The Durrës Regional Archaeological Project (DRAP) was a intensive surface survey field project centered around the modern town of Durrës, Albania.
This collection represents all of the raw data collected from the project, whether born analog or born digital.
Archive of the 2014-15 exhibition, featuring photographs by Richard E. Schade. The photographs were exhibited first in Gallery K in the Max Kade German Cultural Center from November 3 - 26, 2014, and then in the Clifton Cultural Arts Center from January 17 - February 28, 2015. Richard Schade took the photographs at the Berlin Wall upon his visits in 1964 and 1989. They document his experience of the Wall.
Images of bryophyte label specimens from the University of Cincinnati herbarium (CINC) used for databasing the collection. This project was funded by the US National Science Foundation.
Collected media artworks of Associate Professor Charles Woodman, Electronic Artist. School of Art, Department of Art, Architecture, and Planning, University of Cincinnati.
In the summer of 2015, UC English Emerita Professor Lucille M. Schultz donated to the University of Cincinnati’s Department of English and Comparative Literature her archive of 19th-century composition and rhetoric textbooks and handbooks, and several sets of student papers and letters from the same period. Professor Schultz collected these materials during her 26-year career as a scholar of rhetoric and composition at UC.
Professor Schultz made high-quality photocopies of the included materials from 15 libraries and archives around the country, primarily from collections at the Library of Congress and at Harvard University’s Monroe C. Gutman Library. She published a number of articles based on the collection and two scholarly monographs--The Young Composers: Composition’s Beginnings in Nineteenth-Century Schools (1999), the first full-length history of school-based writing instruction, and the co-written, with Jean Ferguson Carr and Stephen L. Carr, Archives of Instruction: Nineteenth-Century Rhetorics, Readers, and Composition Books in the United States. The latter was awarded the MLA’s 2005 Mina P. Shaughnessy Prize, "presented for an outstanding scholarly book in the fields of language, culture, literacy, and literature that has a strong application to the teaching of English." Schultz, who spent nearly ten years locating the materials included in the archive, believes her collection includes all extant 19th-century school-based composition books that are publicly available. The archive, however, does not contain every edition of every book.
The Schultz archive provides a thorough vision of composition practices in 19th-century U.S. schools. With 257 entries representing the period from 1785 to 1916, the collection includes, among other artifacts, picture books for early primary school students, 103 grammar handbooks, and advanced rhetoric textbooks for college students. The materials highlight practices we would today identify as prewriting, freewriting, object-oriented pedagogy, student-centered activities, and multimodal composing. Including lessons, student examples, and images, the texts provide glimpses into 19th-century lives, material cultures, and pedagogical practices. The archive also helps readers understand the socially conservative nature of textbooks: great attention is paid to Christopher Columbus, for example; "demon rum" is seen as an evil, resulting in poverty; and slavery gets no mention. In thus putting a lens on the past, the archive invites reader to reexamine the present.
In addition, the Schultz archive provides a complex backdrop to the origins of rhetoric and composition and to the formation of literacy instruction in the U.S. For example, included texts offer a variety of references to the cultural implications of composition instruction. These cultural components are represented through discussions of cultural assimilation, cultural separation/distinction, religion and the acquisition of "high" culture. In one salient example, George Thompson, in Letters to Sabbath-School Children on Africa (1855), writes about composition instruction as taught by American missionaries to children in Africa. Much of this text addresses the superiority of the English language and the necessity of teaching children to use it properly. Thompson’s text effectively demonstrates cultural assimilation practices as they relate to nonnative English speakers. The practice of cultural assimilation through language also emerges in David Blair’s The Universal Preceptor: Being a General Grammar of Arts, Sciences, and Useful Knowledge (1826), which argues for the exclusion of borrowed words and idiomatic expressions in an effort to purify the English language.
As this snapshot of the archive suggests, the included materials provide a foundation for fruitful research that could examine contemporaneous documents, laws and historical events that have contributed to the assimilation of native and immigrant cultures in the U.S. during the 19th-century (and beyond). The texts invite comparison to contemporary rhetorics related to English-only laws and educational practices, as well as the continued suppression of nondominant languages and cultures within U.S. literacy education. And this is only the beginning. Scholars may also be interested in the archive to study student writing, teacher response methods, classroom conditions and materials, and many other subjects that pertain to literacy instruction during the 19th-century.
Since receiving this comprehensive collection in 2015, graduate students in rhetoric and composition at UC have begun using it as a resource for research projects. By digitizing the collection, our goal is to welcome more users to access the collection. With assistance from the Taft Research Center and the UC library archivists, the resulting online database is available to scholars across the country and around the world, making possible wide public access to a collection of materials otherwise unavailable in a single archive.
Those interested in browsing the print copies of the Schultz archive, currently housed in 110 McMicken Hall, please contact Professor Russel Durst at russel.durst@uc.edu to set up an appointment. To access a complementary 19th-century collection of schoolbooks, visit the Nietz Old Textbook Collection housed at the University of Pittsburgh. ( http://digital.library.pitt.edu/nietz/)
This contains interviews and other information related to my research on the history of computing at UC. Alumni, faculty, and staff were interviewed for this project.
Seniors at the University of Cincinnati in the College of Education, Criminal Justice, and Human Services have an opportunity to complete a senior design capstone course.
The proceedings of the 5th annual 3T: Teaching, Techniques & Technology Conference, March 17, 2017.
The 3T: Teaching, Techniques & Technology Conference is a leading scholarship of teaching and learning conference held at University of Cincinnati Clermont College offering educators across disciplines the opportunity to share a broad range of innovative teaching practices, cutting-edge pedagogical developments, and practical applications of technology in the classroom.
This program is meant to batch process ELISA standard curve data to generate Levey-Jennings control charts and report values that fall outisde of 2 and 3 standard deviations of the mean. The Instruction Manual contains a detailed guide on usage.
The proceedings of the CCCC 2017 Midwest Summer Conference, June 8-10, 2017.
The goal of this conference is to support best practices in working with diverse students in diverse writing environments. Examining the intersection of diversity and writing is critical in developing engaging and ethical composition courses. NCTE and CCCC have a long history of supporting students from diverse backgrounds with the 1974 Resolution on the Students’ Right to their Own Language and the recent Supporting Linguistically and Culturally Diverse Learners in English Education. In 2016, instructors are still concerned about honoring their students’ linguistic varieties while also working with them to write in multiple modes for many audiences. As new forms of composition emerge, instructors are seeking ways to incorporate digital literacy activities for students to write for a range of readers. This conference will provide an opportunity for participants to share their research in digital writing, multimedia writing, working with diverse students, and writing across the curriculum. We are delighted to invite proposals that consider addressing the needs of diverse writers while working in multiple genres, formats, and modalities.
This conference is a collaboration between McMicken College of Arts & Sciences, UC Blue Ash, and UC Clermont College.
This collection contains data and analysis associated with the International Digital Curation Conference research paper (2018) - Giving datasets context: a comparison study of institutional repositories that apply varying degrees of curation -authored by Amy Koshoffer (University of Cincinnati), Amy Neeser (University of California Berkeley), Linda Newman (University of Cincinnati), Lisa Johnston (University of Minnesota), United States of America
The proceedings of the 6th annual 3T: Teaching, Techniques & Technology Conference, March 3, 2018.
The 3T: Teaching, Techniques & Technology Conference is a leading scholarship of teaching and learning conference held at University of Cincinnati Clermont College offering educators across disciplines the opportunity to share a broad range of innovative teaching practices, cutting-edge pedagogical developments, and practical applications of technology in the classroom.
Half a century ago, thoracic surgeon Paul W. Schafer, MD., believed that the centriole, which was barely visible in light microscopy, was different from all other organelles. He advanced electron micrographic studies that suggested the centrioles had inter-cellular order, i.e., that they might have communication or “force at a distance” interaction.
The School of Information Technology (SoIT) at the University of Cincinnati hosts the Information Technology Research Symposium on an annual basis as a forum for the exchange and dissemination of research ideas through the IT EXPO. The 2018 symposium was held on April 10, 2018 and this collection features the digital proceedings of presentations. The primary purpose of the symposium is to exchange research ideas among graduate students, faculty, industry, and practitioners involved in IT research in our field. IT research topics may range from state-of-the-art system development to recent progresses in scientific endeavors that are theoretical or applied areas of Information Technology, such as advanced storage technologies, computer-mediated communication, cloud computing, cyber security, data analytics, Internet of Things (IoT), IT infrastructure, mobile security, interactive gaming, technologies for smart and connected cities, and user-centered design.
Images relating to a 4th century C.E. sarcophagus found at Çan, in northestern Turkey.
These images were created in 1999 by holding a flatbed scanner directly against the sarcophagus under the supervision of the conservators.
The sarcophagus was published as Sevinç, Körpe, et. al., "A New Painted Graedo-Persian Sarcophagus from Çan", Studia Troica 11 (2001), pp 383-420.
Selected works from University of Cincinnati dissertations, Programmschriften, and pamphlets in classical studies, held in the John Miller Burnam Classical Library.
During the fall semester of 2013, guest fellow Ignacio García May, from Spain, taught a Taft Research Seminar on the techniques of writing for the theater. The seminar was supported by Andrés Pérez-Simón, Assistant Professor of Spanish, who acted as convener, and Patricia O'Connor, Emerita Professor of Spanish, who was available in an advisory capacity.
During the first sessions of the seminar, Prof. García May provided the basic rules of playwriting:
* Playwriting’s specificity as opposed to any other form of writing. Dramatic text as a voluntarily unfinished and problematic text.
* Different kinds of dramatic structures, plots and subplots
* Real time vs. stage time; the triggering incident; dramatic progression.
* The world in a nutshell: unlimited-but-limited spaces of drama.
* Language of drama: dialogues, monologues, didascalia (stage direction).
* Defining characters: agon (in ancient Greek: conflict, combat, dispute) as foundation of relationship.
* Reality is not always believable: plausibility vs. truth.
* Mechanics of comedy.
* Mechanics of tragedy.
Then, under the guidance of professors Pérez-Simón and García May, the students developed their own original short plays using the information received. The finished plays were read and discussed in class. Although none of the students had previous experience in playwriting, all the resulting short plays were worthy, and some of them were first class and deserve to be published. It was considered a good idea to create a digital repository that could be maintained as a dynamic file of dramatic texts, where future writers (and even well-established playwrights in Spanish language) could publish their own plays. In addition to original creations, translations of plays done by UC students—undergraduate or graduate—could also be published in this archive. Finally, the repository contains the videos of two lectures delivered by prof. García May in October and November 2013, available for free download.
The creation of this repository was overseen by Arlene Johnson, Associate Senior Librarian and Digital Humanities Strategist, and Nathan Tallman, Assistant Librarian and Digital Content Strategist, in collaboration with prof. Pérez-Simón. This is a project of interdisciplinary nature and global scope, two pillars of the UC2019 Strategic Plan.
Using 400 videos this audio eBook explains the physics and physiology of sound, the history of audio recording, analog and digital hardware, microphones and signal processing, and how musical instruments produce sound.
Images of marine organisms, invertebrate and vertebrate animals, and plants, and environments, gathered in my research in the tropical Western Atlantic and tropical Pacific oceans. These are mostly underwater photographs taken as 35 mm images by me and several colleagues. Images are grouped by geographic locality, then taxonomic group. Data are provided on taxonomic identification, exact location, date, photographer, water depth, publications, and relevant information. The image displayed is a jpeg, and in addition, there is a tif file of approximately 20 MB which can be provided upon request. Contact me at david.meyer@uc.edu. Currently available images are of comatulid crinoids from 8 localities in the Tropical Western Atlantic and 8 in the Indo-West Pacific. Since there are 421 images the contents list will take a short time to appear.
Data sets for in-vivo imaging and ablation of rabbit liver with VX2 tumor, using image-treat ultrasound arrays, with and without ablation control by echo decorrelation imaging.
Scholarship and best practices about the global partnership in higher education: campus internationalization, global learning, strategic partnership, intercultural communication, etc.
Scholarship and best practices about global library services:
- library service to global users
- library partnerships
- library's contribution to the campus internationalization
- hosting visiting scholars
This collection contains air quality data collected from five air monitoring sites in Eastern Ohio located in two cities - Marietta, Ohio and East Liverpool, Ohio.
This collection holds the webinars and related files sponsored by the Research Data Access and Preservation Association for the following academic years. Website for RDAP - https://rdapassociation.org/
2019-2020
The School of Information Technology (SoIT) at the University of Cincinnati hosts the Information Technology Research Symposium on an annual basis as a forum for the exchange and dissemination of research ideas through the IT EXPO. The 2019 symposium was held on April 11, 2019 and this collection features the digital proceedings of presentations. The primary purpose of the symposium is to exchange research ideas among graduate students, faculty, industry, and practitioners involved in IT research in our field. IT research topics may range from state-of-the-art system development to recent progress in scientific endeavors that are theoretical or applied areas of Information Technology, such as advanced storage technologies, computer-mediated communication, cloud computing, cybersecurity, data analytics, Internet of Things (IoT), IT infrastructure, mobile security, interactive gaming, technologies for smart and connected cities, and user-centered design.
The School of Information Technology (SoIT) at the University of Cincinnati hosts the Information Technology Research Symposium on an annual basis as a forum for the exchange and dissemination of research ideas through the IT EXPO. The 2020 symposium was held on April 14, 2020 and this collection features the digital proceedings of presentations. The primary purpose of the symposium is to exchange research ideas among graduate students, faculty, industry, and practitioners involved in IT research in our field. IT research topics range from state-of-the-art system development to recent progress in scientific endeavors that are theoretical or applied areas of Information Technology, such as cybersecurity, data analytics, Internet of Things (IoT), IT infrastructure, interactive gaming, technologies for smart and connected cities, and user-centered design among others.
This webinar series is an informational series focused on making the most impact with research scholarship. Changes in funder requirements make data sharing a requirement for most types of research data. These five sessions focus on how to make data sharing a bonus to individual researchers and their overall publishing profile while benefiting the greater research community.
The materials included in this collection support the research article, DATA-INFORMED TOOLS FOR ARCHAEOLOGICAL REFLEXIVITY: EXAMINING THE SUBSTANCE OF BONE THROUGH A META-ANALYSIS OF ACADEMIC TEXTS
Orville Simpson was an amateur artist, city planner, and architect that developed a conceptual utopian city called “Victory City.” This archive spans six decades with materials created by Simpson that are comprised of: sketches, architectural plans, building models, letters, photographs, and manuscripts that offer detailed insight into Simpson's process of creating Victory City.
[insert link to website]
All inquiries regarding reproduction or use of any written documents or images should be directed to the Simpson Center for Urban Futures: simpsoncenter@uc.edu
Written correspondence to and from Orville Simpson that regard development, inquiries, and promotional outreach of Victory City.
***Inquiries regarding reproduction or use of any written documents or images should be directed to the Simpson Center for Urban Futures: simpsoncenter@uc.edu
Victory City handbook made by Orville Simpson that gives a detailed outline of the mission statement, function of building and community, and living conditions.
Technical aspects of how to build different components of Victory City and its purpose/function.
***Inquiries regarding reproduction or use of any written documents or images should be directed to the Simpson Center for Urban Futures: simpsoncenter@uc.edu
Conceptual hand drawings of architectural plans and building models of different components of Victory City.
***Inquiries regarding reproduction or use of any written documents or images should be directed to the Simpson Center for Urban Futures: simpsoncenter@uc.edu
These collections include senior capstone project reports for programs in the College of Engineering and Applied Science (CEAS). Most CEAS programs require senior-year students to complete a capstone project. These extensive research projects represent a culmination of their academic and professional experience.
The CEAS Library manages publishing services for senior capstone project reports. Current years of reports are posted in the Scholar@UC repository. Access information for senior capstone reports in earlier years is at https://libraries.uc.edu/libraries/ceas/services/senior-design-reports.html .
Seniors at the University of Cincinnati in the College of Engineering and Applied Science have an opportunity to complete a senior design capstone course, working on real industrial problems of practical importance. Selected senior design capstone reports are chosen for publication in Scholar@UC. Older senior designs are available in print form. More information is at the senior design information page: https://libraries.uc.edu/libraries/ceas/services/senior-design-reports.html.
Seniors at the University of Cincinnati in the College of Engineering and Applied Science have an opportunity to complete a senior design capstone course, working on real industrial problems of practical importance. Selected senior design capstone reports are chosen for publication in Schoar@UC. Older senior designs are available in print form. More information is at the senior design information page: https://libraries.uc.edu/libraries/ceas/services/senior-design-reports.html.
Seniors at the University of Cincinnati in the College of Engineering and Applied Science have an opportunity to complete a senior design capstone course. Seniors in the Environmental Engineering program work with external clients on real industrial problems of practical importance. Selected senior design capstone reports are chosen for publication in Scholar@UC. More information on all senior design reports is at: https://libraries.uc.edu/libraries/ceas/services/senior-design-reports.html.
This collection of three works contains the data sets supporting the publication "Convergence in Viral Epidemic Research: Using Natural Language Processing to Define Network Bridges in the Bench-Bedside-Population Paradigm" submitted to the Harvard Data Science Review in November 2020.
The authors were Margaret Powers, Erin McCabe, Sally Luken, Danny Wu, Philip Hagedorn, Ezra Edgerton, Amy Koshoffer, Dorcas Washington, Suraj Kannayyagari, Jennifer Latessa, and James Lee.
The Workshop is an online platform where members of the public offer their own responses to artworks and other content included in the exhibition Hank Willis Thomas: All Things Being Equal... Many of the voices in the Workshop belong to Greater Cincinnatians who are Black, Indigenous, or people of color. Responses will accumulate throughout the run of the exhibition, and will remain online after the exhibition closes.
The explanatory texts that appear on the walls of the museum are customarily written by curators, who balance factors including the artist’s point of view, institutional expectations, their own training and perspective, and the need to communicate with members of the public. Most but not all of the curators who wrote the explanatory texts in Hank Willis Thomas: All Things Being Equal... were trained in practices of social critique similar to those used by the artist, and are White. The purpose of the Workshop is to create space for more voices, views and ways of speaking about art to be heard.
This collection represents the presentations given on April 1, 2019 as part of the 4th annual UC Data Day that took place in the Tangeman University Center at the University of Cincinnati.
The collection contains all the presentations as power points if available or pdfs. However, access for some may be restricted to users with a UC 6+2 only.
Videos of the all presentations can be found on the STRC youtube channel at -
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cOl-ITkX1VQ – morning events
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I3f9vYaZfwE – afternoon events
The schedule for the day was:
Time
9:00 – 9:30 Opening Remarks - Great Hall TUC 465
9:30 – 10:30 Keynote: The NIH All of Us Research Program: Supporting Data-Powered Health for Researchers, Participants, and Communities Amanda Wilson
10:30 – 10:45 Break
10:45 – 12:15 Panel Session Health Equities/Disparities - Great Hall TUC 465
Panelists:
Reem Aly
Stef Murawsky
Dr. Sarah Pickle
Tammy Mentzel
12:15 – 1:30 Lunch Service Providers available for one-one discussion - Great Hall TUC 465
1:30 – 3:00 Panel Session Data Empowering Social Justice - Great Hall TUC 465
Panelists:
Theresa Culley
Brian Howe
Christopher Sullivan
Concurrent Power Session – TUC 400 B/C
Interactive mapping of social vulnerability caused by climate change using R
Facilitators:
Richard Johansen
Mark Chalmers
3:00 – 3:15 Break
3:15 – 4:15 Keynote: Big Data For or Against Health Disparities Deborah Duran Great Hall TUC 465
4:15 – 4:30 Closing Remarks Great Hall TUC 465
More information can be found at the event website - http://libapps.libraries.uc.edu/blogs/dataday/
Through narrative inquiry, preservice art educators in the School of Art at the College of Design, Art, Architecture, and Planning at the University of Cincinnati, use their own biographic narrative as data to understand the nature of their educational experience and to project a better approach to that educational experience in their futures. Through narrative inquiry, they regressively reflect on their own social positions and synthesize that with their analysis of current experiences in the art education field. These future art teachers present their process of narrative inquiry that has evolved into a viable curricular approach they hope to implement in their future classrooms or schools. By reflecting on their position, privilege (or lack of privilege), and biases and synthesizing that with their current experience in the art education field, they questioned situations and events that led to further research.
Goal: Identify students interested in Family Medicine to help target limited resources for their support
Research Question: Could artificial intelligence help identify students interested in or suited for Family Medicine?
Web site devoted to documenting and describing the Greater Cincinnati region's Modernist architecture, with a focus on the collection at the Design, Architecture, Art, and Planning Library at the University of Cincinnati.
DAAP THINKS is a collection of scholarly research and creative work from the faculty and graduate students in the College of Design, Architecture, Art, and Planning. Aside from conducting project based research, this collection also showcases other forms of scholarly research and creative work within the college; publications, research findings, artifacts, digital based applications, etc.
This work showcases the research, innovation and collaboration based on the five research areas within DAAP:
• Urban Systems
• Health & Wellbeing
• Creative Entrepreneurship
• Digital Culture
• Sustainable Living
https://daap.uc.edu/strategic-futures/research.html
The Cincinnati Romance Review is a peer-reviewed electronic journal published by the Department of Romance and Arabic Languages and Literatures of the University of Cincinnati. The journal was founded in 1981-82 and has been published electronically since 2008.
Recent issues of the Cincinnati Romance Review are available at: http://www.artsci.uc.edu/crr.html.
Betweenness centrality is a measure of centrality in a network based on shortest paths.
The data files in this collection are for datasets:
Document Count: 5,000 documents
Corpus: (one of) Caselaw (cas) / Pubmed Abstracts (pma) / Pubmed Central (pmc)
Search Term: (one of) Climate / Earth / Environmental / Pollution
Networked Models at Topic Counts: 15, 20