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sharonmleon
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Sharon M. Leon | @sharonmleon
Best Practices Exchange | April 30, 2019
"In numerous cases, interviewees demonstrated their organization processes by showing the physical and digital “piles” of sources that made up a chapter. Many scholars had stacks of index cards, paper notes, and print-outs of sources organized by chapter. In one case, an interviewee showed the file boxes (representing chapters) with tabs (representing sections) containing individual index cards (representing notes or ideas) by which a book is being organized; another shared the bookshelf on which he kept his last book, with each chapter’s
Schonfeld and Rutner, ITHAKA S+R, 2012
https://sr.ithaka.org/publications/supporting-the-changing-research-practices-of-historians/
Sam Wineburg, “Thinking Like a Historian,” http://www.loc.gov/teachers/tps/quarterly/historical_thinking/article.html
Use URIs as names for things
Use HTTP URIs so that people can look up those names.
When someone looks up a URI, provide useful information, using the standards
Include links to other URIs. so that they can discover more things.
Tim Berners-Lee (2006),
Tim Sherratt