Teaching and Learning via the Network
The Labyrinth
A World Wide Web Disciplinary Server
Project Number 04 - 1994
Deborah Everhart and Martin Irvine
Co-Directors of the Labyrinth
Georgetown University
1209 12th St. N.W.
Washington D.C. 20005
(202) 289-0423
Fax: (202) 687-5445
labyrinth@gusun.acc.georgetown.edu
Other Individuals And Organizations Associated With The Project
The Labyrinth International Advisory Board:
Patrick Conner, West Virginia University
U47C2@wvnvm.wvnet.edu
William Schipper, Memorial University, Newfoundland
schipper@morgan.ucs.mun.ca
Michael Neuman, Georgetown University
neuman@guvax.georgetown.edu
Penn Szittya, Georgetown University
pszittya@guvax.georgetown.edu
Peter Flynn, University College Cork, Ireland
pflynn@curia.ucc.ie
David Seaman, University of Virginia
dms8f@etext.lib.virginia.edu
Hoyt Duggan, University of Virginia
hnd@virginia.edu
Mary Wack, Washington State University
wack@wsuvm1.csc.wsu.edu
Stuart Lee, Oxford University
stuart@vax.ox.ac.uk
Marilyn Deegan, Oxford University
marilyn@vax.ox.ac.uk
The Labyrinth Georgetown Technical Support Team:
Jay Whittle (Systems support)
Scott Allen (Systems support)
BethAnn Bergsmark (Graphics and pedagogical tools)
Paul Mangiafico (World Wide Web and e-text support)
Michael Neuman (E-text and humanities computing support)
Abstract
The Labyrinth creates connections to universities, organizations,
libraries, and government agencies too numerous to list, providing
collaborative associations among diverse resource providers.
The Labyrinth is a global information network providing free,
organized access to electronic resources in medieval studies through a
World Wide Web (W3) Internet server at Georgetown University. The
Labyrinth's easy-to-use menus and hypertext links provide automatic
connections to databases, services, and electronic texts and images on
other servers around the world. In addition, the Labyrinth will include a
full range of new educational resources: an electronic library, on-line
forums, professional directories, on-line bibliographies, an "on-line
university" of teachers and scholars available for consultation via
e-mail or real-time "talk," and an archive of pedagogical tools. The
Labyrinth is an open-ended, interdisciplinary project and is designed to
grow and change with new developments in technology and in medieval
studies. This project not only provides an organizational structure for
medieval studies, but also serves as a model for similar, collaborative
projects in other fields.
The Labyrinth was officially opened to the public on May 2, 1994.
Our statistics of use, based on only one month's traffic (May 1994),
reveal that the Labyrinth is being used by a wide range of academics and
non-academics from 25 countries around the world. We have complete
records documenting all requests for Labyrinth files from the server at
Georgetown, and among the 9300 requests in the log, we can identify users
from educational, government, military, and commercial institutions and
organizations. The Labyrinth is reaching an enormous audience, and our
correspondence with an incredibly diverse range of interested people
demonstrates the great potential for developing World Wide Web
disciplinary servers for other subject areas.
Please feel free to explore the Labyrinth yourself. From Mosaic,
Lynx, or any other World Wide Web client, go to the URL
http://www.georgetown.edu/labyrinth/labyrinth-home.html
If you have questions about how to access or use a World Wide Web client,
or if you have questions about the Labyrinth itself, please contact us at
the address above.
The Labyrinth project represents a new form of outreach in
education and research that we encourage other institutions and
organizations to develop, and therefore our project is particularly
well-suited to the interests of the Coalition Working Group on Teaching
and Learning. World Wide Web technology creates unprecedented
opportunities for educators "to enrich scholarship and to enhance
intellectual productivity," and the Labyrinth provides a successful
example of how a W3 disciplinary server can be organized and developed to
make the best use of this technology. We have developed a collaborative
system whereby scholars, students, librarians, publishers, software
developers, and others around the world can not only access and use
Labyrinth resources, but also effectively add to these resources. For
example, we are working with university presses to make a larger
selection of academic texts, journals, and anthologies available on-line.
We are working with graduate students to develop student directories, a
register of dissertations in progress, and on-line forums. We are working
with professors who now offer courses not only in the classroom, but also
via the Internet. We provide connections to libraries around the world,
including small research libraries with specialized collections, and in
the near future will provide access to digitized images of manuscripts,
allowing scholars and students to do primary manuscript research even if
they lack the time and funding for travel to remote libraries and
collections. By coordinating our efforts with those of others who are
actively developing electronic resources, we have not only been able to
"do more with less," but in fact we have effectively built the Labyrinth
with almost no direct funding; we offer a world of resources with few
financial demands on our host institution.
The World Wide Web, with its hypermedia capabilities and
potential for sophisticated global networking, has expanded the
opportunities for research and pedagogy exponentially. We believe that it
is vital for us to shape the changes in our profession rather than being
overtaken by them, and as developers of a successful and highly
productive Web project, we would be pleased to share our experience with
others in the educational community.
Audio-visual requirements
Our presentation would be a live demonstration of the Labyrinth and World
Wide Web technology, and therefore we would require a 486 PC running
Windows with a direct Internet connection, Mosaic (free software), and an
overhead projection monitor.