We are a group of fourteen undergraduate students at Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania, enrolled in an Honors course – Introduction to Digital Humanities. As our final, in fitting with the themes that we have studied, we have been inspired (and, thankfully, allowed and encouraged) to draft, for the 4Humanities project, a manifesto.
DH Has Changed Us
We believe that teaching Digital Humanities to undergraduate students is critically important. Today’s college undergrads are part of a unique, new generation. We have been immersed in this new climate every day, surrounded by the digitization of the world, and yet most students probably know very little about the actual study of Digital Humanities.
So little is being done to truly integrate technology into new pedagogical practices. Teaching Digital Humanities to undergrads can be beneficial because it gives insight not only into the humanities but also into how the onset of technology has changed our world, and how we can change with it. Though learning Digital Humanities does not need, as a goal, to turn its students into scholars, it can prompt them to make their work a little more worthwhile.
The study of humanities is an art form, and if this is not passed on to the next generation, using the new tools that we are accustomed to and can use easily, the art form will be lost. As one of the few undergraduate DH classes, we feel that all undergraduates need to have a chance to experience this and to show the DH community the substantial contributions that we can make. Teaching DH to undergraduate students opens up a world of innovation that will enhance the study of the humanities.

Undergraduates should be learning about DH
Mark Bauerlein argues that “[Digital immigrants] want [us] to grow up and to blow [them] away […] but [they] just don’t see it happening” (see video from the PBS special, Digital Nation). In the chapter “Screen Time” from his book, The Dumbest Generation, Bauerlein further asserts that much of our time spent with digital media is more of an idle activity than a mind-expanding one. We’ve read and heard enough statistics this semester to know that he’s not just making this up. But what exactly are we doing wrong?
We’d like to argue that we haven’t done anything wrong; we’ve simply been misguided.
Technology can both inhibit and facilitate the learning process for undergraduates. It can serve as a tool for intellectual assignments or as a distraction; the latter of which gave us the title “Dumbest Generation.” If we, the digital natives, don’t want this designation, we need to harness this shift in our learning styles and knowledge. We need to show the digital immigrants that “our way” cannot be compared with the “old way” — it’s simply different.
As a class, DH opened our eyes to these implications of technology. This course exposed us to the effects of the digital world in each of our lives and society in general. We have learned that we are not less intelligent, but that we use knowledge and learn information differently than digital immigrants.
We need a different kind of education…
…and the Humanities needs interdisciplinary collaboration
Because it’s different for everyone. The science major approaches things differently than the literature major — this diversity is foundational to Digital Humanities.
The literary scholar will tell you what Howl means; the historian will give you context on the sociopolitical climate of the time; the chemist will test for drug residue on the original manuscripts; the computer scientist will create a Java-enhanced website; all of them will transcribe those manuscripts in TEI-XML; and none of this will be done alone.
Through our Digital Humanities experience, we’ve learned that Humanities is interdisciplinary and collaborative. To quote our About page: “In this course we’ll explore some of the new ways humanists are bridging the cultural divide by applying technologically-driven methods within the humanities.” Rather than fussing over a definition of DH, why not kick back and embrace its multifarious nature?
Conclusion
It is baffling why the concepts of DH are not being taught more broadly at the undergraduate level. Digital Humanities is about not only learning and accepting the digital ways of our world, but also about how to apply these strategies to our education. From our DH class, we found that DH isn’t easy to pin down/put a label on. It’s not a fact or a definition one can memorize. It’s not something that can be understood in 5 minutes- or even 5 weeks. It’s something that is on a completely different level than any other subject or idea. It’s real. It’s relatable. It’s understandable. It’s intellectual. It’s sophisticated. It’s essential.
If we could take all of these thoughts and ideas from a course we were so unsure of in the beginning, imagine what college students in the future could contribute.




it’s weird how there are 15 likes because I just got on and didn’t like it yet…
I was the 15th like — I wonder if another student used the anon login to add a like… Did you add the 16th like?
yes
I added likes for myself, Ken and Erik. It’s possible Erik added his own like later. I also had to hit thumbs-up twice for Erik’s to work, so it’s possible that it registered more than one.
I do feel the lack of a picture of me with Erik in a head lock takes away from the overall post.
However, I feel this is something that we can all be very proud of, congratulations to all.