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The archive from the former ITV Border TV channel has been made available for academic use through an online, searchable website. This powerpoint presentation gives an idea of how Border TV resources could be used within your academic research and teaching.
A powerpoint presentation discussing how to use powerpoint hyperlinks within a lecture to enable the direction of the lecture to be led by student needs.
This powerpoint presentation from a workshop on 'teaching visual sources' discusses how to encourage students to think critically about visual images and how to increase awareness of how they could have been read differently in the past.
This collections includes video footage from the HumBox project peer review workshop, held in September 2009; partner presentations from the final partner meeting in February 2010 and a promotional video devised for dissemination. The video's are in mp4 format.
During the final HumBox project partner meeting in February 2010, each partner gave a presentation about the key points of their engagement with the project. This mp4 video is a recording of Opinderjiy Kaur Takhar's presentation and is approximately 5 minutes long.
During the final HumBox project partner meeting in February 2010, each partner gave a presentation about the key points of their engagement with the project. This mp4 video is a recording of Julie Watson's presentation and is approximately 5 minutes long.
During the final HumBox project partner meeting in February 2010, each partner gave a presentation about the key points of their engagement with the project. This mp4 video is a recording of Margaret Tejerizo's presentation and is approximately 5 minutes long.
During the final HumBox project partner meeting in February 2010, each partner gave a presentation about the key points of their engagement with the project. This mp4 video is a recording of Antonio Martinez-Arboleda's presentation and is approximately 5 minutes long.
During the final HumBox project partner meeting in February 2010, each partner gave a presentation about the key points of their engagement with the project. This mp4 video is a recording of Sarah Hayes' presentation and is approximately 5 minutes long.
During the final HumBox project partner meeting in February 2010, each partner gave a presentation about the key points of their engagement with the project. This mp4 video is a recording of Emmanuel Godin's presentation and is approximately 5 minutes long.
During the final HumBox project partner meeting in February 2010, each partner gave a presentation about the key points of their engagement with the project. This mp4 video is a recording of Michael Pidd's presentation and is approximately 5 minutes long.
During the final HumBox project partner meeting in February 2010, each partner gave a presentation about the key points of their engagement with the project. This mp4 video is a recording of Robert O'Toole's presentation and is approximately 5 minutes long.
During the final HumBox project partner meeting in February 2010, each partner gave a presentation about the key points of their engagement with the project. This mp4 video is a recording of Michael Jardine and Matthew Sauvage's presentation and is approximately 5 minutes long.
During the final HumBox project partner meeting in February 2010, each partner gave a presentation about the key points of their engagement with the project. This mp4 video is a recording of Billy Brick's presentation and is approximately 5 minutes long.
This short video guide looks at some of the issues involved in setting up resources effectively and reviewing resources for comment: connected processes in enabling users to find, use and repurpose teaching materials.
This checklist was devised by the project team to help users consider resource uploading and reviewing effectively: the layout of the resource, how best to describe it, and the importance of metadata.
This 3-minute video was devised to help promote HumBox amongst colleagues, and at dissemination events. It includes brief interviews with two partners about why they got involved in the project and what they have got out of it, along with information and screenshots of HumBox itself. In wmv format.
The HumBox project partners held a two-day peer review workshop in September 2009 to advance the project, concentrating particularly on peer review. The recorded highlights of this fifth and final last 10 minutes, in wmv format. The discussions reflect partner thoughts on sustainability of the repository and how to disseminate the advantages of using HumBox effectively.
The HumBox project partners held a two-day peer review workshop in September 2009 to advance the project, concentrating particularly on peer review. The recorded highlights of this third session last for under 6 minutes, in wmv format. The discussions reflect partner thoughts on the attributes of the online space that will benefit colleagues and how project partners can engage them.
The HumBox project partners held a two-day peer review workshop in September 2009 to advance the project, concentrating particularly on peer review. The recorded highlights of this second session have been divided into 2 parts, lasting 8 and 6 minutes respectively, in wmv format. The discussions reflect partner thoughts on peer reviewing in the context of the workshop and the project.
The HumBox project partners held a two-day peer review workshop in September 2009 to advance the project, concentrating particularly on peer review. The recorded highlights of this first session have been divided into parts, just under 5 and 9 minutes long respectively, in wmv format. Together they reflect the discussions held on the importance and practicalities of reviewing resources in HumBox.
Resources reviewed and commented on during the project
Image if a dig site
This pdf is derived from a seminar resource webpage from a core history undergraduate module looking at daily life in early modern society as part of the European World, 1500-1750. It includes hyperlinks to core resources, in the form of texts and images in a clear, reusable format.
This pdf is derived from a seminar resource webpage from a core history undergraduate module looking at the European World, 1500-1750. It includes hyperlinks to core resources, in the form of texts, audio and images in a clear, reusable format.
This series of podcast lectures (from the British Parliamentary and Electoral Politics undergraduate module at the University of Warwick) provide an introduction to British political culture in the long eighteenth century from the Glorious Revolution to the Great Reform Act. This period has long been the subject of fierce debate by historians who have put forward competing interpretations on the nature of government and representation; on the democratic impulse; and on the extent of popular participation in political life.
This series of lecture podcasts (from the School of Comparative American Studies at the University of Warwick) examines English colonies in North America from their establishment in the early seventeenth century to their break away from Britain in the 1770s. They discuss why the English felt the need for colonial expansion in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, why they chose North America and how they went about creating new societies three thousand miles from home.
A podcast lecture on British parliamentary and electoral politics, 1688-1832: electoral politics in the age of reform
A podcast lecture on British parliamentary and electoral politics, 1688-1832: Whigs and tories, 1780-1832
A podcast lecture on British parliamentary and electoral politics, 1688-1832: Burke, Paine and Wollstonecraft
A podcast lecture on British parliamentary and electoral politics, 1688-1832: The French Revolution and British Politics
A podcast lecture on British parliamentary and electoral politics, 1688-1832: print and politics
A podcast lecture on British parliamentary and electoral politics, 1688-1832: radicalism, 1760-90
A podcast lecture on British parliamentary and electoral politics, 1688-1832: George III and the politicians
A podcast lecture on British parliamentary and electoral politics, 1688-1832: The Age of Oligarchy, Jacobites and Opposition Politics
We look back now to the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries as the time of origins of modernity -commercial and industrial revolutions, demographic transition, imperial expansion, the rise of working-class and artisan radicalism, and the emergence of the bourgeois public sphere. But this time of origins and transitions was also cast in contradictions and conflict: riches and poverty; markets and slaves; gender divisions; private life and public virtue; consumers and criminals; enlightened rationalism and religious enthusiasm, oligarchic government and popular radicalism. The eighteenth century was the great time of possibilities, opportunities, new directions and identities, but no certainties of what these were to be. These podcasts provide an overview of these and other themes of a society creating itself anew.
This is a history field trip resource to explore different aspects of the Victorian city. The parts of Bradford explored are Little Germany, Undercliffe Cemetery, Saltaire and Manningham Mills. The resources uses embedded applications of 'Google maps' to enable the student to navigate and have some understanding of the city in advance of the field trip.
A podcast lecture on British parliamentary and electoral politics, 1688-1832: elections and voting behaviour in the first age of Party
A podcast lecture on British parliamentary and electoral politics, 1688-1832: politics in the age of Anne
A podcast lecture on British parliamentary and electoral politics, 1688-1832: the revolutions of 1688-9
A podcast lecture on British parliamentary and electoral politics, 1688-1832: an introduction to eighteenth century politics
A podcast lecture on Georgian Britain: the print culture
A podcast lecture summary on Georgian Britain: patrician and plebeian
A podcast lecture summary on Georgian Britain: a discussion on gender
A podcast lecture summary on Georgian Britain: the public and the private.
A podcast lecture summary on Georgian Britain: Enlightenment and scientific culture
A podcast lecture summary on Georgian Britain: slavery and abolition
A podcast lecture summary on Georgian Britain: luxury goods, consumerism and colonial commodities
A podcast lecture summary on Georgian Britain: the domestic impact of the Napoleonic Wars
A podcast lecture summary on Georgian Britain: the 'second British Empire'
A podcast lecture summary on Georgian Britain: imperial identities, the 'first British Empire'.
A podcast lecture summary on Georgian Britain:war and state formation
A podcast lecture summary on Georgian Britain: the electoral system
A podcast lecture summary on Georgian Britain: radicalism and reactions to the French Revolution
A podcast lecture summary on Georgian Britain: political identity and popular protest - Whigs, Jacobitism, Excise Crisis.
A podcast lecture summary on Georgian Britain: religious identity - anti-Catholicism, the Church of England and dissent
A podcast lecture summary on Georgian Britain: the seventeenth century legacy and the uses of the past.
Parliament in Crisis: Professor Mark Knights chairs a podcast discussion on Parliament in 1832 and 2009, with Dr Joe Hardwick and Dr Sarah Richardson
An Early American Social history audio-lecture on the crisis of empire, 1763-1776
An Early American Social History audio-lecture on joining the empire, 1690-1763.
An audio-visual lecture presentation on the history of fashion: the age of renunciation, men without fashion.
An Early American Social History audio-lecture on slave societies
An Early American Social History audio-lecture on culture and leisure in the period
An Early American Social History audio-lecture on domesticity and gendered lives at home
An Early American Social History audio-lecture on issues of gendeer in the work environment
An Early American Social History audio-lecture on the religious revivals in 1700-1775
An Early American Social History audio-lecture on the Glorious Revolution of the 1680s
An Early American Social History audio-lecture on Bacon's rebellion anf King Philip's War in the 1670s.
An Early American Social History audio-lecture on the development of New England Society to 1660
An Early American Social History audio-lecture on the development of Chesapeake Society to 1660
An Early American Social History lecture on the native american response to migration and settlement
An Early American Social History lecture on migration and settlement in Virginia
An Early American Social History lecture on the origins of empire, Ireland, roanoke, 1550-1600
An early american social history lecture on 'Two different worlds, England and America 1500-1600'
David Fearn and Andrew Laird of Warwick's Classics department discuss the vagaries of epic poetry.
Kevin Butcher and Stanley Ireland of Warwick's Classics department discuss the fascinating story of money in the classical world.
Powerpoint slides to aid the criticism and review of the Hollywood movie LA Confidential and its genre
Powerpoint slides to aid the criticism and review of the Hollywood movie 42nd Street and its genre
a critical assessment of the movie LA Confidential, and genre, including movie clip
A critical assessment of the movie 42nd Street looking at the genre of women in movies. The resource looks at how movies offer women modern but often conflicting models and the impact of the American Depression. The presentation lasts for 4 mins, 25 secs, including movie clip.