curator
Examples of curator in the following topics:
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Content Sourcing
- Boundless content is sourced from open educational resources and curated by subject-matter experts.
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Content Curation
- Content curators are the backbone of our content.
- When we're creating a new subject, adding new content to an existing subject, or updating an existing subject, content curators with deep subject-matter expertise are who we turn to to make the changes in our editing platform.
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The Market
- The key components of the art market are the gallery, curator, dealer, consultant, and collector.
- The important players in the art market are the gallery, curator, dealer, consultant, and collector.
- The curator is generally the manager of the gallery and the person who programs the space and organizes art shows.
- Curators at commercial galleries may have the responsibility of selling work, while those at museums generally maintain the organizational aspects of exhibitions.
- Summarize the roles of the gallery, curator, dealer, consultant, and collector in the art market
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Professional Services
- Then we work with our network of 400+ subject-matter experts (SMEs) to curate that content, and bring it up to a high standard approved by professors actively teaching in their field.
- If you want Boundless in your classroom, but we don't cover the subject you want to teach, we can build it out using our content curation process faster than any conventional publisher—think several weeks, not several months.
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How Boundless Content is Created
- Boundless content uses existing open resources as a starting point and is vetted and curated by our network of subject-matter experts.
- Boundless works with a network of 400+ subject-matter experts (SMEs)—professors, other educators, and people with or working toward their master's or PhD—to vet and curate sourced content.
- All content curation is thoroughly QAed by the Boundless Content Team.
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Building Community
- Boundless content is created and curated by a community of educators and subject-matter experts.
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Annotating Genomes
- Automatic annotation tools try to perform all of this by computer analysis, as opposed to manual annotation (a.k.a. curation) which involves human expertise.
- Other databases rely on both curated data sources as well as a range of different software tools in their automated genome annotation pipeline.
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Gender
- The following are only a few examples of important artists and writers who can be credited with making the movement more visible in culture: Judy Chicago, founder of the first known Feminist Art Program (in Fresno, California); Miriam Schapiro, co-founder of the Feminist Art Program at Cal Arts; Sheila Levrant de Bretteville and Arlene Raven co-founders of the Woman's Building; Suzanne Lacy and Faith Wilding, both participants in all the early programs; Martha Rosler Mary Kelly, Kate Millett, Nancy Spero, Faith Ringgold, June Wayne, art-world agitators The Guerrilla Girls; and critics, historians, and curators Lucy Lippard, Griselda Pollock, Arlene Raven, and Dextra Frankel.
- and critics, historians, and curators Lucy Lippard, Griselda Pollock, Arlene Raven, and Dextra Frankel.
- In 1996, Catherine de Zegher curated an exhibition of 37 great women artists from the twentieth century.
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Assessment Strategies
- By contrast, asking a student to put on a performance, to create a portfolio, or to curate an exhibition might well help gauge just how well students have understood the central concerns of the course.
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Who We Are
- These SMEs curate existing educational content that is available under an open license, vetting the accuracy and pedagogy of every piece, to ensure Boundless content presents only the highest-quality information.