Archive for the ‘Manhattan’

Neighborhoods of New York
Professor: Joseph Berger
ITF: Madison Priest
Campus: Hunter College
URL: https://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/neighborhoodsofnyc/
Neighborhoods of New York is the result of research project undertaken by first year Macaulay Honors students at Hunter College, City University of New York (CUNY) under the supervision of Professor Joseph Berger and Madison Priest. This website showcases student groups' profiles of New York City neighborhoods. Students integrated images, video and sound, created timelines, and left room for "surprises and serendipities."
Posted on on May 20th, 2019 in
African American, All The Sites, audio, Chinatown, Chinese, Dutch, GoogleMaps, Greenwich Village, Hunter College, Irish, Italian, Joseph Berger, Madison Priest, Manhattan, Queens, Russian, video, WordPress, Year |
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The Peopling of New York City
Professor: George Gonzalez
ITF: Hamad Sindhi
Campus: Baruch College
URL: https://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/gonzalez19/
Class site for Professor George Gonzalez's IDC 3001H The People of New York. Site was used mainly for hosting the syllabus and reading materials, as well as for student essays on the readings.
Posted on on May 15th, 2019 in
African American, All The Sites, Baruch College, Chinatown, Chinese, Christian, East Harlem, George Gonzalez, Hamad Sindhi, Harlem, Irish, Italian, Jewish, Latino, Lower East Side, Manhattan, Mexican, WordPress, Year |
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Seminar Two
Professor: Grazyna Drabik
ITF: Andres Orejuela
Campus: City College
URL: https://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/20crossroads/
Students visited 20 crossroads on Broadway and Fifth Avenue. The stops began in lower Manhattan on Wall Street, and arrived at 181st Street in Washington Heights. The stops are arranged in order on the homepage of site, including the name of the street and neighborhood. For each entry, students wrote up a short post about their experience of the location and about the location itself.
Posted on on May 11th, 2019 in
African American, All The Sites, Andres Orejuela, Brazillian, Chinatown, Chinese, City College, Dominican, East Harlem, East Village, Grazyna Drabik, Greek, Greenwich Village, Harlem, Indian, Irish, Italian, Jewish, Korean, Latino, Lower East Side, Manhattan, Mexican, Morningside Heights, Muslim, Other, Upper East Side, WordPress, Year |
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NY State of Mine: We Are From New York
Professor: Charlene Floyd
ITF: Julie Fuller
Campus: Baruch College
URL: https://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/nystateofmine/
Charlene Floyd's class set out to learn about the ways in which New York public schools shape the lives of middle and high school students–their connections to the city in which they live, and their identities as New Yorkers. Her students collaborated to produce this digital book which reflects their ideas about what it means to be a New Yorker. They concluded the semester by visiting the Computer School in Manhattan to present the book to a group of middle schoolers.
Posted on on July 24th, 2018 in
2018, All The Sites, Baruch College, Brooklyn, Charlene Floyd, Julie Fuller, Manhattan, Other, Other, Queens, Staten Island |
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Hispanic/Latino Nueva York
Professor: Francisco Soto
ITF: Joseph Pentangelo
Campus: College of Staten Island
URL: https://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/soto2018/
Each student was randomly assigned a topic pertinent to the Cuban, Dominican, and Puerto Rican communities in NYC, including subjects as diverse as Avenue of the Americas and Santería. Each student made three posts on these topics, as they focused their attention from a general overview to a specific aspect that they found particularly interesting.
Posted on on June 11th, 2018 in
2018, African American, All The Sites, Brooklyn, Caribbean, College of Staten Island, Francisco Soto, Joseph Pentangelo, Latino, Manhattan, Other, Queens, Staten Island, WordPress |
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NYCROPOLIS
Professor: Peter Vellon
ITF: Amanda Matles
Campus: Queens College
URL: https://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/vellon18/
New York is dying. “But wait,” you say. “New York is dying? Impossible.” Sure, a visit to the Big Apple on any given day will yield sights of glass high-rises, bustling crowds of tourists and professionals, and shops with bedazzling variety: from classic bodegas to swanky yoga studios. But look closer. How can there be so many new skyscrapers and yet so many homeless? Why are trains on-time in Yorkville but not in Van Nest? And what on earth happened to the rent in Chelsea?
A visit to NYCropolis might leave you angry and frustrated with the current state of affairs. Good- that’s why we made it. The issues we researched relate to deep, unsolved problems in New York’s physical and social architecture. But our city is an amazing city, a feat of history that’s constantly reinventing itself. And we need you to be a part of its resurrection. Today, New York’s development conceals its death in essential areas. New life only comes when we stop treating the symptoms and start honestly working toward a cure. The more of NYCropolis you read, the more you will find that solutions to these problems don’t lie with the powers that be, but with the power of the people. Call your council member, join an advocacy group, and participate in Community Board meetings using your informed opinions. Turn this dying city into bright lights that inspire you and streets that make you feel brand-new.
-From the students of Honors 126, “The Peopling of New York,” Professor Vellon, and Amanda Matles
Macaulay Honors College and Queens College
Spring 2018
*With apologies to Jay-Z and Alicia Keys
Posted on on May 31st, 2018 in
2018, African American, All The Sites, Amanda Matles, Armenian, audio, Bay Ridge, Brighton Beach, Brooklyn, Bushwick, Caribbean, Chelsea, Chinatown, Chinese, Christian, East Asian, East Harlem, East Village, Flushing, GoogleMaps, Greenpoint, Haitian, Harlem, Indian, Irish, Italian, Jackson Heights, Jewish, Korean, Latino, Lower East Side, Manhattan, maps, Mexican, Muslim, Other, Other, Other, Peter Vellon, Polish, Queens, Queens College, Russian, video, Williamsburg, WordPress |
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The Peopling of NYC through Film
Professor: Robert Tutak
ITF: Frieda Benun
Campus: Brooklyn College
URL: https://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/tutak18/category/documentary-projects/the-community-i-dont-know/
For the final project, students were assigned to make a documentary film on the topic: "Their Community: The Community I Know the Least or Fear the Most"
The prompt:
Using journalistic, photojournalistic, and filmmaking tools, document the community that is most alien to you:
(1) Learn about the community and its members first hand; hear their story
(2) Confront your stereotypes, challenge your reservations & prejudice or confirm your fears
The students were encouraged to confront their own fears and/or prejudices by venturing out and delving deep into the feared/unknown community through interviews.
Note: A few of the interviews were secured with the promise that they would only be shown to the closed room of students in our class, as they feature incriminating (e.g. drug or crime-related) content. Those are password-protected.
Posted on on May 25th, 2018 in
2018, African American, All The Sites, Brooklyn, Brooklyn College, Frieda Benun, iMovie, Indian, Irish, Italian, Jewish, Korean, Latino, Manhattan, Mexican, Muslim, Other, Queens, Robert Tutak, Russian, Sikh, Staten Island |
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Podcasting the People of New York
Professor: Amy Weiss
ITF: Katherine Logan McBride
Campus: City College
URL: https://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/weiss17/podcasts/
Students created podcasts to address an historical question of their choosing about the inhabitants of New York City.
Posted on on June 6th, 2017 in
2017, All The Sites, Amy Weiss, Chelsea, Chinese, City College, East Asian, Greek, Greenpoint, Indian, Italian, Jackson Heights, Jewish, Katherine Logan McBride, Latino, Lower East Side, Manhattan, Muslim, Other, Other, Polish, Queens, video |
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Oral Histories: Becoming American
Professor: Nancy Aries
ITF: Julie Fuller
Campus: Baruch College
URL: https://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/becomingamerican17/
Students created multi-media oral history stories on each other and also on someone else they know. Their public facing projects integrated long-form text (based on personal interviews) with visual artifacts, audio, moving clips, graphs, maps, and timelines that clarify both the informant's story and the context of the immigrant group which this person represents.
Posted on on May 30th, 2017 in
2017, All The Sites, audio, Baruch College, Brooklyn, Caribbean, Chinatown, Chinese, Dominican, Flushing, Haitian, Harlem, Irish, Italian, Jewish, Julie Fuller, Korean, Lower East Side, Manhattan, maps, Nancy Aries, Other, Polish, Queens, Russian, Ukrainian, video, WordPress |
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Contested New York
Professor: Peter Vellon
ITF: Amanda Matles
Campus: Queens College
URL: https://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/vellon17/
This website is the hub for a collection of six digital projects that focus on several key points of socio-economic conflict, struggle, and tension in New York City from the post World War II period to the present.
It would have been great to coordinate link-backs to the hub site from each of the group project sites, but not all of the groups included one.
Posted on on May 22nd, 2017 in
2017, African American, All The Sites, Amanda Matles, audio, Brooklyn, Chinese, East Asian, Haitian, Hindu, Italian, Jewish, Latino, Manhattan, maps, Morningside Heights, Muslim, Other, Other, Peter Vellon, Queens, Queens College, Social Explorer, video, WordPress |
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Reading Between the skyLines
Professor: Moustafa Bayoumi
ITF: Kelly Eckenrode
Campus: Brooklyn College
URL: https://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/skylines/
Students divided into 7 groups and choose a language generally based on their ease with the language. The 7 groups included: Spanish, Japanese, Hebrew, Russian, African American, Arabic and Korean. Each group went to a bookstore that specializes in that language of literature. Students quickly learned that these stores are much more than deposits for books. Typically, the serve as a culture refuge to preserve culture of immigrants groups into the city. I thought it was a successful project.
For myself and the students, it was interesting to learn how different language prompted different interviews. Our most extreme example was the Arabic bookstore. The manger did not give consent to share their interview on the internet. What seemed like a snag initially–gave the students a moment to pause and reflect on seriousness of sharing stories of people. The students decided to re-frame their work to discuss Trump era problems.
Posted on on May 22nd, 2017 in
2017, African American, All The Sites, audio, Brighton Beach, Brooklyn, Brooklyn College, East Asian, East Harlem, GoogleMaps, iMovie, Jewish, Kelly Eckenrode, Korean, Latino, Manhattan, maps, Moustafa Bayoumi, Muslim, Russian, WordPress |
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Storefront Survivors
Professor: Mike Benediktsson
ITF: Christina Nadler
Campus: Hunter College
URL: https://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/storefrontsurvivors
This website is the result of a unique research project undertaken by first year Macaulay Honors students at Hunter College, City University of New York (CUNY) under the supervision of Mike Owen Benediktsson, Marnie Brady, Caroline Loomis, Christina Nadler, and Tommy Wu. The interviews, images, and research collected here were collected entirely by students, as part of their coursework for the People of New York City seminar, or Seminar II, an interdisciplinary class on the past and present of the city’s neighborhoods, with a focus on migration and immigration. In the last few years, elected officials and the media have begun to acknowledge the plight of small, independent businesses in the city. Blogs like Jeremiah’s Vanishing New York have called attention to the loss of valuable landmark institutions due to unregulated commercial rent markets and municipal rezoning. Local elected officials, including Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer, have put forth competing legislative measures that would seek to relieve some of the economic pressure faced by small business owners in the city. Attention to the precarious position of small business is growing. But is it enough? Explore our website to find profiles of small business owners across the city who are conducting their own individual struggles against the crosscurrents of economic, social, and policy change in the city.
Posted on on May 21st, 2017 in
2017, African American, All The Sites, Armenian, Brooklyn, Caribbean, Chinatown, Chinese, Christian, Christina Nadler, GoogleMaps, Harlem, Hunter College, Jackson Heights, Jewish, Lower East Side, Manhattan, Mexican, Mike Benediktsson, Muslim, Queens, Russian, Social Explorer, Upper East Side, WordPress |
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Here to Stay NYC
Professor: Lina Newton
ITF: Tommy Wu
Campus: Hunter College
URL: https://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/heretostaynyc/
This is a public-facing site for the class (in addition to a class site for administration). I'm using the Kerouac theme here and I have mixed feelings about it. Aesthetically, I think it looks great but there are also some bugs and limitations (if students don't want to use CSS). Overall, I would recommend it because the student groups took ownership of the site and spent a lot time perfecting their profile pages. They seemed to be proud of what they have produced. I think this would be a good example for future students.
Posted on on May 21st, 2017 in
2017, All The Sites, audio, Brooklyn, Caribbean, Chinatown, Chinese, Dominican, Flushing, GoogleMaps, Hunter College, Indian, Jackson Heights, Lina Newton, Lower East Side, Manhattan, maps, Mexican, Morningside Heights, Queens, Sunset Park, Tommy Wu, video, WordPress |
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Halal Carts: Behind the Scenes of a New Yorker's Lunch
Professor: David Rosenberg
ITF: Jacob Cohen
Campus: Baruch College
URL: https://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/halalcarts/
This site examines many of the issues that involve halal carts in New York City, with a focus specifically on the lives and work of the cooks, the owners and product suppliers, the customers, and the city bureaucracy that governs the carts. Students composed articles highlighting different issues related to these topics and immigration, and utilized the Himalayas theme with its one-page menu feature. Entries include photographs as well as recorded interview clips.
Posted on on May 20th, 2017 in
2017, All The Sites, audio, Baruch College, Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, David Rosenberg, Egyptian, Indian, Jackson Heights, Jacob Cohen, Manhattan, Muslim, Other, Queens, video |
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Becoming American
Professor: Nancy Aries
ITF: Kara van Cleaf
Campus: Baruch College
URL: http://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/aries16/
Students created oral history projects on each other and also on someone else they know.
Posted on on August 16th, 2016 in
2016, All The Sites, audio, Baruch College, Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, Buddhist, Chinatown, Chinese, Egyptian, Greek, Italian, Jewish, Kara van Cleaf, Korean, Manhattan, Muslim, Nancy Aries, Sunset Park, WordPress |
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Contested New York
Professor: Peter Vellon
ITF: Amanda Matles
Campus: Queens College
URL: http://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/vellon16/
Contested New York is a collection of digital essays that focus on several key points of socio-economic conflict, struggle, and tension in New York City from the post World War II period to the present. Our guiding questions were: Does NYC always “work,” and what happens when it does not? Our project was created during the Spring 2016 semester by students from the Macaulay Honors College at Queens College, Class of 2019, as part of the seminar course The Peopling of New York City.
Posted on on June 8th, 2016 in
2016, African American, All The Sites, Amanda Matles, audio, Bay Ridge, Brighton Beach, Brooklyn, Caribbean, Chinatown, Chinese, East Asian, Flushing, GoogleMaps, Haitian, Harlem, Jewish, Latino, Manhattan, maps, Other, Other, Other, Peter Vellon, Queens, Queens College, video, WordPress |
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Conflict and Coexistence in NY
Professor: Grazyna Drabik
ITF: Andrew Lucchesi
Campus: City College
URL: http://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/drabikgallery
This website focuses on the connections between personal storytelling and the deep repository of history connected to the New York City region. It is broken into three interrelated galleries: one contains objects from each author’s family history, as well as their personal reflections on how they see their relationship to history. The second and third galleries focus on New York City history, on iconic historical sites (which are mapped on an interactive Google Map) and on the historical and present-day figures associated with those sites. Readers of this website will see a complex, multi-layered representation of New York City, past and present–full of people, stories, objects, and an ever-changing urban background.
Posted on on June 1st, 2016 in
2016, African American, All The Sites, Andrew Lucchesi, City College, Dutch, GoogleMaps, Grazyna Drabik, Harlem, Irish, Jackson Heights, Jewish, Manhattan, Queens |
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Our Top 20 NYC Albums
Professor: Chris Bonastia
ITF: Rachel Bogan
Campus: Lehman College
URL: http://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/twentymostnycalbums/
Students in Chris Bonastia’s class examined social and political changes in NYC’s neighborhoods via NYC’s shifting music scenes. Using the 2014 Village Voice article, The 50 Most NYC Albums Ever, as inspiration, students chose one album and researched not only the artist/album, but also the space(s) the artist wrote about and where the artist performed.
The site’s purpose is to showcase each student’s artist/album analysis + to provide some collaborative aspect (the timeline!). Students wrote final papers and then turned their papers into blog posts, adding digital components. Good stuff: a few students created a timeline, showing the progression of albums. While they didn’t end up using TimelineJS, the timeline is the homepage’s focal point and is well-made and a strong asset to the site. Another student activated the plugin, Soundy Background Music, which allowed students to attach song(s) to their posts — this really added to the flavor of the site.
Posted on on May 23rd, 2016 in
2016, African American, All The Sites, audio, Brooklyn, Chris Bonastia, Lehman College, Manhattan, Other, Other, Queens, Rachel Bogan, Staten Island, video, WordPress |
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History Through Objects
Professor: Constance Rosenblum
ITF: Andres Orejuela
Campus: City College
URL: http://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/objects2016/
The students in Professor Rosenblum’s Seminar 2 participated in The Museum’s Your Stories, Our Stories project. For our final course site, students used the assignments they had prepared for that project, and added them to a site with the Aesop story engine, experimenting with different ways to present their stories.
Posted on on May 18th, 2016 in
2016, All The Sites, Andres Orejuela, Brooklyn, Chinese, City College, Constance Rosenblum, East Asian, Egyptian, Italian, Jewish, Manhattan, maps, Other, Other, Queens, Russian, WordPress |
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From Residences to Retail: The Commercialization of 57th Street
Professor: Richard Ocejo
ITF: Kevin Ambrose
Campus: John Jay
URL: http://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/57thstreet/
57th Street is a very dynamic street in New York City representing decades of architectural and commercial developments. As we make our way from the West Side of Manhattan towards the East, take note of the inherent differences that come to light, not only in the buildings along 57th Street but also in the people who make up the society of the area. The phases of New York City over the years can be found on this single street in Manhattan.
Posted on on September 29th, 2015 in
2015, All The Sites, GoogleMaps, John Jay College, Kevin Ambrose, Manhattan, maps, Richard Ocejo, video |
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Walking Wall Street
Professor: Richard Ocejo
ITF: Kevin Ambrose
Campus: John Jay
URL: http://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/walkingwallstreet/
A virtual tour of a changing neighborhood
Posted on on September 29th, 2015 in
2015, All The Sites, GoogleMaps, John Jay College, Kevin Ambrose, Manhattan, maps, Richard Ocejo, video |
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The Peopling of New York City
Professor: Rafael Mutis
ITF: Joseph Pentangelo
Campus: College of Staten Island
URL: http://peoplingofnyc.tumblr.com/
The Seminar 2 class was broken up into groups which each focused on a particular population’s role in the peopling of NYC: Native Americans, Greeks, Italians, Sri Lankans, and Jewish immigrants were covered. The site presents all posts in reverse chronological order, by default as an amalgamation of all groups, but each group also tagged their posts consistently, allowing the site to be navigated by simply clicking on one of the groups’ links. Posts are almost entirely original content, including photographs, interviews, and ethnic restaurant reviews. Students were engaged and posted regularly, and took to the ease of tumblr-use quickly.
Posted on on September 12th, 2015 in
2015, All The Sites, audio, Buddhist, College of Staten Island, Greek, Italian, Jewish, Joseph Pentangelo, Manhattan, maps, Other, Other, Queens, Rafael Mutis, Staten Island |
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NEW YORK: A CITY WITH NO LIMITS
Professor: Grazyna Drabik
ITF: Katherine Logan McBride
Campus: City College
URL: http://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/conflictandcoexistenceincosmopolis/
New York City is the city that never sleeps: its inhabitants run on the coffee served by cafes around every corner, but more than that, its history never sleeps. This city is the madness that courses through its veins. But it is also a single tapestry woven by diverse ideas and people. This is how we change throughout the course of hundreds of years: building, deconstructing, rebuilding. Today, this is our city.
This site represents both the discovery of NYC and its history by MHC CCNY First Year students in Professor Drabik’s class and also their reflections of their coursework, themselves as New Yorkers and the city they study in.
Posted on on September 12th, 2015 in
2015, African American, All The Sites, Chinatown, Chinese, City College, East Village, Grazyna Drabik, Irish, Italian, Jewish, Katherine Logan McBride, Lower East Side, Manhattan, WordPress |
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Exceptional NYC
Professor: Lina Newton
ITF: Christina Nadler
Campus: Hunter College
URL: https://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/exceptionalnyc/
This is a site created by Prof Lina Newton’s Seminar 2 course–the Peopling of New York City.
Students worked in groups throughout the semester to undertake research on 5 immigrant groups–Chinese, Haitian, Dominican, Russian and Mexican. In these posts you can find the key findings of the research, statistical profiles, and researched narratives on the history of the immigrant group’s migration & settlement.
Enjoy exploring the projects on the exceptional histories of NYC residents!
Posted on on September 11th, 2015 in
2015, All The Sites, audio, Brighton Beach, Brooklyn, Chinese, Christina Nadler, Coney Island, Dominican, Flushing, Haitian, Hunter College, Lina Newton, Manhattan, maps, Mexican, Other, Russian, Sunset Park, video, WordPress |
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The Peopling of New York City: Neighborhood Stories
Professor: Ellen Scott
ITF: Andres Orejuela
Campus: Queens College
URL: http://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/neighborhoodstories14/
This site conglomerates the individual sites that each student group made. One of the strengths of this approach was that students were not only able to design and think about their site’s organization, but also worked with tools that were new to them.
Posted on on June 4th, 2014 in
2014, African American, All The Sites, Andres Orejuela, Armenian, Brooklyn, Caribbean, Chinatown, Chinese, Christian, Ellen Scott, GoogleMaps, Greek, Harlem, iMovie, Indian, Italian, Jewish, Korean, Latino, Manhattan, Maps Marker, Mexican, Other, Other, Other, Queens, Queens College, Sikh, Swedish, Ukrainian, WordPress |
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New York Dreams
Professor: Constance Rosenblum
ITF: John Boy
Campus: City College
URL: http://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/nydreams/
An immersive storytelling site. The stories presented on this site tell of New Yorkers who chased their dreams — sometimes succeeding, sometimes not. These people traveled very different paths, but they have one thing in common: All of them sought to make a place for themselves in a big, complicated, challenging but often profoundly rewarding metropolis.
Posted on on May 28th, 2014 in
2014, All The Sites, audio, Brooklyn, Caribbean, Chinatown, Chinese, Christian, City College, Constance Rosenblum, Haitian, Harlem, Indian, Irish, Jewish, John Boy, Latino, Manhattan, Other, Other, Other, Queens, Russian, video, WordPress |
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Sounds and Scenes of New York City
Professor: Chris Bonastia
ITF: Ben Miller
Campus: Lehman College
URL: http://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/musicalnyc
A central landing site connects four subsites dedicated to musical “scenes” within NYC: Jazz, Latin, Disco, and Hip-Hop. All of these subsites share the same theme (Bushwick) and navigation, with pages for History, Music, Places, People, and Credits; the Genres tab and an image-mapped map allows for travel between them.
To create the site, students divided into five groups: one for each of the musical scenes, and one to work directly with the ITF on site-building skills like plugins, menus, iframes, and CSS. Members of the site-building team then acted as liaisons to the content groups; each group chose their own internal division of labor to produce or procure text, images (including maps), and sounds.
Posted on on May 22nd, 2014 in
2014, African American, All The Sites, audio, Ben Miller, Caribbean, Chris Bonastia, Harlem, Latino, Lehman College, Manhattan, maps, Maps Marker, Other, Other, Other, WordPress |
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What Happened When the Lights Went Out?
Professor: Philip Kasintz
ITF: Anton Borst
Campus: Hunter College
URL: http://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/downtownhurricanesandy/
This site, designed and built by a team of students, showcases the documentary projects Professor Philip Kasinitz’s seminar developed in small groups over the course of the semester. Each group was asked to investigate how the social history and social networks of a particulal lower Manhattan neighborhood shaped its inhabitants’ experience of and response to the immediate aftermath of Hurricane Sandy. It was a focused research question on a very relevant topic that gave students a lot of room to express their own point of view. Professor Kasinitz blocked off a considerable amount of time so that students could approach the project in stages throughout the spring: we led discussions and workshops on conducting interviews, planning through storyboarding and outlines, developing (and sticking to) a thesis, and, finally, how best to present the documentaries to the public. However, I think we both agreed that even more time could have been devoted to the project. In particular, I thought it would have helped if students had been asked to conduct more interviews and gather more material so they had a surplus of footage to choose from in telling more pointed stories. Bottom-line: to do even a 3-5 minute quality video takes A LOT of work and draws (or should draw) on many of the same skills as writing a research paper: namely planning, writing, gathering material, and developing a thesis or coherent point of view. As far as the site itself, I think the map navigation on the homepage is striking, attractive, and simple. I encouraged students to think about the first impression they wanted to make with the site, to think about how to ensure that visitors would quickly be able to understand what the site was about, who created it, and why it’s interesting–and I think they succeeded in that.
Posted on on January 15th, 2014 in
2013, All The Sites, Anton Borst, East Village, Hunter College, iMovie, Lower East Side, Manhattan, maps, Philip Kasintz, video, WordPress |
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The Peopling of New York City
Professor: Gabriel Haslip-Viera
ITF: Aaron Kendall
Campus: City College
URL: http://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/haslipviera2013/
Students investigated the role of immigration and migration in the shaping of New York’s identity – past, present, and future, through oral history interviews and neighborhood research projects. The projects were carried out individually and with little structuring, which made the website content too broad in my opinion. Next time around I would suggest the students do the project in groups and focus on a few particular issues related to immigration and migration.
Posted on on January 15th, 2014 in
2013, Aaron Kendall, African American, All The Sites, Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, Chinese, Christian, City College, Dominican, East Asian, Flushing, Gabriel Haslip-Viera, GoogleMaps, Greenwich Village, Harlem, iMovie, Irish, Italian, Lower East Side, Manhattan, Other, Queens, Staten Island, Upper East Side, video, WordPress |
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Making it in New York
Professor: Jackie Brown
ITF: Fiona Lee
Campus: Hunter College
URL: http://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/collectiveproject/
This website presents students’ findings and reflections on what they learned in addressing the question, What does it take to “make it” in New York? Popular media, as captured in the music of Frank Sinatra (“If I can make it here, then I can make it anywhere…”) and of Jay-Z and Alicia Keys (“New York/concrete jungle where dreams are made up/there’s nothing you can’t do/Now you’re in New York”), New York City is pictured as a city of endless opportunity for those who have what it takes. Working in groups, students explored the question from a range of perspectives: people who are or who have experienced homelessness; adult English language learners; workers handing out free newspapers at subway stations; subway commuters encountering solicitors; and Hunter College students on the topic of diversity.
Students opted to use Prezi to showcase their findings, a tool that worked especially well when they presented their research and website to their peers in person. For readers encountering the site on their own, the text accompanying the Prezi slideshows, as well as on the page explaining the overall theme of the project, is a helpful guide that ties together the wide range of perspectives presented. The header image, a modification of an image of the well known piece of graffiti art created by a student in the class, also captures the themes of struggle, defiance and fortitude reflected in the stories the class encountered in completing the project.
Posted on on January 14th, 2014 in
2013, All The Sites, Chinatown, Fiona Lee, Hunter College, Jackie Brown, Manhattan, Other, Upper East Side, video, WordPress |
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