| The University
of Illinois has long pioneered advances in humanistic inquiry at the leading
edge of technological innovation. EOTU builds on this legacy with an undergraduate
research initiative that integrates powerful software applications developed
by university faculty.
RESOURCES
The infrastructural and intellectual resources of UIUC will sustain
EOTU over time. In terms of information infrastructure, the campus has
long been on the technological cutting edge. UIUC is the cradle of the
Netscape browser and the Eudora e-mail application, and in 1998 Yahoo!
Internet Life named it the "most wired" public university
campus in the United States. That same year, Newsweek named
Champaign-Urbana one of the nation's "hottest tech cities."
Most important for EOTU, however, is the enormous intellectual energy
available at the interface between technology and the humanities at the
university. EOTU draws liberally on resources and expertise already established
at this interface:
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The
Illinois Program for Research in the Humanities. Founded in
1997, the program promotes interdisciplinary study in the humanities,
arts, and social sciences. |
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The
Center for Democracy in a Multiracial Society. Initiated in
2002 as a Chancellor's cross-campus initiative, the center supports
analysis of how multiracial democracy is experienced in a variety
of contexts, with a special focus on the university and on Illinois.
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The
Student Life and Culture Archival Program. The program collects,
preserves, and makes available materials documenting student involvement
in fraternities, sororities, student government, religious associations,
publications, social events, athletics, and other activities that
contribute to students' experience in higher education. No other
university in the United States houses such a collection. |
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Campus
Information Technologies and Educational Services (CITES). CITES
coordinates the integration of information and educational technologies
into academic life. Free regular consulting and competitive intensive
support are available for campus initiatives. |
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Applied
Technologies for Learning in the Arts and Sciences (ATLAS).
ATLAS provides consulting on educational technologies and maintains
state-of-the-art instructional spaces for the departments and instructors
in the Liberal Arts and Sciences. |
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Center
for Advanced Study (CAS). EOTU's success to date owes much to
the initial investment of CAS. CAS funding sustained a 2002-03
seminar series that brought together faculty,
graduate fellows, staff, and administrators from across campus.
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Previous humanities initiatives on campus have made
good use of the foregoing resources. For example, a recent initiative,
Silicon, Carbon, Culture: Combining
Codes through the Arts, Humanities, and Technology, supported more
than twenty broadly collaborative projects that brought together faculty
from the Colleges of Fine Arts, Liberal Arts and Sciences, and Engineering.
Of longer standing, Women,
Information Technology and Scholarship, begun in 1991, is an interdisciplinary
group of women faculty, academic professionals, and graduate students
working to help insure that new communications technologies are structured
and used in ways beneficial to all, regardless of gender.
UIUC TECHNOLOGIES
These and similar campus initiatives are models for our project. An
element common among them is the use of technologies developed at UIUC.
EOTU follows suit by incorporating two web-based applications authored
by colleagues on campus:
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The
Inquiry Page (IP). A dynamic virtual community, the Inquiry
Page offers a collaborative environment in which inquiry-based education
can be discussed, resources and experiences shared, and innovative
approaches explored. Both the processes and products of research
are archived in readily accessible form, and are thereby made available
to later generations of students who will build on the work of their
predecessors. The IP supports students' research efforts by sustaining
and documenting an active inquiry process. Students are prompted
to Ask Investigate Create Discuss Reflect Ask
in order to generate claims of academic interest and locate evidence.
(The IP's creator, Professor Bertram
C. Bruce, Library and Information Science, is a member of the
EOTU Working Group.) |
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Inquiring
Knowledge Networks on the Web (IKNOW). IKNOW is a web-based
application that assists communities-classes, workgroups, and organizations-in
managing their knowledge assets. By surveying a community's members
and searching its web pages, IKNOW answers the questions: who knows
who? who knows what? who knows who knows who? who knows who knows
what? In so doing, connections can be made between persons and groups
who possess specific knowledge and those who seek it. (IKNOW's creator,
Professor Noshir Contractor,
Speech Communication, is a member of the EOTU Working Group.) |
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