News
Donor Wall Display
September 6, 2012
Donors now have their name in lights in the new display at the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media.
Providing free access to primary sources, building high-quality online teaching modules, and offering instruction on critical thinking skills.
Developing publications and applications to define digital humanities for a new generation of scholars, librarians and museum professionals.
Bringing history to audiences worldwide by collecting digital records, archiving documents of the past, and presenting historical exhibits.
Supported by the Department of Education, teachinghistory.org is a central online location for accessing high-quality resources in K-12 U.S. history education.
September 6, 2012
Donors now have their name in lights in the new display at the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media.
Each year, the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media’s many project websites receive over 16 million visitors, and more than a million people rely on its digital tools to teach, learn, and conduct research. Your donation helps us sustain these resources. Thanks!
Digital history is an approach to examining and representing the past that takes advantage of new communication technologies such as computers and the Web. It draws on essential features of the digital realm, such as databases, hypertextualization, and networks, to create and share historical knowledge.
Digital history complements other forms of history—indeed, it draws its strength and methodological rigor from this age-old form of human understanding while using the latest technology.