2008 |
Notes and Links for Presentation in Lynne Siemen’s seminar on “Issues in Large Project Planning and Management” (DHSI, U. Victoria)Categories Uncategorized |
1. Small-Team Digital Projects
Selected UCSB English Department Small-Team Projects
- Web Pages & Database-to-Web Sites (“Web 1.0” and “Web 1.5”)
- Voice of the Shuttle (1994-2001) (2001-present)
- Transcriptions Project
- The Romantic Chronology (co-editor Laura Mandell; original version 1995-96; database version 1999)
- English Dept. Site
- Coursebuilder
- Blogs and Wikis (Web 2.0)
- The Agrippa Files (co-built with graduate students)
- EDKB-Wiki
- Immersive Virtual Environments
- Second Life Instructional Project (co-developed with Rita Raley and Media Arts & Technology, English, and Sociology graduate students)
Institutional Implications: UCSB English Department’s “Center” Model
Some (Tentative) Principles of Small-Team Projects
- Team model + POST method (Forrester Research group on POST)
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- Team-first versus project-first philosophy (i.e., the difference between the academy and business)
- Differentiation of skills/tasks
- Parity of interests and intellectual engagement in project (“mindshare” problem)
- Simultaneous work tracks (i.e., avoid “engineer-first” project design)
- Project collaboration logistics:
- hands-on supervision
- lead research assistant
- weekly face-to-face meetings
- content-management-system as staging ground for work (or equivalent: blogs, wikis, Google Docs, etc.)
2. Large, Distributed Digital Projects
Selected UCSB/UC Large Collaborative Projects
- Digital Culture Project (director: William Warner; 2000-2005)
- English Broadside Ballad Archive (director: Patricia Fumerton, 2006-)
- Transliteracies Project: Research in the Technological, Social, and Cultural Practices of Online Reading (2005-2010)
Some Problems of Large, Distributed Projects
- Normal humanities large-scale formats for working and sharing interim results not fully useful (e.g., conferences, editions)
- Cost and logistics issues
- Not collaborative-goal oriented
- Need to scale modularly into multiple small-team groups (e.g., Transliteracies research working groups
- Need to cross between disciplines
- “What’s that for?” (Kevin Almeroth)
- My “Literature+” courses English 149 | English 236 (supporting Toy Chest (Online or Downloadable Tools for Building Projects))
- Transliteracies Social Computing Group
- Need to bridge across multiple geographical locations
- Small-scale face-to-face workshops
- Remote meetings
- Asynchronous use of video/audio recordings
- Staff-to-staff financial coordination / group and task-oriented budget reporting