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Item Between The Wars: The United States, 1919-1941 (History 409)(Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, 1997) O'Malley, MichaelBespoke website designed in late 1990s as the digital component of a history course. URL: chnm.gmu.edu/courses/hist409/Item Between The Wars: The United States, 1919-1941 (History 409)(Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, 1997) O'Malley, MichaelBespoke website designed in late 1990s as the digital component of a history course. URL: chnm.gmu.edu/courses/hist409/Item Clio Wired (History 696) 2014(2014) Takats, SeanWebsite designed in mid-2010s as the digital component of an introduction to digital history course, required for PhD students in the Department of History and Art HistoryItem Conceptions of the Self: Honors HIST 130(Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, 2002) O'Malley, MichaelBespoke website designed in early 00s as the digital component of a history course. URL: chnm.gmu.edu/courses/honors130Item Digital History Fellowship(Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, 2020) Walters Cooper, LaQuanda; Swain, Greta; Dauterive, Jessica; Crossley, Laura; Odiorne, Andrew; Wilson, Lacey; Bratt, Jordan; Seal, Stephanie Anne; Fahringer, Alyssa Toby; Legg, Jannelle; McDivitt, Anne; Regan, Amanda; Hurwitz, Benjamin; Morton, Amanda; Roberts, SpencerThis website served as a space for reflection from the graduate students in the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media's Digital History Fellowship program. Each new group of students contributed their stories and experiences, and provided a fresh look at digital history in graduate programs. The site also included each year's fellowship syllabus. First awarded in 2012, the Digital History Fellowship was funded by the Provost’s PhD Program Awards, and provided graduate students with stipends and an opportunity to undertake practicum courses in the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media at George Mason University. Students discussed previous projects completed by the Center to better understand how digital history has developed since 1994, while simultaneously offering new perspectives on present and future projects. They also worked within the Education, Public Projects, and Research divisions to learn new skills and contribute to current projects. Hosted at chnm.gmu.edu/courses/fellowship.Item Digital Public Humanities Graduate Certificate(2015) Department of History and Art HistoryWebsite for the Department of History and Art History's Digital Public Humanities Graduate Certificate, run in conjunction with the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media and the Smithsonian Associates. This is a 12-18 month program that includes three 3-credit hour online courses and a 6-credit hour virtual summer internship with the Smithsonian Institution. URL: dhcertificate.org Date: 2015-2020Item Discussion as a Way of Teaching (CTCH 792)(Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, 2009)Website designed in 2000s as the digital component of a history course. URL: chnm.gmu.edu/courses/discussion Authors: variousItem Enlightenment in Europe (HIST 635)(Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, 2008) Takats, SeanWebsite designed in the 2000s as the digital component of a history course on history of the Enlightenment in Europe.Item Exploring U.S. History(Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, 2004-04) Petrik, Paula; O'Malley, MichaelThese modules, designed for George Mason University's U.S. survey course History 120, offer relevant exercises that reinforce textbook readings and classroom discussion. They provide an alternate, often entertaining, way of investigating historical concepts and problems. Divided into four chronological periods, these modules cover a variety of topics, including indentured servitude, runaway slaves, popular culture in the 19th century, and advertisements in the early 20th century. These modules help students build their Information Technology (IT) proficiency. Students can learn to build and maintain web pages, complete online assignments, perform online research, and use technology in historical analysis.Item Exploring U.S. History(Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, 2004) Center for History and New MediaThese modules, designed for George Mason University's U.S. survey course History 120, offer relevant exercises that reinforce textbook readings and classroom discussion. They provide an alternate, often entertaining, way of investigating historical concepts and problems. Divided into four chronological periods, these modules cover a variety of topics, including indentured servitude, runaway slaves, popular culture in the 19th century, and advertisements in the early 20th century. These modules help students build their Information Technology (IT) proficiency. Students can learn to build and maintain web pages, complete online assignments, perform online research, and use technology in historical analysis.Item French Revolution HIST 635(2009) Takats, Sean; VariousWebsite designed in late 00s as the digital component of a history course.Item George Mason University History PhD Students(Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, 2010) VariousThis website was a combination of blog and wiki pages that formed a "cyber cafe" for students in George Mason University PhD in History program from 2009-2010. It was used to share resources, start discussions, plan events, and answer each other's questions about everything from scholarship to life. historyphd.gmu.eduItem HIST 499 Civil Rights and Grassroots Politics in 20th-Century America Spring 2003(Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, 2003) Smith, SuzanneBespoke website designed in early 2000s as the digital component of a history course.Item HIST 810: Doctoral Colloquium(2008) Department of History and Art HistoryThis is the website for the History Doctoral Colloquium at George Mason University. It includes the schedule, the assignments, and a place for online discussion. URL: chnm.gmu.edu/courses/colloquium Years: 2008-2017.Item Histories of American Popular Music HIST 615(Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, 2002) Smith, SuzanneBespoke website designed in early 00s as the digital component of a history course. URL: chnm.gmu.edu/courses/smith/hist615f02/Item Introduction to Modern World History (HIST 125)(Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, 2006)Website designed in early 2000s as the digital component of a History 125 (Introduction to World History).Item Jacksonian Democracy(Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, 1999) O'Malley, MichaelBespoke website designed in late 1990s as the digital component of a history course. URL: chnm.gmu.edu/courses/jacksonItem Last American Pirate(Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, 2008) Kelly, Mills; VariousThe Last American Pirate was a scholarly hoax perpetrated by students in History 389 at George Mason University in the Fall 2008 semester as part of T. Mills Kelly's course on "Lying About the Past". During this hoax, a (nonexistent) student named Jane explored a (fake) local legend about a house where the (also nonexistent) "Last American Pirate" lived. The purpose of the hoax was to encourage people to think about how easily information takes on a life of its own online, ethics in the historical profession, and the role of digital media in popular culture. URL: lastamericanpirate.netItem Magic, Illusion and Detection at the Turn of the Last Century(Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, 2004) O'Malley, MichaelWebsite for a history course at George Mason University. This course explored two simultaneous tendencies in American life at the turn of the last century. On the one hand, the rise of industrialization made Americans fascinated with personal transformation--with self making, with economic mobility, and with the possibility of changing your place in life. This new, modern world highlighted the difference between the real and the fake. In an age of mass copies and new identities, how could you tell the genuine, honest man from the con man? As much as they loved magic and personal transformation, Americans of this era loved detection, and the wide range of new techniques--like fingerprints, mug shots, and criminology generally--designed to pin identity down. The course focused on this simultaneous, contradictory fascination with both self transformation and with stabilizing identity. The course made extensive use of this game-like website, which was designed to reproduce some of the ambiguities of historical research itself. Former URL: chnm.gmu.edu/courses/magic/.Item Mike O'Malley Course Website(Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, 2020) O'Malley, MichaelThis is the website for George Mason University history professor Mike O'Malley's course syllabi. Its primary contents are the syllabus for HIST 615 The American History of Money during the Spring 2020 (COVID-19 pandemic) semester. Hosted at chnm.gmu.edu/courses/omalley/.