Category: StoryMaps

  • Sticking Around: How Does Website Preservation Work?

    While the web is a great platform for creating interesting, unique, and innovative projects, there is also a risk that today’s technology will be obsolete and unusable in the near future. To keep my site up for as long as possible, I sat down with Katie Farr and Zach Sharrow from The College of Wooster…

  • …and we’re back!

    Hello and happy 2023! I just returned to campus and I am happy to be starting the spring semester tomorrow! Since my last blog post, you will see some changes to the site. Most obviously, I added a new section which made up the bulk of my work over winter break. This section, called “Ben…

  • End of November Updates, Postcoloniality on the Web

    Having just come back to Wooster from break, I am now closing out the first semester. As I’ve discussed in my earlier blog posts, the process of creating web content is iterative. As with many points in the semester, I’m starting to write and outline the third and final section of my website while also…

  • StoryMaps Continued: Additional Tools

    This week, I have continued to work on my StoryMap on Indigenous life in Wayne County, as well as cross-referencing and editing my website and the accompanying essay. I’m also looking forward to meeting with the Cultural Education for the Delaware Tribe of Indians, a second Delaware group in Oklahoma, to discuss my project and…

  • ArcGIS StoryMaps Skills

    Continuing from my last blog post, this blog post is going to discuss another technology platform that will be going into my final project, ArcGIS StoryMaps. While I briefly discussed my use of this platform in an earlier post. I now have a better idea of how I am going to use the tool to…