Loading
Overviews
- Orville Vernon Burton, "American Digital History", July 2005
- Daniel J. Cohen, "The Future of Preserving the Past", June 2005
- Daniel J. Cohen, "History and the Second Decade of the Web", June 2004
- Roy Rosenzweig, "Scarcity or Abundance? Preserving the Past in a Digital Era", June 2003
- Roy Rosenzweig, "The Road to Xanadu: Public and Private Pathways on the History Web", September 2001
- Michael O'Malley and Roy Rosenzweig, "Brave New World or Blind Alley? American History on the World Wide Web", June 1997
Scholarship
- Roy Rosenzweig, "Can History be Open Source? Wikipedia and the Future of the Past", June 2006
- Daniel J. Cohen, "From Babel to Knowledge: Data Mining Large Digital Collections", March 2006
- Michael Jon Jensen, "Evolution, Intelligent Design, Climate Change, and the Scholarly Ecosystem", March 2006
- Daniel J. Cohen and Roy Rosenzweig, "Web of lies? Historical knowledge on the Internet", December 2005
- David A. Bell, "The Bookless Future: What the Internet is Doing to Scholarship", May 2005
- Roy Rosenzweig, "Should Historical Scholarship Be Free?", April 2005
- Patrick Manning , "Gutenberg-e: Electronic Entry to the Historical Professoriate", December 2004
- Joshua Brown, "History and the Web, From the Illustrated Newspaper to Cyberspace: Visual Technologies and Interaction in the Nineteenth and Twenty-First Centuries", June 2004
- Brian Dennis, Carl Smith, and Jonathan Smith, "Using Technology, Making History: A Collaborative Experiment in Interdisciplinary Teaching and Scholarship", June 2004
- Randy Bass, "The Garden in the Machine: The Impact of American Studies on New Technologies", December 1999
- Roy Rosenzweig, "Crashing the System? Hypertext and Scholarship on American Culture", June 1999
- Carl Smith, "Can You Do Serious History on the Web?", February 1998
Teaching Digital History
- T. Mills Kelly, "Sending Your Courses into the Blogosphere: An Introduction for "Old People"", August 2006
- T. Mills Kelly, "The Role of Technology in World History Teaching", July 2006
- Michael Coventry, Peter Felten, David Jaffee, Cecilia O'Leary, and Tracey Weis, with Susannah McGowan, "Ways of Seeing: Evidence and Learning in the History Classroom", March 2006
- Daniel J. Cohen and Roy Rosenzweig, "No Computer Left Behind", February 2006
- Roy Rosenzweig, "Digital Archives Are a Gift of Wisdom to Be Used Wisely", June 2005
- Daniel J. Cohen, "By the Book: Assessing the Place of Textbooks in U.S. Survey Courses", March 2005
- Kelly Schrum, "Surfing for the Past: How to Separate the Good from the Bad", May 2003
- David Jaffee, "'Scholars will soon be instructed through the eye': E-Supplements and the Teaching of U.S. History", March 2003
- T. Mills Kelly, "Toward Transparency in Teaching: Publishing a Course Portfolio", November 2001
- T. Mills Kelly, "Using New Media to Teach East European History", September 2001
- David Kobrin, "Using 'History Matters' with a Ninth-Grade Class", May 2001
- Kelly Schrum, "Making History on the Web Matter in the Classroom", May 2001
- Tracey Weiss, "Evaluating Websites for History Teachers: Using History Matters in a Graduate Seminar", May 2001
- T. Mills Kelly, "For Better or Worse? The Marriage of the Web and Classroom", August 2000
- Randy Bass and Roy Rosenzweig, "Rewiring the History and Social Studies Classroom: Needs, Frameworks, Dangers, and Proposals", December 1999
- Gary J. Kornblith, "'Dynamic Syllabi for Dummies': Posting Class Assignments on the World Wide Web", March 1998
Designing for the Web
- Paula Petrik, "Top Ten Mistakes in Academic Web Design", May 2000
- Michael O'Malley, "Building Effective Course Sites: Some Thoughts on Design for Academic Work", February 2000
- Paula Petrik, "'We Shall Be All': Designing History for the Web", December 1999
Topics in Digital History
- Sheila A. Brennan and T. Mills Kelly, "Why Collecting History Online is Web 1.5", March 2009
- Thomas Dublin, "Labor History on the World Wide Web: Thoughts on Jumping onto a Moving Express Train", August 2002
- Douglas Linder, "Lessons Learned from Building the Famous Trials Website", January 2001
- John Summers, "The Future of Labor's Past", February 1999
- Roy Rosenzweig, "Wizards, Bureaucrats, Warriors & Hackers: Writing the History of the Internet", December 1998
- Roy Rosenzweig, "'So, What's Next for Clio?' CD-ROM and Historians", March 1995