This paper explores the potential for rigorous pedagogical scholarship to complement developments in digital art history (DAH). In addition to introducing ideas and methods that characterize scholarship of teaching and learning (SOTL) in higher education, we focus on two major themes: how digital tools and techniques can support robust scholarship of teaching and learning in art history (SoTL-AH) and ways that SoTL-AH can be used to evaluate and demonstrate the impact of DAH projects in the classroom and the public realm. Our goal is to encourage greater exchange between these two emerging fields that can together advance art historical study
Art History enrollments at the college level are declining as students flock to STEM majors and perc...
Digital literacy and technology education has gained much relevance in humanities and heritage relat...
Inspired by partnerships between medical schools and museums that produce measurable outcomes in the...
This article surveys the formal, academic literature on active learning in art history. It considers...
This presentation will highlight specific entries on the AHTR Weekly blog and in our lesson plan pro...
This book documents some of the changes that have occurred in the teaching of art history in the las...
Over the past decades, the increase in the use of digital resources and the growth of research condu...
The following comments were adapted from a roundtable on Digital Humanities pedagogy at the 2018 Ren...
This paper explores the potential for architectural history to engage more widely and more deeply wi...
Engaging in the recent tradition of disciplinary and instructional self-critique by art historians t...
Over the last two decades, teaching, learning, and research in higher education have developed a gro...
In the United States, as elsewhere, the continuous application and evolution of digital technology i...
In February 2014, eighty participants gathered at Columbia College, in downtown Chicago, in the two ...
The large-enrollment, lecture-based introductory survey still forms an essential part of art history...
Over the past decades, technological advancement and the mass digitization of information resources ...
Art History enrollments at the college level are declining as students flock to STEM majors and perc...
Digital literacy and technology education has gained much relevance in humanities and heritage relat...
Inspired by partnerships between medical schools and museums that produce measurable outcomes in the...
This article surveys the formal, academic literature on active learning in art history. It considers...
This presentation will highlight specific entries on the AHTR Weekly blog and in our lesson plan pro...
This book documents some of the changes that have occurred in the teaching of art history in the las...
Over the past decades, the increase in the use of digital resources and the growth of research condu...
The following comments were adapted from a roundtable on Digital Humanities pedagogy at the 2018 Ren...
This paper explores the potential for architectural history to engage more widely and more deeply wi...
Engaging in the recent tradition of disciplinary and instructional self-critique by art historians t...
Over the last two decades, teaching, learning, and research in higher education have developed a gro...
In the United States, as elsewhere, the continuous application and evolution of digital technology i...
In February 2014, eighty participants gathered at Columbia College, in downtown Chicago, in the two ...
The large-enrollment, lecture-based introductory survey still forms an essential part of art history...
Over the past decades, technological advancement and the mass digitization of information resources ...
Art History enrollments at the college level are declining as students flock to STEM majors and perc...
Digital literacy and technology education has gained much relevance in humanities and heritage relat...
Inspired by partnerships between medical schools and museums that produce measurable outcomes in the...