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This paper follows the process adopted by the Department of English, University of Colombo in
establishing Sri Lanka's first Digital Humanities (DH) laboratory. The DH laboratory seeks to create pedagogical practices which support learner wellbeing by reflecting on how our students, who operate within multiple technological divides, engage with the digital. As Drucker (cited in Svensson, 2016) posits, no tool is neutral; thus, even the tool of technology must be approached with methodological and epistemic awareness. Although technology is being used in the teaching-learning process (e.g. blended learning), it is mostly as an instrument and fails to speak the language of our students from the Born Digital generation (Palfrey & Gasser, 2008). In the Sri Lankan context, it is important to design pedagogical practices that contribute to creating effective learning environments. With the Born Digital generation of students, technology must be approached as a tool, a medium, as well as a subject (Svensson, 2016). The DH laboratory enables researchers to understand ways in which effective use of technology in the classroom can be reimagined. The paper identifies focus areas to be addressed in the DH laboratory, and analyses the policy level decisions taken in its creation, through an exploratory research design1 and a critical pedagogical approach. This will enable the re-imagining of technology in the classroom, which will in turn inform pedagogical practices. The various activities conducted through the lab, such as digital performances, lab sessions, and reading sessions, require a policy for an ethical practice. The paper is part of an ongoing discussion that attempts to document the process of dynamic
research in DH, specifically in setting up a DH lab in an institutional setting, where both the human
subject and the technology are in a state of constant flux |
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