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The book provides a dynamic, cross-sectional, multidisciplinary
perspective and dialogue to illuminate the challenges humans face
in their interactions with data in their individual postdigital
contexts in local communities. It offers unique insights from real
cases, collaborations, and projects to extend existing academic
theories and frameworks, applied to human data interactions,
disadvantage, and digital skills. The book takes the novel approach
of establishing co-authorship between cross-sector practitioners
from the wider community (such as local authorities, councils,
policy makers, small businesses, charities, education and skills
providers, and other stakeholders) with international academics and
researchers who write about humans, digital skills, and data. This
develops an enabling cross-sector environment throughout the book
that not only furthers broader understandings concerning data,
disadvantage and digital skills in postdigital society, but also
shares a template to support others who may wish to adopt this
approach to co-authorship and knowledge exchange. The book revisits
the Human Data Interaction (HDI) framework (Mortier, Haddadi,
Henderson, McAuley, and Crowcroft 2014) through many diverse
cross-sectoral perspectives. These are co-authored under the HDI
framework’s key tenets of: agency, legibility, negotiability and
resistance. These tenets form the main sections of the book, with
chapters examining these concepts through both interdisciplinary
academic literature and cross-sector dialogue with individuals and
agencies from the wider community who work with diverse and often
disadvantaged groups.
This latest volume in the Learning in Higher Education series,
Innovative Teaching and Learning in Higher Education, brings
together examples of teaching and learning innovations, within the
domain of higher education. The anthology is diverse in nature and
showcases concrete examples of innovative teaching and learning
practices in higher education from around the world. The
contributions come from all scientific disciplines and in all
teaching and learning contexts. The twenty-eight inspiring examples
in this volume show considerable diversity in their approaches to
teaching and learning practices; at the same time they improve both
student engagement and student learning outcomes. All the authors
argue that their innovative approach has helped students to learn
differently, better, and more. For those involved in higher
education, there is a lot to be gained from reading these narrative
accounts of innovative teaching and learning.
The book presents a cross-disciplinary overview of critical issues
at the intersections of biology, information, and society. Based on
theories of bioinformationalism, viral modernity, the postdigital
condition, and others, this book explores two inter-related
questions: Which new knowledge ecologies are emerging? Which
philosophies and research approaches do they require? The book
argues that the 20th century focus on machinery needs to be
replaced, at least partially, by a focus on a better understanding
of living systems and their interactions with technology at all
scales - from viruses, through to human beings, to the Earth's
ecosystem. This change of direction cannot be made by a simple
relocation of focus and/or funding from one discipline to another.
In our age of the Anthropocene, (human and planetary) biology
cannot be thought of without (digital) technology and society.
Today's curious bioinformational mix of blurred and messy
relationships between physics and biology, old and new media,
humanism and posthumanism, knowledge capitalism and
bio-informational capitalism defines the postdigital condition and
creates new knowledge ecologies. The book presents scholarly
research defining new knowledge ecologies built upon emerging forms
of scientific communication, big data deluge, and opacity of
algorithmic operations. Many of these developments can be
approached using the concept of viral modernity, which applies to
viral technologies, codes and ecosystems in information,
publishing, education, and emerging knowledge (journal) systems. It
is within these overlapping theories and contexts, that this book
explores new bioinformational philosophies and postdigital
knowledge ecologies.
Quantitative Research Methods for Linguistics provides an
accessible introduction to research methods for undergraduates
undertaking research for the first time. Employing a task-based
approach, the authors demonstrate key methods through a series of
worked examples, allowing students to take a learn-by-doing
approach and making quantitative methods less daunting for the
novice researcher. Key features include: Chapters framed around
real research questions, walking the student step-by-step through
the various methods; Guidance on how to design your own research
project; Basic questions and answers that every new researcher
needs to know; A comprehensive glossary that makes the most
technical of terms clear to readers; Coverage of different
statistical packages including R and SPSS. Quantitative Research
Methods for Linguistics is essential reading for all students
undertaking degrees in linguistics and English language studies.
The book presents a cross-disciplinary overview of critical issues
at the intersections of biology, information, and society. Based on
theories of bioinformationalism, viral modernity, the postdigital
condition, and others, this book explores two inter-related
questions: Which new knowledge ecologies are emerging? Which
philosophies and research approaches do they require? The book
argues that the 20th century focus on machinery needs to be
replaced, at least partially, by a focus on a better understanding
of living systems and their interactions with technology at all
scales – from viruses, through to human beings, to the Earth’s
ecosystem. This change of direction cannot be made by a simple
relocation of focus and/or funding from one discipline to another.
In our age of the Anthropocene, (human and planetary) biology
cannot be thought of without (digital) technology and society.
Today’s curious bioinformational mix of blurred and messy
relationships between physics and biology, old and new media,
humanism and posthumanism, knowledge capitalism and
bio-informational capitalism defines the postdigital condition and
creates new knowledge ecologies. The book presents scholarly
research defining new knowledge ecologies built upon emerging forms
of scientific communication, big data deluge, and opacity of
algorithmic operations. Many of these developments can be
approached using the concept of viral modernity, which applies to
viral technologies, codes and ecosystems in information,
publishing, education, and emerging knowledge (journal) systems. It
is within these overlapping theories and contexts, that this book
explores new bioinformational philosophies and postdigital
knowledge ecologies.
Quantitative Research Methods for Linguistics provides an
accessible introduction to research methods for undergraduates
undertaking research for the first time. Employing a task-based
approach, the authors demonstrate key methods through a series of
worked examples, allowing students to take a learn-by-doing
approach and making quantitative methods less daunting for the
novice researcher. Key features include: Chapters framed around
real research questions, walking the student step-by-step through
the various methods; Guidance on how to design your own research
project; Basic questions and answers that every new researcher
needs to know; A comprehensive glossary that makes the most
technical of terms clear to readers; Coverage of different
statistical packages including R and SPSS. Quantitative Research
Methods for Linguistics is essential reading for all students
undertaking degrees in linguistics and English language studies.
Against the backdrop of embryonic Melbourne, John Thomas Smith left
behind his currency roots to become an influential member of
society. A widely recognised figure about town smoking a cutty pipe
and wearing a white top hat, in 1851 he became Lord Mayor of
Melbourne; he went on to be re-elected seven times. His scandalous
marriage to the daughter of an Irish Catholic publican, however,
and his awkwardly appropriated gentility, made him unpopular with
certain sections of society. From 1849 to 1860 Smith and his family
occupied 300 Queen Street, Melbourne, one of the first true
residential townhouses in the city. Flashy, Fun and Functional: How
Things Helped to Invent Melbourne's Gold Rush Mayor explores the
things they left behind.Excavations at the site in 1982 by Judy
Birmingham and Associates uncovered a rich and important
archaeological record of the Smiths' lives in the form of a cesspit
rubbish deposit. The recovered artefacts can be used to examine the
distinctive way the Smith family used material culture to negotiate
their position in colonial society. Popular decoration styles and
expensive materials suggest the family's efforts to secure their
newly obtained social status. The artefacts evoke the turmoil,
volatility and opportunity of life in the first decades of the
colony at Port Phillip. They provide an example of the possibility
of social mobility in the colony, but also of the challenges of
navigating the customs of a newly forming society.
For much of the 19th and 20th centuries, Melbourne's Little
Lonsdale Street - locally known as 'Little Lon' - was notorious as
a foul slum and brothel district, occupied by the itinerant and the
criminal. The stereotype of 'slumdom' defined 'Little Lon' in the
minds of Melbournians, and became entrenched in Australian
literature and popular culture.The Commonwealth Block, Melbourne
tells a different story. This groundbreaking book reports on almost
three decades of excavations conducted on the Commonwealth Block -
the area of central Melbourne bordered by Little Lonsdale,
Lonsdale, Exhibition and Spring streets. Since the 1980s,
archaeologists and historians have pieced together the rich and
complex history of this area, revealing a working-class and
immigrant community that was much more than just a slum. The
Commonwealth Block, Melbourne delves into the complex social,
cultural and economic history of this forgotten community.
This colonial archaeological study examines the artefacts recovered
from the estate of an early, middle-class immigrant family to
Melbourne.
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