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Yale Collections Collaborative

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Title: Yale Collections Collaborative


1
Yale Collections Collaborative
  • Spring symposium May 2007

2
Schedule
  • 930 - 1000 Welcome / Overview of Collections
    Collaborative activities
  • 1000 - 1045 Keynote address by Kenneth Hamma,
    Executive Director for Digital Policy and
    Initiatives at the J. Paul Getty Trust "At the
    network level everything is just a resource .. at
    first
  • 1045 - 1100 Break
  • 1100 - 1200 Small group break-out sessions to
    discuss options for improving access to primary
    sources / followed by group discussion
  • 1200 - 1245 Lunch provided in Luce Hall Common
    Room
  • 1245 - 245 Presentations by Yale librarians
    and curators regarding primary source materials
    on topics related to the Yale Initiative on Race,
    Gender and Globalization
  • 245 - 300 Wrap-up

3
  • Initiative funded by Mellon Foundation for
    November 2004 to October 2007 (409,000) no-cost
    extension granted until June 2008
  • The goal of the Collections Collaborative is to
    enhance access to and use of the museums,
    galleries, and library special collections across
    the university.

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  • The imperative is that primary sources are being
    required in the curriculum in order to engage
    students in substantive research and research
    methodologies. 
  • To respond to this pedagogical need, special
    collections, consisting of primary source
    materials, must be made widely available and
    solutions must be found to speed processing,
    integrate materials within and across
    institutions, and provide better accessibility to
    users across systems, making library and
    museum-based material readily accessible in
    learning management systems and vice
    versa. Don Waters, Mellon Foundation

5
Initial goals
  • establish clear processing and description
    priorities across the system with research and
    teaching use in mind reengineer these functions
    to promote efficiencies
  • conceptualize approaches for improved digital
    access that would address specific pedagogical
    and research needs
  • integrate the collections from a user perspective
    across library/museum and learning management
    systems.

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Partners in this endeavor
  • Peabody Museum
  • Yale Art Gallery
  • Yale Center for British Art
  • Yale University libraries
  • Faculty administration representatives on
    Steering Committee

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LIBRARIES, COLLECTIONS, MUSEUMS
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Re-grant projects
  • 2 rounds (100,000 each)
  • 8 projects

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1. Finding aid authoring tool Purpose of the
project is to develop a shared and centrally
supported tool for the creation of finding aids
that follow the Encoded Archival description
standard, for Yale archival and manuscript
collections. Participants Beinecke Rare Book
and Manuscript Library Manuscripts and Archives
Divinity Library Arts Library Yale Center for
British Art Music Library Historical Medical
Library
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  • 2. Digitization of the O.C. Marsh and G.R.
    Wieland papers
  • Marsh and Wieland were paleontologists whose
    work inaugurated some of the Peabody Museums
    most important collections.
  • Information related to specimens they collected
    is in their personal papers, most of which are
    stored at Manuscripts and Archives, while the
    specimens themselves are at Peabody.
  • The purpose of this project is to bring these
    materials together, using digital imaging and
    text capture through optical character
    recognition (OCR), preservation, archiving and
    electronic publication of approximately 40,000
    pages of correspondence, maps, monographs and
    pictures, which are currently available only
    through painstaking browsing of microfilm and
    generalized finding aids.

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  • 3. Unlocking digital data collections across the
    sciences
  • Purpose of project is to investigate models of
    metadata creation
  • Digitization project inspired by the innovative
    leaf morphology classification work of a faculty
    member in the Geology and Geophysics Department
    and the Peabody Museum at Yale University.
  • Scanned Flora Fossilis Arctica, a 7-volume fossil
    leaf identification tool covering various
    geological areas, published between 1868 and
    1883.
  • Enhancing the raw data with metadata elements,
    placing this material on the web for searching
    and display and linking this material to an
    existing set of preserved leaf plates, a locally
    created index of annotated article clippings, an
    online leaf morphology tutorial, and the
    published online literature.

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  • 4. The World War I Experience Phase One
  • Purpose of the project is to create models for
    improving description of and access to
    non-standard published materials that are held in
    repositories across the Yale campus. Focus on
    selecting and digitizing a range of pamphlets,
    broadsides, posters, prints, maps, and sound
    recordings that provide primary source
    documentation of the impact of WWI.
  • Materials included in project from
  • Art Gallery
  • Center for British Art
  • Manuscripts Archives
  • Historical Sound Recordings / Music Library
  • Sterling Mudd stacks
  • Map collection
  • Etc.

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WWI project issues
  • Metadata standards and workflow
  • Scanning standards and workflow
  • Interaction of existing delivery systems
  • Orbis, TMS, DL, MADID, Finding aids, etc.
  • Development of research portal for drawing
    attention to selected materials and providing
    assistance regarding research methodology.

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5. The World War I Experience Phase 2 -
Enhancing Discovery, Search and Access to Yale's
Digital Collections Development of pilot
cross-collection search interface to provide
access to digital collections across the Yale
campus, such as from the Library, the Center for
British Art, the University Art Gallery and the
Peabody Museum.
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Cross-collection searching
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  • 6. Swid Powell Collection
  • Swid Powell was a tableware design firm founded
    by Nan Swid and Addie Powell in 1982.  They
    commissioned several architects to design
    tableware within very strict, traditional
    parameters.  The designs were enormously
    successful and made household names out of many
    of the architects involved.
  • Materials in this collection will be housed both
    at the Yale University Art Gallery and
    Manuscripts and Archives. Many of the architects
    who designed for Swid Powell are already
    represented in YUAG and MSSA holdings.
  • Project will look at ways to adapt the
    controlled vocabulary standard already in use at
    the Yale University Art Gallery (AAT) to the way
    collections, and individual items within them,
    are processed and described at Manuscripts and
    Archives -- seeking to demonstrate a workable
    model of vocabulary-sharing that will be of use
    to scholars wishing to easily access the
    materials in both repositories, possibly with one
    search.
  • Also plan to digitize as many of the materials
    as possible in the collection -- scanning the
    archival materials and photographing the objects.

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7. Archival Collections Management the
Archivists' Toolkit The Archivists' Toolkit is an
open source database application that provides a
tool for managing many of the most common
activities undertaken in the archival enterprise,
such as accessioning, description, donor
tracking, name and subject authority work, and
location management. This project will develop a
model implementation of the Archivists' Toolkit
at four Yale repositories and investigate the
value of system-wide implementation.
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  • 8. Guides to Collections at Yale
  • This project will initiate a series of
    subject-based guides to collections at Yale,
    which will provide an overview of particular
    strengths in a given field across a range of the
    University's special collections and museums.
  • Initial subject areas targeted will be
  • African American Studies
  • British Studies
  • Modernism
  • Photography

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Other collaborative things going on at Yale .
  • Special Collections Subcommittee of CDC
  • Joint exhibits
  • Special Collections fairs
  • Primary sources for senior essays web site
    handouts
  • Special Collections Reference Coffees
  • Digital Coffee meetings
  • Describing Archives A Content Standard (DACS)
    training
  • Archivists reading group
  • Etc

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And in partnership with others
  • Teagle Special Collections Project
  •  http//www.library.yale.edu/teagle/
  • 18 month project, ended last fall
  • Brought together interested parties from 9
    Connecticut institutions (Yale as the largest
    other universities colleges community
    colleges) who aim to make better use of special
    collections in teaching.
  • Aim is to give special collections and
    repositories a great deal more visibility,
    exposure, usability than they've had until now.

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Future goals of the Collections Collaborative
  • Engagement with faculty re. use of primary source
    materials in teaching and research
  • Forum on Natural Collections Description project.
  • Development of a sustainable structure through
    which Yale repositories can discuss issues of
    common concern, share information, and develop
    collaborative programs.

33
Todays meeting Mainstreaming Collections
Reference
  • A "get acquainted" and educational opportunity
    for Yale librarians and curators
  • Exploration of how we can work together to
    improve access to primary source materials for
    teaching and research at Yale
  • Raising awareness of the existence of primary
    source resources in many different repositories
    and formats throughout Yale and how they can be
    found.

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Schedule
  • 930 - 1000 Welcome / Overview of Collections
    Collaborative activities
  • 1000 - 1045 Keynote address by Kenneth Hamma,
    Executive Director for Digital Policy and
    Initiatives at the J. Paul Getty Trust "At the
    network level everything is just a resource .. at
    first
  • 1045 - 1100 Break
  • 1100 - 1200 Small group break-out sessions to
    discuss options for improving access to primary
    sources / followed by group discussion
  • 1200 - 1245 Lunch provided in Luce Hall Common
    Room
  • 1245 - 245 Presentations by Yale librarians
    and curators regarding primary sources materials
    on topics related to the Yale Initiative on Race,
    Gender and Globalization
  • 245 - 300 Wrap-up

35
Afternoon presentations
  • 1245 -100  MSSA (Bill Massa)
  • 100 - 115 YCBA (Stéphane Roy Martha Repp)
  • 115 - 135 RSC (Anne Oechtering others)
  • 135 - 145 Women's resources (Kelly Barrick)
  • 145- 200 Beinecke (Tim Young)
  • 200 - 215 Art Gallery (Pamela Franks)
  • 215-225 Historical Medical (Toby Appel)
  • 225 -235 Law (Mike Widener)
  • 235 - 245 Divinity (Martha Smalley)

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