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A GitHub Garage for a Digital Humanities Course

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Abstract

In August 2015, Pitt-Greensburg digital humanities instructors implemented the DHClass-Hub, a GitHub repository designed to familiarize students with GitHub through daily usage. This GitHub environment functions like a cooperative garage where students are both the clients and the mechanics. In the repository space they share code from assignments and projects that they need help with debugging, so that they and their fellow students and instructors can inspect, advise on, and repair it together. Although the DHClass-Hub was established primarily to help students gain confidence with GitHub in order to improve their management of their own semester projects, the repository unexpectedly became the locus of a flipped learning experience, where the liveliest learning activity of the coding courses occurs in dialogues initiated by students. The DHClass-Hub is openly available to the public, maintained continuously over semesters, and shared by two courses, making its archive of open and closed Issues an increasingly beneficial searchable resource over time for the students and for the wider GitHub community. The repository’s development was the initiative of a student who became a teaching assistant in the course and wrote its accompanying tutorial on accessing GitHub at the command line. The authors find that the most important benefit to using GitHub is not to support the short-term priorities of a semester-long course, but, rather, to encourage sustainable and well-documented digital development, both of student projects and the course itself.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    For courses involving applied coding and programming, some instructor-organized discussion and review seems helpful. Skirpan and Yeh held hack-a-thons during class time in their Spring 2014 course, but decided that in future courses they will respond to student suggestions to incorporate an overall discussion and review of common issues and errors before beginning a new hands-on exercise (217).

References

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Correspondence to Elisa E. Beshero-Bondar .

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Beshero-Bondar, E.E., Parker, R.J. (2017). A GitHub Garage for a Digital Humanities Course. In: Fee, S., Holland-Minkley, A., Lombardi, T. (eds) New Directions for Computing Education. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-54226-3_15

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-54226-3_15

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