The Public Library Partnerships Project

Public Library Partnerships Project

In April 2014 the Public Library Partnership Project (PLPP) launched its first one-day workshop. Since then the project has continued to mature and affect public libraries across the country.

Four Digital Public Library hubs are spearheading this project for the Digital Public Library of America (DPLA). These hubs include Digital Commonwealth, Digital Library of Georgia (DLG), Minnesota Digital Library, and Mountain West Digital Library. All four of these hubs have hosted multiple one-day workshops to teach public librarians the fundamentals of digitization and to connect participants to resources for further assistance.

The goal of the PLPP, which is funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, is to train public librarians in digital technologies, and to digitize their content so that more people can have access to their archival materials. Ultimately the PLPP will produce two online exhibits per hub. The digitized content from public libraries in the area will provide visual context for these exhibits. This will be a way to globally showcase the materials kept in public libraries around the country.

The Role of the Digital Library of Georgia

As a DPLA hub, the Digital Library of Georgia (DLG) plays a major role in training librarians around the state and digitizing their local content.

The DLG has already hosted three workshops for librarians. The first workshop was held in Macon, the second in Savannah, and the third in Augusta, Georgia. A total of 45 librarians attended these conferences where they learned digitization techniques and best practices.

Since these trainings the DLG has been planning and performing site-visits to libraries around the state. At these visits staff from the DLG pick up suitable materials for the PLPP project and bring them back to be digitized at the DLG office. So far, the DLG has completed 7 site-visits and come away with a total of 1715 objects to be digitized. Additionally, digitization has just begun on the first collection.

What’s Next…

The DLG will continue site-visits through early 2015 and digitization will continue through the spring of next year.  Once the digitization has been completed the DLG will begin collaborating with public librarians to create two online exhibits that showcase the materials. These exhibits will be completed by October of 2015. The DPLA will host these online exhibits, which librarians can link to from their own public library website. The ultimate goal of this project is to publicize the valuable archival collections held by public librarians around the country through these online exhibits.

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Digital Library of Georgia staff at 2014 fall conferences

Recently, Digital Library of Georgia staff have attended and/or presented at fall conferences that have taken place in Georgia.

 

Georgia Council for the Social Studies

GeorgiaInfo site administrator Charly Pou attended the Georgia Council for the Social Studies annual conference held in Athens, Georgia October 16-17.

The Georgia Council for the Social Studies mission is to advocate for, support, and celebrate the advancement of quality social studies teaching for Georgia students.

At this conference, Charly attended presentations given by GALILEO staff, and spoke to social studies teachers across the state to learn about which resources they seek in the Digital Library of Georgia; he notes that the Digital Library of Georgia’s newspaper collections proved to be popular amongst social studies educators.

 

Digital Library Federation Forum

Digital Library of Georgia director Sheila McAlister and Digital Projects Archivist Andy Carter attended the 2014 Digital Library Federation Forum in Atlanta, Georgia, October 27-29 at the Georgia Tech Hotel and Conference Center.  The Digital Library Federation promotes collaboration across institutions that build or use digital libraries, including archives, libraries and library service organizations, publishers, museums, and vendors. The program for the conference is available here.

Andy reports* that topics presented at the conference included:

1. Digital humanities and the library

– Several libraries (Columbia, Duke, University of Virginia, and Indiana University) reported on the development of digital humanities training programs for their staff

2. Discussion  about a recent OCLC report on the challenges uniquely identifying researchers who have primarily written journal articles as opposed to monographs, and thus are not represented in national name authority files

– The report advocates for researchers establishing their own research identifier as early in their career as possible (Research identifiers are persistent digital identifiers that distinguish unique researchers).

– The report identified a staggering 100 research networking and identifier systems

– According to the World Bank, there are 9 million researchers worldwide

– The most common self-registered identifiers are ISNI  (International Standard Name Identifier)  and ORCID

3. An update on  SHARE (SHared Access Research Ecosystem), a new effort to create a centralized notification system for research outputs.

4. Copyright issues and strategies for large digital collections such as HathiTrust and Digital Public Library of America

– There are 87,000 unique rights statements on materials in DPLA, a big challenge

– The University of Michigan received a grant for a copyright review management system that has made it possible to verify the copyright of post-1922 materials in HathiTrust. Many of these copyrights were never renewed.

5. Experimental scholarly publishing

– A new WordPress plugin, PressForward, has been adopted by several sites, including   dh+lib (the site for ACRL’s  Digital Humanities Interest Group), and Metaware (the ALCTS/LITA Metadata Standards Committee (MSC)’s public information site) for aggregating and publishing content from the web.

6. Academic Preservation Trust 

– A consortium of 17 institutions, hosted by the University of Virginia, is building its own digital preservation network, The Academic Preservation Trust (APT) 

7. Digital Humanities tools for analyzing digital collections

– This panel urged libraries to make their digital collections available in ways digital humanities researchers can use (e.g. supporting  text and image analysis in digital collections). One site that does this is DocSouth Data, which provides access to the digital collections in Documenting The American South collections in formats that work well with common text mining and data analysis tools.

The panel also highlighted tools for text analysis that include

Voyant, a web-based reading and analysis environment for digital texts

TOME, a tool that employs topic modeling to explore and visualize text-based archives

dfr-browser, a topic model browsing interface for journal articles

More information about the 2014 Digital Library Federation forum is available here .

 

Society of Georgia Archivists Annual Meeting

Many Digital Library of Georgia staff attended the Society of Georgia Archivists Annual Meeting, held in Athens on November 6-7. The theme for the 2014 Annual Meeting was Plans and Strategies for the Future of Archives. You can read more about the Society of Georgia Archivists here.

On November 6, the Digital Library of Georgia’s Digital Projects Archivist Donnie Summerlin presented on the panel “Managing Our Digital Assets” where he described the selection of historic newspaper titles for digitization at the Digital Library of Georgia.

On November 7, the Digital Library of Georgia’s director Sheila McAlister presented on the panel “On ArchivesSpace: Introducing, Assessing, and Exploring the Collection Management Software” where she spoke about the Digital Library of Georgia’s examination of the collection management program ArchivesSpace.

Digital Public Library of America metadata librarian Greer Martin was also recognized at the Annual Meeting as the recipient of the 2014 Carroll Hart Scholarship for attendance at the Georgia Archives Institute.

This year’s conference began with four sets of breakout discussion sessions on digital archives stewardship that solicited input on accessioning digital resources, processing digital materials, providing access to digital archives, and the planning and implementation of long-term digital preservation. The findings from these breakout sessions will be used to determine the Society of Georgia Archivists’ future outreach, education, and programming with relation to digital archives.

Panel topics also included:

– Developing Georgia collections that represent local LGBTQ communities

– Leveraging standards and workflows to improve efficiency in small digitization units as demonstrated by Georgia State University Library’s digital projects staff

– Institutional disaster planning, Georgia disaster resources, and recovery for cultural collections

– Practical approaches for accessioning, processing, preserving, and providing access to electronic materials as presented by staff at the University of Georgia Libraries

– Exploring the functionality and implementation of ArchivesSpace in archival institutions across Georgia.

 

*Special thanks to Andy Carter for his detailed report of the Digital Library Federation Forum

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