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: Hypothesis Annotation in Your LMS, Now With Gradebook Integration

Watch the recording and download the slides from our 4 December 2019 webinar, where Hypothesis Director of Education Dr. Jeremy Dean demonstrated how to use collaborative annotation in your class to make student reading active, visible, and social, how these new gradebook integration capabilities work in various LMSs, and everything you need to know to […]

AnnotatED Summit at EDUCAUSE Learning Initiative 2020

The AnnotatED Summit at the EDUCAUSE Learning Initiative 2020 in Bellevue, Washington, USA was cancelled with ELI 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, but you can read more about the community-organized unconference that included a session on annotating the 2020 Horizon Report and read the collaborative document from the unconference.

Mark Up the Margin: AnnotatED Workshops at OLC Innovate 2020

To kick off the annual conference, Hypothesis held a free workshop on collaborative annotation with members of AnnotatED. This engaging, hands-on event sparked great ideas and generated practical takeaways for using collaborative annotation in the classroom and beyond. The reports we heard from practitioners in the field and the live annotation sessions with OLC Innovate […]

Liquid Margins 1: Piloting in a Storm: Adopting New Practices in a Pinch

Kyle Denlinger, Digital Pedagogy and Open Education Librarian at Wake Forest University, and Michael McGarry, Lead Instructional Technologist at California State University Channel Islands, share how they integrate new practices and tools — including Hypothesis collaborative annotation — at their institutions.

Liquid Margins 3: Primary Sources: Annotating History

Guests Alicia Maggard from Auburn University and Mary Klann from UC San Diego join Nate Angell from Hypothesis to talk about using collaborative annotation to engage students in active, visible, social discussion on history texts.