collaborative digital work: mapping religious activity in the gta

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Presentation by Professor David Perley at UTSC, Thursday, March 17th, 2011 The Nutrition for Educators Series, sponsored by the Centre for Teaching and Learning.

TRANSCRIPT

CTL Talk Mar17-11 - Dr. D. Perley

1. Project Background and Learning Objectives2. Project Design: Groups and Tasks3. Digital interface – the “Religion Engine”4. Learning Outcomes5. Project Review6. Conclusions: sustained and ongoing

collaboration

CTL Talk Mar17-11 - Dr. D. Perley

Fall of 2010 (RLGB10 – Intro to the Study of Religion) collaborative work as part of the first stage of the project

“Mapping Religious Activity in the GTA: Past and Present”

groups were given the task of defining, classifying, and historically contextualizing 2 distinct religious traditions, and then mapping religious locations in the GTA related to those traditions

CTL Talk Mar17-11 - Dr. D. Perley

Map projects at DCSR (Frances Garrett; Pamela Klassen)

Christine Berkowitz and ◦ The History Engine (Scott Nesbit and Rob Nelson, University of

Richmond) CTL Student volunteers (Seyed Hossein, Mathura

Karunanithy, Samia Haque) UTSC library (Sarah Fedko, Lola Rudin) IITS (Syed Kashif and Julia Bronfenbrener)

CTL Talk Mar17-11 - Dr. D. Perley

[excerpt from RLGB10 Course Outline]

Students will learn about contemporary instances of religious activity and the global context of

religions in the GTA connections between religious sites (past and present) and their

historical emergence in the GTA cultural mapping and theoretical classification Students will learn how to research, design, and upload digital content appreciate religious diversity on a sophisticated level in group

settingsStudents will be able to offer new suggestions for classification; participate in

‘redescriptions’ of religion (JZ Smith)

CTL Talk Mar17-11 - Dr. D. Perley

onnections with other course requirements and course content

ROUPS (4 primary groups, 16 subgroups total)

ach of the four PRIMARY GROUPS addresses 2 major religious traditions

. Judaism and Sikhism

. Christianity and Hinduism

. Islam and East-Asian Religions

. Buddhism and 1st Nations/Indigenous Religions

SUBGROUPS: Each student is responsible for duties depending on subgroup:

. Definitions and Classifications: Traditions and Sites

. Interpretations: Insider and Outsider, E-world and “Real” World

. History of Communities: Arrivals and Establishments

. Comparative Analysis in Modern, Global, and Canadian Contexts

CTL Talk Mar17-11 - Dr. D. Perley

pproximate total number of students: 15 X 4 = 60 students.

student’s group affiliation is, e.g., 3.4 (Islam and East-Asian Religions, Comparative Analysis in Modern, Global, and Canadian Contexts).

CTL Talk Mar17-11 - Dr. D. Perley

TASKS GROUP MEMBERSHIP (Wishlist) DELEGATION OF DUTIES (BASED ON *WORKSHEET)

RESOURCES USED Computer rooms in BV RLGB10 Libguide E-Resources

Encyclopedia of Religion Websites

*Turnitin.com* THE RELIGION ENGINE

ACTIVITIES – PRESENTATIONS/ROUNDTABLES

CTL Talk Mar17-11 - Dr. D. Perley

www.turnitin.com and the need for digital review

CTL Talk Mar17-11 - Dr. D. Perley

The Religion Engine

*‘tags’ feature

CTL Talk Mar17-11 - Dr. D. Perley

Collaboration between subgroups:

“Redescription”?

GTA and religious pluralisation

Global connections with the GTA

CTL Talk Mar17-11 - Dr. D. Perley

Development and Improvement◦ Better processes of review◦ More customized form fields for data entry◦ More class time for presentations and intergroup analysis◦ “Redescription” and “tags”◦ In-class evaluation for teaching effectiveness

Suggestions for improvement?

CTL Talk Mar17-11 - Dr. D. Perley

sustained and ongoing collaboration Resources and help? (CTL; IITS)

CTL Talk Mar17-11 - Dr. D. Perley

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