringing students into the picture: Teaching with tableaux vivants. Art History Pedagogy & Practice, 2(2): 2017, pp. 123.   

Griffin, Andrew. The Making of a Broadside Ballad. 

Jordi, R. Reframing the concept of reflection: Consciousness, experiential learning, and reflective practices. Adult Education Quarterly, 61(2): 2010, pp. 18197.

Ratto, Matt. Critical Making: Conceptual and Material Studies in Technology and Social Life. The Information Society, vol. 27, no. 4, 2011, pp. 252260,.

Michelson, E. Re-membering: The return of the body to experiential learning. Studies in

Continuing Education, 20(2): 1998, pp. 21733. 

 

Michelson, E. Gender, experience, and knowledge in adult learning: Alisouns daughters. Routledge: 2015. 

 

Pasupathi, Vimala. The Commonplace Book Assignment. The Journal of Interactive Technology and Pedagogy: 2014. 

 

On Mentoring and Collaboration

 

Fitzpatrick, Kathleen. Generous Thinking: A Radical Approach to Saving the University. Johns Hopkins UP, 2021.

 

hooks, bell. Teaching Community: A Pedagogy of Hope. Routledge, 2003..

 

Risam, Roopika, et al. Building an Ethical Digital Humanities Community: Librarian, Faculty, and Student Collaboration. College & Undergraduate Libraries, vol. 24, no. 24, 2017, pp. 337349..

Schaffer, Talia. Communities of Care: The Social Ethics of Victorian Fiction. Princeton UP, 2021.

Siemens, Lynne, et al. More Minds Are Brought to Bear on a Problem: Methods of Interaction and Collaboration within Digital Humanities Research Teams. Digital Studies/le Champ Num矇rique, vol. 2, no, 2, 2010,.

On Accessibility

 

Kleege, Georgina and Scott Wallin. Audio Description as a Pedagogical Tool. Disability Studies Quarterly, 35: 2015. 

 

Marissa Nicosia

  • Learn more about Cooking in the Archives here:   and also:  and 
  • Sources for working on Early Modern Recipes: 

Mary Elizabeth Leighton: 

  • Panoramas on the Crafting Communities site: 

Vanessa Warne:

  • Read an essay - Getting Scrappy - here:
  • Collaborations with Librarians and Archivists:  

Susan Gerofsky: 

  • Link to film Dancing Euclidean Proofs:
  • Garden-based learning sites:  and theorchardgarden.blogspot.ca
  • Embodied Math Learning -  and  and  and  and 

Claire Battershill:

  • Amy Elkins work:

Melissa McAfee: 

  • Teaching with Primary Sources Collective:

Nicky Didicher: