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The NDLTD and a History of ETDs

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Denise A. D. Bedford. Joan K. Lippincott. Julia C. Blixrud. Thomas B. Hickey ... Austin McLean. NDLTD Committees. Conference Planning. Services and Standards ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The NDLTD and a History of ETDs


1
The NDLTD and a History of ETDs
  • Gail McMillan
  • Director, Digital Library and Archives Virginia
    Tech
  • OETDA, March 28, 2008

2
The NDLTD http//www.ndltd.org/
  • Since its inception in 1996, the Networked
    Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations has
    worked to improve graduate education, increase
    the availability of student research, empower
    students and universities, advance digital
    library technology, and lower the costs of
    submitting and handling electronic theses and
    dissertations.

3
Early VT ETD Goals
  • Graduate students
  • Learn about e-publishing and digital libraries,
    applying that knowledge as they engage in their
    research and build and submit their ETDs
  • Education improves through more effective sharing
  • Universities
  • Learn about digital libraries, as they collect,
    catalog, archive, and make ETDs accessible
  • Learn how to unlock the potential of their
    intellectual property/products
  • Technology and knowledge sharing speed up as
    graduate research results become more readily
    available

4
In the beginning
  • 1987 openly discussed ETDs at UMI meeting
  • 1991 VT ETD initiative
  • 1995 VT Graduate School invites Library to
    participate
  • 1996 Library brings the players together, creates
    web site, drafts workflow scripts
  • 1997 VT requires ETDs CGSPs DRSCAP
  • 1998 NDLTD from National to Networked Digital
    Library of Theses and Dissertations

5
VT ETD Funding
  • Grants
  • SURA 1994 30,000 1996 91,117
  • FIPSE, 9/96-8/99 208,040
  • Contributions
  • Adobe donation of software to the first 20
    universities engaged in pilot testing.
  • Support
  • CNI
  • VTLS
  • Conference fees support conferences

6
VT ETD SURA Funding
  • 1993 SURA and SOLINET support Monticello
    Electronic Library Project. Fox, and Eustis and
    McMillan attend Atlanta meeting separately.
  • 1994 SURA funds VT workshop to develop plans for
    ETDs. Attendees select PDF and SGML for
    representation and archiving.
  • 1996 SURA funds VT implementation, research,
    development, and dissemination of ETD experience,
    or develop and disseminate a standard method for
    making graduate students' final work available
    online.

7
VT ETD SURA Funding
  • Grant calls for Fox, Eaton, McMillan to
  • Develop a system "that people can use"
  • Implement library and user friendly search and
    delivery technology, plus programmatic archiving
  • Document and distribute training materials for
    this approach for other universities in the
    Southeast.

8
VT ETD Funding FIPSE
  • Although there are approximately 400,000 master's
    or doctoral degrees awarded nationally each year,
    many students are poorly prepared for a career in
    which electronic publishing and access to
    networked information systems will
  • be commonplace. Fox 9/96

9
Hosted or Visited for ETD Support
  • Onsite at Arizona State University, Georgia
    Southern, Brigham Young, Case Western Reserve,
    College of William and Mary, Cornell, Georgia,
    Michigan Tech, Pennsylvania State, Worchester
    Polytechnic, University of Florida, University of
    North Carolina at Greensboro, University of South
    Carolina, Vanderbilt, ACRL, ALA, CNI, CAUSE,
    OCLC, RBMS, SAA...
  • Hosted Clemson, Mississippi State, Naval Post
    Graduate School, Rhodes University (South
    Africa), SUNY Buffalo, University of New
    Brunswick, Virginia Commonwealth, Virginia
    Military Institute, Wake Forest

10
From National to Networked DLTD Mission Improve
Graduate Education
  • Produce ETDs, use digital libraries, understand
    issues in publishing
  • Increase availability of student research
  • Lower the cost of processing TDs
  • Empower students to convey a richer message
  • Empower universities to unlock information
    resources
  • Advance digital library technology

11
NDLTD Membership 1997-2003
  • To join send letter of interest from the
    institution expressing interest in ETDS and NDLTD
  • No obligations
  • Non-voting
  • 122 US/international universities
  • 16 US/international institutions
  • 3 consortia

12
NDLTDs Key Constituencies
  • Faculty-Fox/VT, Moxley/USF, Pavani/PUC-Rio, etc.
  • Students--Allard/UKy, Edminster/USF
  • Graduate school administrators--Eaton/VT,
    Clark/OH
  • Organizations
  • International OAS, UNESCO, World Bank, national
    libraries
  • US CNI, ARL not CGS
  • Librarians grow information resources, services
  • Companies--Adobe, OCLC, UMI/ProQuest

13
NDTLD Governance 1997-2003
  • Informal, voluntary, advisory
  • Director Ed Fox, VT professor of computer
    science
  • Steering Committee
  • 30 members, met twice a year
  • International organizations
  • National libraries
  • Publishers
  • Technology companies
  • Consortia
  • Higher education institutions
  • Working groups ETD MS, Strategic Planning

14
NDLTD Program Priorities
  • Standards and metadata
  • Promotion, education, outreach
  • Annual conferences
  • Institutional representatives new to ETD
    initiative
  • Institutional representatives experienced with
    ETDs
  • Sponsors
  • Awards innovation and leadership
  • Incorporation and non-profit status
  • Develop measures of success
  • Membership
  • Open access to ETDs

15
NDLTD 501(c)(3)
  • In order to better serve its membership, in May
    2003 the NDTLD was duly formed as a nonstock
    corporation for worldwide charitable and
    educational purposes within the meaning of US the
    Internal Revenue Code. NDLTD is now headed by a
    Board of Directors, working with members on
    various committees to further the aims of the
    organization.

16
NDLTD Bylaws Board of Directors
  • 3-35 persons with demonstrated interest in,
    concern for, ability to decide and address issues
  • Any national origin, sex, sexual orientation,
    religious affiliation, race, creed, color,
    profession
  • 3 year terms 1/3 elected each year
  • Meet at annual meetings, at least
  • Quorum is a majority
  • Chair committees

17
NDLTD Bylaws Officers
  • Executive Director
  • Operations manager
  • See that policies, orders, resolutions carried
    out
  • Ex officio member of all committees
  • Secretary
  • Attend all meetings of BoD
  • Prepare and maintain custody of minutes
  • Keep a true and complete record of the
    proceedings of all meetings
  • Treasurer
  • Keep correct and complete records of the
    financial condition furnish at BoD meetings
  • Legal custodian of all monies, notes, securities,
    valuables
  • Immediately deposit all funds in some reliable
    bank/depository
  • Such other officers, agents as necessary

18
NDLTD Board of Directors 2008
  • Ellen Wagner
  • Vinod Chachra
  • Edward A. Fox
  • Joseph Moxley
  • Jude Edminster
  • Suzie Allard
  • William A. T. Clark
  • Eric F. Van de Velde
  • Gail McMillan
  • John H. Hagen
  • Denise A. D. Bedford
  • Joan K. Lippincott
  • Julia C. Blixrud
  • Thomas B. Hickey
  • Tony Cargnelutti
  • Ana Pavani
  • Hussein Suleman
  • José Luis Borbinha
  • Peter Schirmbacher
  • Shalini R. Urs
  • Christine Jewell
  • Eva Müller
  • Samson Soong
  • Sharon Reeves
  • Susan Copeland
  • Xiaolin Zhang
  • Austin McLean

19
NDLTD Committees
  • Conference Planning
  • Services and Standards
  • Awards (Adobe and NDLTD), 2004 to date
  • Innovative ETD
  • Innovating Learning through ETDs
  • Leadership
  • Development (w/international subcommittees)
  • Implementation
  • Public Relations
  • Governance Executive, Finance, Nominating,
    Membership
  • ETD Guide U of So. Florida, UNESCO
  • Union Catalog of ETDS VTLS, OCLC

20
The NDLTD Bylaws Members
  • Categories
  • Universities
  • Consortia
  • Supporting organizations
  • Individuals
  • No voting rights
  • Primary interest of the Board
  • Expected to be actively involved in the
    conferences and committee activities

21
Benefits of NDLTD Membership
  • Eligible to be aided by a Mentoring Program
  • Discounts on conference registration fees
  • Discounts on exhibits/displays at the Annual
    Conference
  • Support for harvesting into the Union Catalog
  • Eligibility for NDLTD awards
  • May serve on Committees and Board of Directors
  • Access to member address (when shared)
  • NEW Preservation Network
  • Join ETD-L Send mail to listserv_at_listserv.vt.edu.

22
NDLTD Membership Fee Structurehttp//www.ndltd.or
g/join.en.html
  • 25 Individuals
  • 100-300 Single degree-granting or supporting
    institution
  • Consortium or Multicampus University System
  • 200-2,600 Category II-III (up to 50 members)
  • 600-7,800 Category I (up to 50 members)

23
The NDTLD Bylaws Conferences
  • Annual
  • Provide a forum for members and guests
  • Hear papers
  • Promote discussions
  • Other appropriate activities
  • Technical demonstrations
  • Exhibits

24
NDLTD Conferences
  • 2009 University of Pittsburgh/West Virginia
    University
  • 2008 Robert Gordon University, Aberdeen,
    Scotland
  • 2007 Uppsala University, Sweden
  • 2006 Bibliothèque de l'Université Laval, Quebec,
    Canada
  • 2005 University of New South Wales, Sydney,
    Australia
  • 2004 University of Kentucky, Lexington
  • 2003 Humboldt-University, Berlin, Germany
  • 2002 Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah
  • 2001 California Institute of Technology,
    Pasadena
  • 2000 University of South Florida, St. Petersburg
  • 1999 Virginia Tech, Blacksburg
  • 1998 MECCA - ITEC Conference, Tennessee

25
Availability of VT ETDs
26
Increasing Availability of VT ETDs
27
VT ETD Author Survey 2007/08
  • While preparing your ETD, where did you find
    answers to your questions?
  • 60 VT ETD web site
  • 18 Friends
  • 12 My committee
  • Was this web site useful?
  • 4 No
  • 32 Somewhat
  • 59 Useful - very useful

28
VT ETD Author Survey 2007/08
  • Compared to what you expected, how difficult was
    it to create a PDF file?
  • 14 More difficult
  • 57 Less difficult
  • 30 neutral

29
VT ETD Author Survey 2007/08
  • Where were you when you submitted?
  • 35 Off campus residence
  • 25 Campus office
  • 13 Off campus workplace

30
VT ETD Author Survey 2007/08
  • Compared to what you expected, how difficult was
    it to submit your ETD?
  • 15 more difficult
  • 64 less difficult
  • 22 neutral

31
VT ETD Author Survey 2007/08
  • Within the next 1-2 years, what do you intend to
    publish from your ETD?
  • 51 article
  • 18 conference proceedings
  • 4 book
  • 3 chapter
  • 4 nothing
  • 17 dont know

32
VT ETD Author Survey 2007/08
  • If you restricted access to your VT ETD, on what
    did you base this decision?
  • 46 Advice of faculty
  • 25 Personal choice
  • 20 Other
  • 4 Advice of others
  • 3 Patent pending
  • 3 Advice of publisher

33
VT ETD User Survey 2007/08
  • If you are with a university, does it accept
    ETDs?
  • 80 Yes
  • 10 No
  • 10 not from a university
  • If your university does not accept ETDs, do you
    think it should?
  • 58 Yes
  • 28 No opinion
  • 14 No

34
VT ETD User Survey 2007/08
  • Have you submitted an ETD?
  • 69 No
  • 31 Yes
  • What is your reason for using this digital
    library?
  • 85 Research
  • 7 Personal interest
  • 5 Learn about ETDs
  • 2 Job related

35
VT ETD User Survey 2007/08
  • If you searched for an ETD, how fast was the
    response to your search request?
  • 6 Slow
  • 84 Fairly fast, fast, very fast
  • 9 didnt search
  • If you downloaded any ETDs, how easy was it to
    find what you were looking for?
  • 10 Difficult
  • 90 Fairly easy, easy, very easy

36
Publishers surveys 1999-2002http//lumiere.lib.v
t.edu/surveys/
  • According to the editorial policy,
    OA/university-only constitutes prior
    publication
  • Open access ETDs
  • 9 science publishers
  • 14 social science publishers
  • 15 humanities publishers
  • University-only accessible ETDs
  • 1 science publishers
  • 4 social science publishers
  • 6 humanities publishers

37
NDLTD and Preservation of ETDs
  • Primary concern for early initiatives
  • Paper seen as more enduring
  • Commercial alternatives OCLC, ProQuest
  • MetaArchive survey 2008
  • 75 no formal preservation plan
  • 92 interested in NDLTD preservation strategy
  • Workshop at 2008 conference, Aberdeen

38
Digital preservation?
  • The systematic management of digital works over
    an indefinite period of time.
  • Unlike traditional preservation, digital works
    demand ongoing attention--constant input of
    effort, time, and money. Technological and
    organizational change is the stumbling block for
    preserving digital information beyond a few
    years.
  • Digital preservation is processes and activities
    that ensure the continued access to works
    existing in digital formats.

39
Backup/IRs vs. Digital Preservation
  • Backups are tactical measures--typically stored
    in a single location (often nearby or collocated
    with the servers backed up) and performed only
    periodically. Backups address short-term data
    loss via minimal investment of money and staff
    time resources. Backups are not a comprehensive
    solution to the problem of preserving information
    over time.
  • Digital preservation is strategic--a
    geographically dispersed set of secure caches of
    critical information. A true digital
    preservation program requires multi-institutional
    collaboration and at least some ongoing
    investment to realistically address the issues
    involved in preserving information over time.

40
MetaArchive
  • A distributed digital preservation cooperative
    for digital archives
  • Established under the auspices of and with
    funding from the National Digital Information and
    Infrastructure Preservation Program (NDIIPP) of
    the Library of Congress
  • Sustained by cooperative fee memberships and LC
    contracts
  • Provides training and models for other groups to
    establish similar distributed digital
    preservation networks
  • Fosters broader awareness of digital preservation
    issues

41
Distributed Digital Preservation Network
  • Effective preservation succeeds by replicating
    copies of content in secure, distributed
    locations over time.
  • Security reduces the likelihood that any single
    cache will be compromised.
  • Distribution reduces the likelihood that the loss
    of any single cache will lead to a loss of the
    preserved content.
  • A single organization is unlikely to have the
    capability to operate several geographically
    dispersed and securely maintained servers
  • Inter-institutional agreements will ensure
    commitment to act in concert over time.

42
MetaArchive Distributed Digital Preservation
Networks Across the World, a Region, a State
  • Programmatically collects content from a host
  • Preserves content among partners servers
  • Low cost to administer and run
  • Standard hardware, free software
  • Audits content and repairs as needed from host or
    partners
  • Disseminates content to only the appropriate
    users
  • Host librarys clientele see the content from
    hosts site
  • Unless it isnt available from there
  • Provide copies to partners only to audit and
    repair
  • Dark archive only

43
Key Features of the MetaArchive
  • Distributed preservation strategy
  • Flexible organizational model
  • Formal content selection process
  • Capability for migrating archives
  • Dark archiving strategy
  • Low cost to deployment
  • Self-sustaining incentives
  • Simple exchange mechanisms

44
Successful Disaster Recovery Test
  • Focused on Hardware, Content, Network
  • Simulated and experienced crashing primary node
  • Intentionally damaged content (truncate files)
  • Disabled access to plug-ins
  • Ran routine tests for bad disk, cache manager,
    conspectus database, yum repository, kickstart
    script, xml configuration file, etc.
  • Reconstructed primary node, resurrected network,
    reconstructed content
  • Documentation

45
ETD Preservation Survey
  • Help gauge the digital library communitys
    interest in establishing an ETD-specific
    preservation network.
  • 14 multiple choice and short answer questions
  • 95 responses Jan.-Feb. 2008

46
ETD Preservation Survey
  • How did you learn about this survey?
  • 17 ARL Association of Research Libraries
  • 15 ASERL Association of Southeastern Research
    Libraries
  • 16 CGS Council of Graduate Schools
  • 13 DLF Digital Library Federation
  • 39 NDLTD Networked Digital Library of Theses
    and Dissertations

47
ETD Preservation Survey
  • Does your institution accept ETDs?
  • 20 NO 80 YES
  • If so, does your institution accept only
    electronic versions?
  • 61 NO 39 YES

48
ETD Preservation Survey
  • Estimate the number of ETDs added to your
    collection annually.
  • 5-10 6
  • 20-50 15
  • 100-199 28
  • 200-299 8
  • 300-399 13
  • 500-599 7
  • 600-699 4
  • 700-799 6
  • 800-900 6
  • 1,000 7
  • Estimate the number of ETDs in your collection.
  • gt100 27
  • 100-199 10
  • 200-499 14
  • 500-999 17
  • 1000-1999 13
  • 2000-4999 11
  • 10,000-20,180 7

49
ETD Preservation Survey
  • .pdf 21
  • .jpg 7
  • .wav 7
  • Other formats 7
  • .gif 6
  • .html 5
  • .mov 5
  • Any format 5
  • .avi 5
  • .mp3 5
  • .tif 5
  • .mpg 4
  • .doc 4
  • .xml 4
  • .png 3
  • .ppt 2
  • .aif 2
  • .qt 2
  • .aif 2
  • .avi 5
  • .doc 4
  • .gif 6
  • .html 5
  • .jpg 7
  • .mov 5
  • .mp3 5
  • .mpg 4
  • .pdf 21
  • .png 3
  • .ppt 2
  • .qt 2
  • .tif 5
  • .wav 7
  • .xml 4
  • Any format 5
  • Other formats 7

50
ETD Preservation Survey
  • Does your institution have a formalized
    preservation plan for its ETDs?
  • 73.68 NO (70/95 responses)
  • 26.32 YES (25/95 responses)
  • 97.94 of the people who took this survey (95/97)
    answered this question.

51
ETD Preservation Survey
  • Do you have experience with or knowledge of
    LOCKSS-based preservation networks?
  • 30.11 NO (28/93 responses)
  • 69.89 YES (65/93 responses)
  • 95.88 of the people who took this survey (93/97)
    answered this question.

52
ETD Preservation Survey
  • Would your institution be interested in
    participating in an ETD-specific LOCKSS-based
    collaborative distributed digital archive
    sponsored by the NDLTD?
  • 49.47 MAYBE (47/95 responses)
  • 42.11 YES (40/95 responses)
  • 8.42 NO (8/95 responses)
  • 97.94 of the people who took this survey (95/97)
    answered this question.

53
ETD Preservation Survey
  • If yes, would there be a preference for
  • 17.95 Dark archiving (14/78 responses)
  • 41.03 Public archive (32/78 responses)
  • 41.03 Dim archiving (32/78 responses)
  • 80.41 of the people who took this survey (78/97)
    answered this question.

54
ETD Preservation Survey
  • What would be the level of participation for your
    institution in participating in the NDLTD
    distributed digital preservation archive?
  • 45.95 Contributing
  • 29.73 Preservation
  • 24.32 Sustaining

55
ETD Preservation Survey
  • What platform or repository structure are you
    using to collect, disseminate, and store your
    ETDs?
  • 10 ETDdb
  • 1 Eprints
  • 2 Fedora
  • 19 DSpace
  • 22 In-house solution
  • 46 Other platform or repository (1-3
    CONTENTdm, Digital Commons, DigiTool, OhioLink,
    ProQuest, )

56
ETD Preservation Survey
  • What information would your institution need to
    participate in an ETD DDPN?
  • Costs 38
  • Staffing 16
  • Technical issues 12
  • Expectations, responsibilities 12
  • Hardware 9
  • Long term goals, sustainability 6
  • Access 6
  • Procedures 4
  • Agreement, legal terms 4

57
ETD Preservation Survey
  • Comments/concerns, particularly the distributed
    model that the MetaArchive Cooperative is
    considering for ETDs
  • A welcome opportunity 8
  • Still not enough 5
  • Migration? 3
  • Confidential ETDs? 2
  • Not a priority 2
  • Using CDs 2

58
NDLTD Distributed Preservation Workshop
  • June 4, 2008
  • 11th International ETD Conference
  • Aberdeen, Scotland Robert Gordon University
  • http//scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/DDPNWorkshop20080
    6.pdf
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