HIST 8500

TE11: Podcasting

I am incredibly passionate about podcasts, I listened to more podcasts this year than I did music on Spotify and my wrapped was embarrassing. However, I’m not a […]

HIST 8500

TE10: Net.Create

Net create made me feel like I was working on something so scientific that it had to have multiple eyes on it at once. That page was so […]

HIST 8500

TE7: Air Table

When people hear the word database, their minds are automatically thinking of numbers in a long list, no associated with much anything other than a name, location or […]

HIST 8500

TE5: Zotero

Zotero, a creation of George Mason University was created for researchers to organize their secondary sources in an accessible and free way. With an incredibly intuitive setup, Zotero […]

HIST 8500

TE4: Tropy

Tropy is a tool that was publicly released in 2017 that is used by historians, and other types of researchers to organize, annotate, share notes on, and engage […]

HIST 8500

TE3: Story Maps

Story Maps, powered by ArcGIS is an incredibly useful tool for displaying information in a creative way. Its allows the author to show a narrative, visually with supplemental […]

HIST 8500

TE2: HTML and CSS

Code Academy may be one of the most accessible, and easily understood online resources for those with little to no experience in any type of computer science education […]

HIST 8500

TE1: Wikipedia Edits

In the History Course of HIST 8500 at Clemson University, we were tasked with editing the code of a wikipedia article that we felt we were a semi-expert […]