Published: June 15, 2015

Phoebe Young

CU Boulder Professor of History Phoebe Young won a Spring 2014 ASSETT Development Award to obtain student training support for digital exhibition software.聽聽Young integrated聽聽digital exhibition software into her course, History 4546: Popular Culture in Modern America.聽聽Young's students created online exhibits of pop culture themes.聽 They聽uploaded images and sound clips and聽recorded the items' source information.聽 The source information, such as the date of creation and who owns rights to it, is searchable through Omeka.聽 Then, students selected artifacts and collaborated with one another to create exhibits about particular pop culture themes.聽 Students wrote captions about the pieces that they selected.聽 Each exhibit consists of several web pages that explain how a collection of artifacts exemplifies their chosen pop culture themes.聽 The exhibits are聽like illustrated, digital,聽research papers, except they're written so that the visitor can approach the artifacts in any order.

Young's聽students聽learned to聽digitize objects--upload photos and sound clips--and write source information and captions about them.聽 Students collected artifacts into a digital exhibit--like an online webpage.聽 Young used the ASSETT Development Award to hire an undergraduate History Major as a Technology Learning Assistant to serve as a peer trainer for students.聽聽Young said, "[The ASSETT Development Award] paid聽for student labor to help fellow students do peer-to-peer teaching around technology."聽 The聽student assistant聽created a Sandbox on the class's Omeka site with How Tos to support students technically.

Phoebe Young Exhibit

Young's Students Created Virtual History Exhibits. This exhibit is about the history of portable music.

Young taught her students about what metadata is and why archiving a large amount of information into a searchable database is important to scholars of history.聽 She asked Norlin Library to speak to her students about public domain rights to information.聽 Young said that students' creating a public exhibit, "demonstrated聽the value聽of students of being able to create work that will have a public audience."聽 She said that in creating an online exhibition,聽"[Students] make their聽work a public object, and聽it gives them a聽sense of agency."

Young聽contrasted creating something online with writing a traditional term paper.聽聽"The sense聽of permanence of students' work was incredibly valuable."聽聽She聽also said that an online exhibition is something that students can take with them after the course is over and share with friends and family.聽

Young said that in creating an online exhibition: "Students聽may see more value of what they do.聽 Students may take more ownership聽in the聽project itself when it's聽something that belongs to them."聽聽Even further, Young sees a bigger picture for History students' creations of digital exhibits.聽 She says, "For聽the聽Humanities, it enhances the work for people outside聽of the University聽to see what your students are doing.聽 Students can say, 'This is what I've done.聽 This is what I've produced.聽 This is what I've learned.'"聽聽See聽Young's students' exhibits here:聽.

Young also said that聽once she received the聽ASSETT Development Award provided a first step to further matching grants from聽the History Department to support the project.聽 The History Department's grant provided a one day Omeka聽training session.聽 The one-day training session was聽led by a national expert on Omeka.聽 Faculty, staff, and students from across the university聽attended.

Omeka is an open source software that was developed by the聽.聽 Young says that she thinks that, because of the metadata searchable software聽that Omeka software provides, it would be most appropriate for a larger digitization project.聽 ASSETT is hosting Omeka through the end of 2015, and CU Libraries and other CU departments are welcome to investigate.

This past spring, Young joined the ASSETT team聽as its Interim Director.聽 She continues to teach History at CU.