What if the proposal title for the afternoon session were, “How to Read and Navigate TEI Code with some Basic Processing” (that requires no installations beyond oXygen), that would fit what I am describing. If we want to try eXist-dB, I have an installation on a web server that I only use for training purposes—and the benefit is the view it provides of surveying a collection of files with simple XPath expressions. Thus, no challenging installation or debugging people’s setup is required— just aim your browser at the training database on the web. If the database is stocked with an interesting variety of TEI—for linguistics, for manuscripts, some EpiDoc, etc, the XPath orientation becomes a way of surveying different models and varieties of TEI as well. If we place emphasis here on simply *learning to read* XML, this is mainly the goal of my proposal for the afternoon. This way the entire day is not on how to write code, and the second half it is not on learning just one way to publish it before you have learned the many ways you can view it. Reading the code with XPath leads readily to some basic transformations—produce a list of the linguistic phenomena you have marked; study someone else’s use of this attribute; notice how often this turns up inside that. Does that sound better? I think we face a problem of perception of what is “introductory” that often keeps people fenced off from the perspective they need to continue independently after a workshop ends. This is a topic I care about because I see ADHO and “big tent” arenas of DH as the places where people form opinions about TEI and whether it is accessible or too much work for too little reward. It doesn’t take much to teach people how to read, in the same day on which they learn to write. I think the training may stand to accomplish more for the people who might come to learn from us. Elisa -- Elisa Beshero-Bondar, PhD Director, Center for the Digital Text Associate Professor of English University of Pittsburgh at Greensburg 150 Finoli Drive, Greensburg, PA 15601 USA E-mail: ebb8@pitt.edu | Development site: http://newtfire.org Typeset by hand on my iPad
On Feb 13, 2018, at 8:51 AM, Elisa
wrote: Hi Martina— I was not proposing a full training in either XSLT or XQuery, but rather an orientation to how to navigate TEI to locate data and how you can use that for basic transformations. Think of it as a gateway to learning more, with emphasis on XPath, and a little tangible output as a reward at the end of the day (showing the application of the XPath to output something useful).
I do have experience with teaching a two-hour orientation to XPath, when people in the room were not very clear on how to code XML. Those people had a better understanding of how to work with it and how to read their own code and others’ code to find out things about it—survey what kinds of information is being marked, and even critique code on that basis. People who are just learning TEI and XML and have only workshop time for learning can gain skills quickly this way and become more serious adapters. Without such orientation at the intro level, I think people become skeptical that they have to use X tool or somebody else’s technology to publish an edition, and are not aware of how to read their code and the many different things they can learn from it with a little dose of XPath. I think that dose of XPath helps people to see why the code fits together and gives them ideas that may keep them involved with TEI longer.
I do teach quite a lot of this to undergraduates in the context of a semester course, so I have a lot of training experience and material. I also adapt that material for short intro sessions. I realize the TEI is enormous to learn, but I think people stand a better chance of continuing with it if they are given the perspective that an XPath orientation provides.
Elisa
-- Elisa Beshero-Bondar, PhD Director, Center for the Digital Text Associate Professor of English University of Pittsburgh at Greensburg 150 Finoli Drive, Greensburg, PA 15601 USA E-mail: ebb8@pitt.edu | Development site: http://newtfire.org
Typeset by hand on my iPad
On Feb 13, 2018, at 4:10 AM, Scholger, Martina (martina.scholger@uni-graz.at)
wrote: Hi,
I added some possible session topics to "part 1" (although I think this would be enough for a full day workshop). Elisa, I understand that you (we) want to teach participants as much as possible, but I thought of attendees who possibly write their first angle brackets at this workshop and fear that they will be overwhelmed with processing TEI by learning XSLT or XQuery. I agree that it is important to talk about processing, but I cannot see it work in a one day workshop. Or rather, I've never done that before and therefore I am sceptical. Do you have other experiences? How about giving a preview on how to process/publish TEI documents and where to look next? Hugh mentioned a workshop (I guess it was this one: http://mith.umd.edu/register-one-free-workshops-hosted-mith-wednesday-may-31...) and I wonder if that would be a possible way to show people how to move on, or, try out the TEI Publisher App, the TEI Stylesheets, mention X-technologies, etc. If you think that our participants are likely to be more advanced, we could focus more on the processing (but I wouldn't call it introductory then).
Best wishes, Martina
-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- Von: tei-council-bounces@lists.tei-c.org [mailto:tei-council-bounces@lists.tei-c.org] Im Auftrag von Elisa Beshero-Bondar Gesendet: Dienstag, 13. Februar 2018 04:38 An: tei-council@lists.tei-c.org Betreff: Re: [tei-council] TEI Council @ DH?
PS: I think we’d have to do *either* a little introductory XSLT *or* a little introductory XQuery…and I think I’d prefer the latter, since eXist-db is a great way to get people up and running—a place to write and test XPath expressions on a collection of TEI, and a place to begin working on development from TEI. Does anyone (Magda?) know if eXist-db is offering a workshop this year? We could perhaps piggy-back on that and concentrate intensively on XPath preparations for example.
On the other hand, a basic intro to XSLT with drilling in XPath could complement an XQuery/eXist-db workshop. I’m torn, since I teach students their first processing in both environments. Showing a basic identity transformation in XSLT that adds line-numbers to a giant document might be helpful in an introductory training scenario, as is a little pull-processing in *either* environment… I think in a full-day workshop, we ought to be sharing some basic training in processing with TEI, but I’ll only write that up if others agree.
Elisa -- Elisa Beshero-Bondar, PhD Director, Center for the Digital Text | Associate Professor of English University of Pittsburgh at Greensburg | Humanities Division 150 Finoli Drive Greensburg, PA 15601 USA E-mail: ebb8@pitt.edu mailto:ebb8@pitt.edu Development site: http://newtfire.org http://newtfire.org/
On Feb 12, 2018, at 10:31 PM, Elisa Beshero-Bondar
wrote: I visited the blank Google Doc, and I’m baffled about how to proceed. If this is an introductory workshop, it probably shouldn’t be a “bring your own questions about the TEI”: we should actually be teaching something.
Here’s my suggestion: for a full day, maybe we want to break this into two concentrated units. I think people who would be drawn to this, as attendees of ADHO, have probably encountered TEI before—I’m not sure where to begin. I’m aware from Elena Pierazzo’s talk last November that people’s access to TEI orientation is limited in Latin America, and this is something we should try to address. I suspect that each of us on Council orients people to TEI in different ways, so I don’t know how to proceed there.
For the second half of the workshop, I’d like us to spend some time orienting people to *processing* TEI, because there aren’t enough opportunities for people to begin learning that. I am happy to volunteer as much time as you like to XPath orientation, and I have material written up about that. Where could that lead? I can imagine (and have taught) a basic introduction to XSLT following from XPath, and could imagine something in two hours. I can also imagine training people to play with XPath expressions in XQuery with eXist-db and move from that into simple HTML outputs of charts, lists, etc. I’d really like to do this kind of teaching in the second half of the workshop. Is that okay with people—and can we still pitch this as “introductory”—in the sense of “introductory processing” of TEI?
Thanks, Elisa -- Elisa Beshero-Bondar, PhD Director, Center for the Digital Text | Associate Professor of English University of Pittsburgh at Greensburg | Humanities Division 150 Finoli Drive Greensburg, PA 15601 USA E-mail: ebb8@pitt.edu mailto:ebb8@pitt.edu Development site: http://newtfire.org http://newtfire.org/
On Feb 12, 2018, at 11:05 AM, Raffaele Viglianti
mailto:raffaeleviglianti@gmail.com> wrote: Hi all (sorry for the delayed response),
I'm also waiting to hear back about my submissions, but I think I might go regardless as I saved my research funds for it.
Raff
On Sun, Feb 11, 2018 at 6:10 PM, Scholger, Martina ( martina.scholger@uni-graz.at mailto:martina.scholger@uni-graz.at)
mailto:martina.scholger@uni-graz.at> wrote: Hi!
Great to hear that there is so much interest in this! It's very likely that I go there. Could we agree to do a full-day introductory workshop in Mexico? I also think that this would be a good opportunity/place for doing an intro workshop.
I have created a Google Doc (sorry, no content yet) for the proposal: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1d41jLLpUXltS8WbVIGRd4NVlm3su_ https://docs.google.com/document/d/1d41jLLpUXltS8WbVIGRd4NVlm3su_ 3oPm5AkwvDaAwc/edit?usp=sharing If you have any text blocks at hand, please add them.
@Magda & Hugh: if the workshop gets accepted, wouldn't that be a reason to get funding?
Best wishes, Martina
-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- Von: tei-council-bounces@lists.tei-c.org [mailto:tei-council-bounces@ lists.tei-c.org] Im Auftrag von James Cummings Gesendet: Sonntag, 11. Februar 2018 23:04 An: tei-council@lists.tei-c.org Betreff: Re: [tei-council] TEI Council @ DH?
I may be going (depends if paper accepted). The flight alone more than wipes out my research fund so I don't know how I'll be affording hotel, but I've started saving.
I'd happily contribute to a TEI one-day workshop, either giving a talk or being a TEI expert for some sort of consultation surgery "come with your TEI questions" or something.
Best wishes,
James
--
Dr James Cummings, James.Cummings@newcastle.ac.uk
School of English Literature, Language, and Linguistics, Newcastle University
________________________________ From: tei-council-bounces@lists.tei-c.org
on behalf of Elisa Beshero-Bondar Sent: 11 February 2018 19:43:19 To: tei-council@lists.tei-c.org Subject: Re: [tei-council] TEI Council @ DH? Sorry, I was typing too fast...let me just resend this: The discussion of TEI and LOD this morning on the TEI-list makes me wonder if that might be a good topic for the ADHO conference? Can we imagine an introductory TEI workshop that incorporates discussion of LOD, and helps people to think about how to design a project for the semantic web? For those of us planning to attend, is this a good topic and interest we share in common? I'm not sure I have time this week to pound out a full proposal, but I think some of us here have some material already to start with...?
Elisa
On Sun, Feb 11, 2018 at 2:41 PM, Elisa Beshero-Bondar
wrote: The discussion of TEI and LOD this morning on the TEI-list makes me wonder if that might be a good topic for the ADHO conference? Can we imagine an introductory TEI workshop that incorporates discussion of think about and design a project for the semantic web? For those of us planning to attend, is this a good topic and interest we share in common? I'm not sure I have time this week to pound out a full proposal, but I think some of us here have some material already to start with...?
Elisa
On Sun, Feb 11, 2018 at 2:08 PM, Magdalena Turska
wrote: > Unfortunately I will not be going, had mixed feelings about this gig, > and with rather poor reviews for my submissions I stand pretty much > where Hugh does > :-) Fully support doing some outreach, in particular in a place where > it is not as easy to find any TEI workshop as, say, Europe or US. > > Magdalena > > On 11 February 2018 at 01:21, Syd Bauman
> wrote: > >> It is not a given, but very likely I will go. (My daughter will >> most likely be living in Mexico City this summer.) Happy to teach >> standard WWP workshop or almost anything else. >> >> -- >> tei-council mailing list >> tei-council@lists.tei-c.org >> http://lists.lists.tei-c.org/mailman/listinfo/tei-council >> >> PLEASE NOTE: postings to this list are publicly archived >> > -- > tei-council mailing list > tei-council@lists.tei-c.org > http://lists.lists.tei-c.org/mailman/listinfo/tei-council > > PLEASE NOTE: postings to this list are publicly archived > -- Elisa Beshero-Bondar, PhD Director, Center for the Digital Text | Associate Professor of English University of Pittsburgh at Greensburg | Humanities Division 150 Finoli Drive Greensburg, PA 15601 USA E-mail: ebb8@pitt.edu
Development site: http://newtfire.org -- Elisa Beshero-Bondar, PhD Director, Center for the Digital Text | Associate Professor of English University of Pittsburgh at Greensburg | Humanities Division 150 Finoli Drive Greensburg, PA 15601 USA E-mail: ebb8@pitt.edu
Development site: http://newtfire.org -- tei-council mailing list tei-council@lists.tei-c.org http://lists.lists.tei-c.org/mailman/listinfo/tei-council PLEASE NOTE: postings to this list are publicly archived -- tei-council mailing list tei-council@lists.tei-c.org http://lists.lists.tei-c.org/mailman/listinfo/tei-council
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