Publishing Schedule


September

First cycle of posts in a personal introduction. It is an opportunity for fellows to introduce themselves to the wider community. While you are welcome to talk about your areas of interest in the fellowship (possibly with a general discussion of which direction your final project might take), you will get an opportunity later on in the semester to talk in great detail about your fellowship project.

October

Second cycle of posts - fellows are given the choice of two topics. First, write on the importance and relevance of version control in cultural heritage projects. Second, write on the experience of creating a digital component for a cultural hertigae institution.

December

Post your project introduction. Should be done in concert with the submission of your project proposal. The project intro post is part of the fall reporting requirements that will trigger the disbursement of your spring fellowship funds.

March

Third cycle of posts - report back on your project progress, what has worked, what has not worked, and how the project is progressing.

May

The final post (which is scheduled for the week after all projects are scheduled to be launched) should be your “launch post.” Take this post to introduce your launched project, discuss the process of development, talk about future plans, etc.