


Instructors: Dot Porter and Nicholas Herman
Are you a medievalist or early modernist? Are you a K-12 teacher with a unit on medieval or renaissance history? Are you a library science instructor who teaches history of the book? Do you teach history of science or mathematics? Do you ever wish that you had access to primary sources, manuscripts and printed books, to illustrate concepts covered in your classes?
Then you may be interested in a Virtual Classroom Visit! Since Spring 2016 we have offered Virtual Classroom Visits, featuring manuscripts and early printed books from our collections, and knowledgeable curators to introduce the items.
What is a Virtual Classroom Visit?
During a Virtual Classroom Visit, a curator at Penn will present books from our collection via Zoom. We can serve both in-person classes (if you have a large monitor or projector on your end), virtual classes (where every student joins individually), or a combination of both.

What kind of books might I show my class?
At Penn, we have a pretty good collection of medieval and renaissance manuscripts. Many of them are in Latin, and include a few Books of Hours, some Bibles, plus a small number of books in Middle English (including a Wycliffite Bible). We also have a very strong collection of secular books – medicine, philosophy, mathematics, astrology, astronomy, and many more – mostly later medieval and early modern, some non-Western, including extensive holdings in Sanskrit. We also have a collection of incunabula, and many other collections of early printed books. To find out more about what manuscripts and early printed books we have, click some of the links above or search and browse Find, our online catalogue (this link specifies as the location “Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books, and Manuscripts” – you can browse from there, and manuscript records include links to digitized copies when available). We have several book lists used for previous classes, and we’ll work with you to put together a list relevant to your class:
- Introduction to medieval manuscripts
- Books of hours
- Chaucer
- Global medieval studies
- History of science
- History of medicine
- Women and Middle English
- Medieval Justice and Law
Why should we have a Virtual Classroom Visit, rather than visiting books in our library or viewing scanned books online?
If your library owns items relevant to your class, you need to take your class to your local library! Your librarians will be happy to see you, and there is nothing that compares to the experience of a rare book in real life. For the same reason, if you don’t have access to books at your own library, while it’s not the same as viewing books in real life a Virtual Classroom Visit provides an object-centered view of the book that doesn’t come across in still images. While the resolution of the streaming video isn’t high (so it might be difficult to make out text, especially if it’s quite small), you can really get a sense of the size and “heft” of books, see how they move, even hear them, all things that are more or less obscured by digitization.
Sounds interesting. How do I find out more?
If you are interested in the possibility of a Virtual Classroom Visit, now or in the future, please email curator Dot Porter at dorp@upenn.edu. Be aware that due to time constraints, we are only scheduling one Video Classroom Visit a week so early booking is important. Since we present Coffee With A Codex on Thursdays, we are not booking Virtual Classroom Visits on Thursdays.
You my also be interested in our video orientations or our ongoing series Coffee With A Codex.