Events

Join our upcoming events.

In the world of social annotation, there’s always something new to learn and discover. The Hypothesis team leads and participates in a wide range of events – from insightful webinars to industry conferences. Follow along and join us to stay at the forefront of online collaboration.

Webinar: Custom Annotation Groups for Publishers With Hypothesis

This webinar focused on ways to use open, restricted, and private groups to support different annotation use cases with your publication using Hypothesis. Moderator Heather Staines, our former Director of Partnerships, explored how Hypothesis collaborates with publishers to support and host annotations that enable authors, editors, invited experts, and readers to engage in discussion directly […]

Webinar: Research on Annotation in English and Composition

Hypothesis held a webinar on Thursday, 9 May 2019, that brought together scholars to discuss current and future research on how annotation is being used in the English and composition disciplines, and what research shows — or could show — about the impact that digital collaborative annotation can have on student success. Watch the webinar […]

Future Trends Forum: Annotation

Annotating the Web for Education: Amanda Licastro from Stevenson University, Remi Kalir from the University of Colorado Denver, and Hypothesis Director of Education Jeremy Dean discuss collaborative web annotation in education on Bryan Alexander’s Future Trends Forum.

AnnotatED at OERizona and OpenEd 2019

We traveled to Glendale Community College in Glendale, Arizona, for OERizona, a free day-long workshop the day before the 2019 Open Education Conference (30 Oct–1 Nov), where participants engaged in […]

Hypothesis 101: Learn More About Social Annotation

In Hypothesis 101 on 3 Dec 2020, we’ll introduce the Hypothesis annotation tool and show how social reading can transform your classroom, making reading active, visible, and social.

Hypothesis 101: Learn More About Social Annotation

In Hypothesis 101 on 9 Dec 2020, we’ll introduce the Hypothesis annotation tool and show how social reading can transform your classroom, making reading active, visible, and social.