Roundtable Series: What Makes Podcasting Accessible? Session 1
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Roundtable Series: What Makes Podcasting Accessible? Session 1
Are you an active podcaster or an enthusiastic listener? Are you curious about how podcasts can be a tool for improving access in teaching, research, and other activities inside and outside the university? Join the Sheridan Libraries' Tabb Center for a series of roundtable conversations about accessible podcasting featuring creators from across Johns Hopkins and other universities.
The series is organized by Tabb Center/AGHI postdoctoral fellow Milan Terlunen, co-founder of the Humanities Podcast Network and host of the postcasts How To Read and In Sacred Spaces.
Session 1: Featured Speakers
- Aaron Henkin, Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics (playing god?, Out of the Blocks)
- Shruti Jain, Le Li, Mamen Rodriguez Galindo, Lisa Yun, Binghampton University SUNY (Immigrants Wake America)
Registration
FREE. Hybrid; in-person and online via Zoom.
Please note that speakers are subject to change without prior notice.
- Limited seats for in-person registration. Lunch will be provided.
- To request an accommodation or for inquiries about accessibility, please indicate your accommodations on the registration form or email tabbcenter@jhu.edu. Advance notice is necessary to arrange for some accessibility needs.
Related Events
March 10: Session 2 Featured Speakers
- Lindsay Smith Rogers, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health (Public Health on Call)
- Tamar Rodney, Johns Hopkins School of Nursing (On the Pulse)
March 26: Session 3 Featured Speakers
- Rahne Alexander, Johns Hopkins University Press (The Hopkins Press Podcast, The Projection Booth)
- Dylan Selterman, Johns Hopkins Krieger School of Arts and Sciences (A Bit More Complicated)
April 11: Session 4 Featured Speakers
- Robin McGinness, Johns Hopkins Peabody Institute (Max Q)
- Sarah Stern, Johns Hopkins Center for Indigenous Health (Indigenae)
- Ulrich Baer, New York University (Think About It, The Proust Questionnaire)
- John Plotz, Brandeis University (Recall This Book)
- Matt Seybold, Elmira College (The American Vandal)
The Winston Tabb Special Collections Research Center advances experimental and participatory research methods, public humanities scholarship, and collaborative approaches to knowledge creation that engage the distinctive collections and archives of the Sheridan Libraries & University Museums. Make a gift and support our work today.
Photo credit: Flickr