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  • Undergraduate (14)

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  • Archival Science/Preservation/Records Management (13)
  • (-) Cultural heritage Informatics (6)
  • Doctoral Core (3)
  • Data Science/Engineering/Analytics (9)
  • General Informatics Elective (3)
  • General Information Studies Elective (18)
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  • Human Computer Interaction/UX Design/UX Research (15)
  • Human-Centered Data Science (11)
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  • Required for an Informatics Degree (8)
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  • (-) Social Justice Informatics (8)
  • User-Experience Design (13)

I 310C: Introduction to Cultural Heritage Informatics

Undergraduate
Cultural heritage Informatics

In this class, students will first learn some fundamentals of cultural heritage informatics and be introduced to the major kinds of institutions in this space: galleries, libraries, archives, and museums. Students will also see case studies of how fundamental concepts like access or metadata get used in contemporary examples.

Skills: Archival Records
Topics: Metadata, access, Preservation

I 320C: Topics in Cultural Heritage Informatics: Knowledge Equity and Digital Environments

Undergraduate
Cultural heritage Informatics

This course we will explore the concepts and values of open knowledge and knowledge equity and how they intersect with the ongoing evolution of digital environments. Open knowledge can be described as information that is freely available to the public to use and redistribute. Knowledge equity extends beyond information access and use to also include what is valued as knowledge, whom that knowledge represents, and who creates it.

I 320C: Topics in Cultural Heritage Informatics: Preservation of Difficult Histories

Undergraduate
Cultural heritage Informatics

Engage in modern ethical dilemmas within archives, libraries, and museums, considering issues of collections management and preservation within changing cultural frameworks. This I 320C topic carries the Cultural Diversity in the United States flag. The purpose of the Cultural Diversity in the United States Flag is for students to explore in-depth the shared practices and beliefs of one or more underrepresented cultural groups subject to persistent marginalization. In addition to learning about these diverse groups in relation to their specific contexts, you’ll also reflect on your own cultural experiences.

I 320C: Topics in Cultural Heritage Informatics: Archives As Data

Undergraduate
Cultural heritage Informatics

This course introduces digital archival collections that can be accessed and used as data for research and inquiry. Topics will focus on the transformation, analysis, and interpretation of digital cultural heritage in archival contexts, including digitization, web archiving, software emulation, and data archiving. From text messages, Spotify playlists, to the President's tweets--how are digital traces collected, preserved and managed by archives? What are the ethics of managing digital archives and making them accessible to researchers, the public, and machines?

Skills: Digital Preservation, Responsible Data Management, web Archiving
Topics: Social Media Archives, digital Collections, critical Data Studies

I 320C: Topics in Cultural Heritage Informatics: Mapping Urban Destruction

Undergraduate
Cultural heritage Informatics

What stories does rubble tell? This course investigates how demolitions have shaped the social and material lives of cities in a range of urban contexts. Course sections will follow the razing of singularly meaningful sites along with broad patterns of demolition in cities throughout the world, from Chicago to Paris and São  Paulo to Austin. Specific questions that will recur throughout the course include: How do demolitions change places and the meanings attached to them? Why do authorities bulldoze certain structures and not others? Where do dislocated residents go? How have demolitions contributed to uneven urban development, including through patterns of segregation, economic immobility, and inequality, across space and time?   Source materials will include historical maps, city plans, oral histories, and music that preserves razed spaces in popular memory.   Students will learn to use digital mapping tools to document, analyze, and visualize social and spatial change related to demolitions over time. They will also re/map and narrative the life and destruction a significant demolished space. No prior experience with mapping or programming is required; students interested in learning foundational mapping skills in a supportive and structured environment are welcome. 

I 320C: Topics in Cultural Heritage Informatics: Data and Society

Undergraduate
Cultural heritage Informatics

Explore common data collection, management, and sharing practices around information technology and emerging technologies such as AI. Students will gain hands on experiences with collecting, analyzing, and managing user data in ethical and responsible manners. Students will design data-driven systems that are centered around user consent, transparency, and social responsibilities.

I 310J: Introduction to Social Justice Informatics

Undergraduate
Social Justice Informatics

Explore the leveraging of data, information, and technology for the greater benefit of society and to help ensure a level playing field for everyone in the information age. Offered on the letter-grade basis only. This course carries the Cultural Diversity in the United States flag. The purpose of the Cultural Diversity in the United States Flag is for students to explore in-depth the shared practices and beliefs of one or more underrepresented cultural groups subject to persistent marginalization. In addition to learning about these diverse groups in relation to their specific contexts, you’ll also reflect on your own cultural experiences.

I 320J: Topics in Social Justice Informatics: Misinformation, Justice, and Design

Undergraduate
Social Justice Informatics

In this course, we will work to understand and address the challenges of misinformation, disinformation, and strategic manipulation in online environments. First, we will work to develop a deep understanding of the problem space. We will read and discuss existing research (both historical and contemporary) on how and why misinformation and disinformation spread. Next, we will explore the process, both personal and interpersonal, by which these issues can be approached and addressed in our own lives. This will involve reflecting on our own presuppositions, beliefs, and biases about information; and doing a project in which we apply the principles of Human-Centered Design to investigate different design directions for addressing misleading information. Students will gain important contextual knowledge and hands-on design experience that they can take into future professional domains (from education to policy to technology), where they can contribute to building more trustworthy information systems.

Skills: Prototyping, Qualitative User Research, Media Literacy
Topics: Describe the

I 320J: Topics in Social Justice Informatics: Technologies and Information in the Global South

Undergraduate
Social Justice Informatics

Critical exploration of the intersection between digital technologies and information access in emerging economies. Investigate the historical, socio-economic, and ethical dimensions of digital adoption in the Global South, analyzing its impact on governance, economies, cultures, and societal dynamics. Emphasis on critical thinking, ethical considerations, and collaborative approaches to address challenges such as the digital divide(s), data sovereignty, and technology-driven inequality. Through case studies and practical exercises, students will develop skills in digital research, global cultures, policy analysis, and technology innovation with a focus on promoting inclusive and sustainable digital transformation in Global South contexts. Also offered as I 320S.

I 320J: Topics in Social Justice Informatics: Understanding Disability and Accessibility

Undergraduate
Social Justice Informatics

In this course, we will work to understand and address the challenges of misinformation, disinformation, and strategic manipulation in online environments. First, we will work to develop a deep understanding of the problem space. We will read and discuss existing research (both historical and contemporary) on how and why misinformation and disinformation spread. Next, we will explore the process, both personal and interpersonal, by which these issues can be approached and addressed in our own lives. This will involve reflecting on our own presuppositions, beliefs, and biases about information; and doing a project in which we apply the principles of Human-Centered Design to investigate different design directions for addressing misleading information. Students will gain important contextual knowledge and hands-on design experience that they can take into future professional domains (from education to policy to technology), where they can contribute to building more trustworthy information systems.

I 320J: Topics in Social Justice Informatics

Undergraduate
Social Justice Informatics

No description provided.

I 320J: Topics in Social Justice Informatics: Design For Social Impact

Undergraduate
Social Justice Informatics

This class explores how to make arguments about and through design. The first half focuses on values, criticism, ethics, and analysis of technology, the latter portion aims to help a soon-to-graduate technologist envision positive social impact in a mission-driven enterprise. Students will practice synthesizing ethical tech considerations – as they will have to do for the rest of their careers – and combining this with an organizational mindset. Through exercises, role-playing, discussions, guest lectures from activist technologists, and wide-ranging readings, students will practice connecting broader implications of their designs with technical choices. Design for Social Impact seeks to arm students with diverse ways of reflecting on their authorial relationship to technology, drawing from art and design to political science and anthropology. Course participants will be encouraged to focus on areas of personal interest, enumerating the social, political, and economic parameters of particular technical systems: parameters that are as important as power consumption, usability, or efficiency.

Skills: Conscious Making, design, social Change
Topics: Values In Design, design Approaches, design Justice, organizational Models

I 320J: Topics in Social Justice Informatics: Applied Social Justice Research

Undergraduate
Social Justice Informatics

Project-based learning course in which students will apply a combination of research and evaluation methods (scientific, sociological, historical, computational) to identify and explore a research question of community impact. Students will first learn about applied research and evaluation from a team of faculty and community-based nonprofit leaders, then work in small groups apply their knowledge.

I 320J: Topics in Social Justice Informatics: Data and Society

Undergraduate
Social Justice Informatics

Explore common data collection, management, and sharing practices around information technology and emerging technologies such as AI. Students will gain hands on experiences with collecting, analyzing, and managing user data in ethical and responsible manners. Students will design data-driven systems that are centered around user consent, transparency, and social responsibilities.

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