Certificate in Digital Humanities
In our increasingly digitized world, the question isnāt whether to use digital technology, but how. 51²č¹Żās Graduate Certificate in Digital Humanities offers a coordinated curriculum that is feasible for graduate candidates to complete alongside existing degree requirements.
Certificate Overview
Institutions of higher education, as well as employers in many other sectors, recognize that digital humanities skills such as text analysis, mapping, and coding have transformative potential. 51²č¹Żās Graduate Certificate in Digital Humanities combines interdisciplinary methodological training with discipline-specific coursework to provide students with training and institutional recognition of their accomplishments in this fast-growing field.
A joint effort of the History and English Departments and the Boston College Librariesā Digital Scholarship Group, the program offers M.A. and Ph.D. students the opportunity to diversify their skill-sets and produce projects such as digital archives, data visualizations, online exhibits, and scholarly websites. This project-based approach puts a premium on collaboration and interdisciplinary inquiry. In the process, Certificate holders will enhance their employment prospects in both traditional academia as well as in publishing, government, museums, libraries, archives, and otherĀ professional fields.
Eligibility
Students wishing to pursue the Graduate Certificate in Digital Humanities must first be enrolled in a graduate degree program at Boston College. They will be able to pursue coursework in accordance with their preparation under any of the following disciplines:
- Classical Studies
- English
- History
- Economics
- Political Science
- Philosophy
- Psychology
- Romance Languages and Literatures
- Slavic and Eastern Languages and Literatures
- Sociology
- Theology
Admission will be open to all interested graduate students with approval from their graduate advisor.
Requirements
The curriculum for the certificate program consists of three courses:
- HIST/ENGL 7888: Graduate Colloquium: Digital Humanities, introductory course
- One relevant course within the home departmentĀ
- HIST/ENGL 8275 Capstone: Digital Humanities as Public Scholarship, a capstone course conducted under the auspicesĀ of the Libraries' Digital Scholarship Group (third year for doctoral students, second year for MAs)
The introductory course covers methodological aspects of the digital humanities, giving students the technical skills needed to do independent digital scholarship. The departmental course will allow students to apply these skills to discipline-specific work as they complete a digital project agreed to in advance with the course instructor. The capstone course will give students a chance to create a larger-scale work of digital scholarship, perhaps in collaboration with other students in the program, which they can use as part of a portfolio to demonstrate their abilities to potential employers.
Procedures
Interested graduate students should contact the program director as early as possible in their graduate studies. They will need to take the introductory course in the digital humanities and get approval from their departmental advisor to enroll in the program. Because the certificate is interdisciplinary, drawing from the course offerings of other departments, students must plantheir schedules accordingly to ensure that approved electives are offered and can be taken by the time of graduation. For more information, please contact the program director at: DHCertificate@bc.edu
Required Courses, 2023ā2024
Course Number | Course Title | Instructor |
---|---|---|
HIST7888 (Fall 2023) | Graduate Colloquium: Digital Humanities | Weiskott |
HIST8275 (Spring 2024) | Capstone: Digital Humanities as Public Scholarship | Lehman |
Electives, Spring 2024
Affiliated Faculty
Marilynn Johnson
History
Library
Joe Nugent
English
MarĆa de los Ćngeles Picone
History
Christy Pottroff
English
Dana Sajdi
History
Library
Eric Weiskott
English