Research materials digitisation


University of Canberra Library



Download 299.79 Kb.
Page4/5
Date05.05.2018
Size299.79 Kb.
#47811
1   2   3   4   5

University of Canberra Library

Maintained by keepers of the materials, metadata accessed via TROVE and Google Scholar


University of Melbourne

It is almost impossible to imagine the research possibilities that could be realised by the increased availability of quality digitised material. The ability to create new research data sets creates potential to analyse the content of these digitised resources and combine them in new ways. New research data raises new research questions and outcomes. Through working with early adopter, high profile projects and significant content we hope to attract further funding and collaborators. We expect to attract new research projects with dedicated funding similar to our early experiences.


University of Newcastle

National Library or National Archives are possibilities


University of New England

UNE has made a long standing commitment to provide archival facilities for the New England and North West of NSW. Part of this commitment would have to be the ongoing storage of digital research material from the collections donated by the public. That said, it would be hoped that once the records are created by a national programme, then the ongoing storage and migration of this material would be an organisation with the resources of the National Library or the National Archives.


University of Queensland

Hopefully if a national digitisation program was established the major stakeholders would identify this as an issue and make recommendations eg subscription models. It would be important that the material was of interest that ongoing funds could be found.


University of the Sunshine Coast

One would hope that such a corpus would be considered significant enough to warrant ongoing government support (??)


University of Sydney

It can be distributed depending on partnership with central metadata harvesting. There will need to be commitments from participants to ensure the long term maintenance and access to these collections. There will be a need for appropriate project management


University of Western Australia

This will depend on the architecture chosen for delivery of the digitised material. A distributed structure, where each institution is responsible for exposing its own digital objects to a national harvesting service, will require local support and maintenance. A more aggregated model, where (for example) state-based repositories are hosted and maintained by a small number of large institutions, would be easier for smaller institutions to contribute to. Cloud-based storage solutions would be preferable, particularly in the academic sector.


University of Western Sydney

Clearly sustainability issues are paramount. Much has been/is still being learned about ensuring wide access to both research outputs and research data as a result of the various ANDS funded projects across NSW. Lessons learnt could serve to inform future sustainability. It is possible that a set % of research grants could be ‘garnisheed’ to assist in sustainability.


University of Wollongong

NLA - Trove


Victoria University

It is almost impossible to imagine maintaining support for such projects without funding. We expect to attract new research projects with dedicated funding similar to our current experience.



APPENDIX 1

CAUL RESEARCH MATERIALS DIGITISATION SURVEY


CAUL has been a long time advocate for the recognition of digitisation as a core part of the national research infrastructure. While some digitisation projects have been funded, mostly by the ARC, they have not been guided by a nationally cohesive vision.
In responding to the 2011 Strategic Roadmap for Australian Research Infrastructure Exposure Draft, CAUL advocated a national conversation about the model or models and the framework that should be adopted to meet the Government’s aims for a digitisation capability and richer national digital collections. That conversation is expected to occur over the next twelve months and CAUL is seeking information about current digitisation activity and capability within universities and especially within libraries. Your thoughts on what should happen in the future in terms of project funding, priorities and models for the digitisation of content for research purposes would also be welcome.
The Roadmap highlights that digitisation is not only about creating digital surrogates but importantly requires discovery, access and analysis layers.
The focus of this questionnaire is on the digitisation of information resources used to undertake original research. Excluded at this stage are the following: information on the digitisation of theses, journal articles, publications for ERA, electronic reserve or for preservation.
In addition to digitisation activity and capability within the library, the survey seeks to understand the extent of activity/capability within your university. In general, the focus is on activity that is undertaken and/or managed centrally either at a whole-of-institution level or by a major organisational unit such as a faculty. Digitisation undertaken by individuals or small research groups need not be included in your response. The survey is not restricted to Australian research materials although future government funding may prioritise Australian resources.



Library Digitisation Activities

1

Does your library digitise, or plan to digitise, research material?





2

Do you have a written digitisation plan, policy or guidelines for determining the identification of research material for digitisation? Please include the URL, or attach a copy of the document if not available online.





3

What has been digitised by the library?

(In answering this question, it would be useful if you could provide information relating to the type, quantity, date ranges, funding sources of each major digitisation project/activity. It is not necessary to report on every project but sufficient detail to indicate the general nature of activity would be appreciated)





4

Is the library digitisation programme a collaborative activity? If so, with whom do you normally collaborate? (This could be with a range of partners including other units of the university, individual or groups of academics, other universities, libraries, archives or commercial organisations)





5

Does the library undertake the digitisation or contract with other organisations/companies? Please include the name of the company/ies.






6

Does the library digitise material for other parties within your own institution or for external organisations?





7

What staffing and expertise is available to the library for the digitisation of research material? What specific skills gaps do you have? Is the expertise acquired through on the job experiences with equipment, through formal in house staff development of established staff or targeted recruitment?

(The primary interest is in library-based staffing and the desirable mix of skills and capabilities for such an area. Details about expertise available elsewhere in the university or commercially would also be useful)




8

What equipment does the library currently have at its disposal for research digitisation? (The primary interest is in library-based equipment. Details about equipment available elsewhere in the university or commercially would also be useful)





9

How is the equipment funded and updated?






Institutional Digitisation Activities (not associated with the library)


10

Are there major centrally managed digitisation facilities, either at whole-of-institution or faculty/school level, within your university that are not associated with the library?
If not, please skip questions 11-13.





11

What is the general nature of digitisation undertaken by these facilities?

(In answering this question, only a brief outline is required to provide a general indication of whether the activity is for administrative, teaching or research related. It would be useful to describe type of material digitised ie hard copy (paper/books/maps/prints etc etc), audio, video, objects) Details of specific projects is not required)





12

If the central facility undertakes the digitisation of research material, please describe briefly the type, quantity, date ranges, funding sources of each major digitisation project/activity. Please also highlight non-paper based activities, needs and relative volumes (e.g. video, audio, objects).


.

13

Is there scope for the central facility to undertake research material digitisation either for the institution and/or on behalf of others? How would this differ from the library-provided service? Who would most likely be responsible for it?






Future Activities


14

Do you have a desideratum of research materials for digitisation in the future by either the library or by your institution?





15

What materials would you prioritise for a national research digitisation project?




16

What barriers are there to the digitisation of this material? Please include some specific examples.




17

Would your institution participate in a national digitisation programme if Government funding was dependent on co-contributions?




18

How would you envisage the corpus created by a national digitisation programme being maintained and accessed once project funding is exhausted?





19

Name of Institution

Respondent

Contact details





20

Can the responses to this questionnaire be attributed publicly to your organisation?


Yes



Thank you for responding.



APPENDIX 2
RESEARCH MATERIAL DIGITISED
Australia National University

1. China Digital Archive 1966-1976


http://anulib.anu.edu.au/subjects/ap/digilib/chi/cr/china.html or http://hdl.handle.net/1885/7575
This consists of scanned images of locally held, privately held, shared and purchased rare materials relating to the Cultural Revolution.
Type: documents, photographs, newspapers, tracts and other publications
Quantity: Total approx. 500 documents with each document ranging from 1 page to c. 150 pages
Date ranges: 1966-1976
Funding sources: The Project was funded jointly by the Library, a grant from the Luce Foundation (USA) and the Pacific Rim Digital Library Alliance (PRDLA). This funding covered purchase of equipment (a Big Mac with flatbed scanner attached plus a digital microform scanner, etc.)
2. Giles Pickford Photograph Collection
https://digitalcollections.anu.edu.au/handle/1885/20
This is a donation by Giles Pickford. It includes 12+ albums of family photos. Those relating to China have been digitized and available for open access, all other family photos have been digitized in high resolution and await uploading to the ANU Digital Repository (DSpace).
Type: photographs
Quantity: Approximately 350 photographs (mainly those relating to China) plus family photos
Date ranges: 1870-1949
Funding sources: Locally funded by the Library
3. His Imperial Majesty's Shoot in Nepalese Terai, December 1911
http://hdl.handle.net/1885/21
Photographs of King George V hunting expedition to Nepal. Originals held in the Library’s Rare Book Collection.
Type: photographs
Quantity: 50 photographs
Date ranges: 1911
Funding sources: Locally funded by the Library
4. 红旗 (Red Flag) 1958-1988
http://hdl.handle.net/1885/7485
Table of contents to the full range of this Chinese Communist Party central organ.
Type: printed document
Quantity: 50 documents
Date ranges: 1958-1988
Funding sources: Locally funded by the Library
5. Digitisation of rare printed works from the Pacific and Southeast Asian rare materials: http://anulib.anu.edu.au/subjects/ap/digilib/
These are materials collected in the Rare Book Room of the Asia Pacific Library and recommended by researchers for digitisation on an ad hoc basis.
Type: Books
Quantity: 5+
Date ranges: ca. 16th century to 1919
Funding sources: Locally funded by the Library, or paid for by requestors. Some may have been financed by the Luce foundation or PRDLA grants. 6. Photographs from the ANU Archives https://digitalcollections.anu.edu.au/handle/1885/4 and Noel Butlin Archives Centre: https://digitalcollections.anu.edu.au/handle/1885/22
Quantity: c. 2,000 images
Date range: 19th to 20th century
Funding source: cost-recovery from client requesting image, local Archives funding, donations from Friends of the Noel Butlin Archives Centre
Some of these images are available through the NLA Picture Australia service.
7. Audiovisual digitisation project (initial stages):
Quantity: 20 audio tapes so far, out of over 6,000 items
Date range: 1950s-1990s
Funding source: internal project funding
While this is primarily a preservation strategy, we are prioritising material relating to the Canberra centenary in 2013, Nobel prize winners, Prime Ministers and other VIPs most likely to be requested for access.

Bond University

The School of Business Discussion Papers published in hardcopy July 1990 – August 1998, have been digitised and placed in the University’s digital repository, e-publications@bond.


Digitisation of the Bond University Law journal The National Legal Eagle published in hardcopy 1995-to present has been undertaken and uploaded into e-publications@bond.
Out of print books are also digitised and uploaded into the repository, after thorough investigation of the copyright status and receipt of the appropriate permission.
Central Queensland University

• Theses – ad hoc as ILL requests come in.


• 1000 + Historical photographs – Central Queensland Capricornia collection.
• 500+ Research publications for CQUniversity’s Institutional Repository, ACQUIRE as part of ASHER project and ongoing for HERDC and ERA.
Charles Darwin University

AraDA – digitising the material in the East Timor Collection that is out of copyright. Funding was an ARC LIEF grant in 2001.


LAAL – Living Archive for of Aboriginal Languages – just approved – funding from LIEF grant 2011.
NT Historical Photographs Collection – gradually digitising collection of old, out-of-copyright photographs
Curtin University

Curtin University Library currently has a range research collections which have been made discoverable and accessible via online archives and which have significant proportions of digitised content. Building on the successful establishment of the John Curtin Prime Ministerial Library (JCPML) (http://john.curtin.edu.au/) and its digital archive focusing on the life and times of John Curtin, the Library has accepted donations of other research collections to date. They are


• Personal papers of former Western Australian Premier Dr Geoff Gallop (1890- ) http://john.curtin.edu.au/gallop/index.html
• Online annotated bibliography of noted author Elizabeth Jolley (1965-2010) http://john.curtin.edu.au/jolley/index.html
• Personal papers of former Western Australian Premier Dr Carmen Lawrence (1978-2008) http://john.curtin.edu.au/lawrence/index.html
• Project Endeavour: Jon Sanders' Triple Circumnavigation of the World Collection’ (1985-2010) http://john.curtin.edu.au/endeavour/index.html
• WA Folklore Archive (1980- )- http://john.curtin.edu.au/folklore/index.html
The JCPML collection is the largest and encompasses approximately 500 shelf metres; Gallop and Lawrence collections are both approximately 25 m, Jolley is 6m, Project Endeavour is 10m and Folklore is also 10m. The collections are primarily document focussed but also include audiovisual materials, photographs, and some objects.
The Library has also digitised selected content (pamphlets and out of print/out of copyright books) from its Women’s Health Collection (http://john.curtin.edu.au/womenshealth/).
In general the Library has covered the cost of developing the collections, including digitising content and creation of websites to promote the discoverability and access to material.

Edith Cowan University

Only those areas excluded in this survey. Nothing outside of those areas.


La Trobe University

• Out of print and some special collection works – 6 books by Walker, William Sylvester, 1846-1926 July 14 – 21 2011


• Historic city plans – 2 volumes of collected plans for Bendigo
• Videos of performances funded as part of an ARC project, 4.5 TB of files created
• Six archaeological drawings from field work
Monash University

The range of digitised materials available through the Monash University Repository (http://arrow.monash.edu.au/vital/access/manager/Index) includes and unpublished published works like books, book chapters, journal articles,conference papers, manuscripts, theses, technical reports, working and discussion papers, and conference posters. Material generated by researchers forms an important and growing component of material being digitised. These include data sets, collections of images, audio and video files .


Murdoch University

Nothing as yet. The Irene Greenwood Digitisation Project is our first involvement in the digitisation of any materials held by the Library.


Queensland University of Technology

To date the Library has digitised:


• The Sugar Industry Collection
• OzCase – law materials
See http://www.digitalrepository.qut.edu.au/digitalcollections/
And some of the fulltext resources available in the AUSTLIT Children’s Literature Digital Resources collection http://www.austlit.edu.au/specialistDatasets/ChildLit/CLDR
Swinburne University of Technology

The Library retrospectively digitised all HERDC material from before 2007 with funding from our research office. In addition, for future value we’ve digitised a valuable out of print book to be re-released as a free online text; old university council minutes; old course handbooks; and archival photographs, slides and audiovisual material. We are also responsible for digitising course readings for lecturers.


University of Adelaide

The following is a sample of material digitised from the Barr Smith Library Rare Books & Special Collections:

• RA Fisher Digital Archive (approx 780 items) – funded through the royalties from the publication of Fisher’s Collected papers – royalties donated by Prof Henry Bennett of Dept of genetics – see http://www.adelaide.edu.au/library/special/mss/fisher/gateway.html

• On Dit (U of Adelaide student newspaper 1932-2008 - 1353 files) – special project undertaken in periods of low demand by the Digital Resources Management Centre which produces online student resources

• Selected manuscripts and photographs from the Daisy Bates Papers

• Manuscripts and texts relating to indigenous languages egg George Taplin’s mss ‘Vocabulary and grammar of the language of the aborigines who inhabit the shores of the Lakes and lower Murray’ – to support the reintroduction of indigenous language programmes

• Selections from the German Settlers in SA Papers egg Diary of Joh. Hansen 1841

• Photographs and selected items from the Sir Mark Oliphant Papers (in response to remote research queries)

• Selected out of print items from the Pacific Collection egg ‘Statistics of the Tonga Islands for the half years ended 30 June, 1887, 1888 and 1889 : Trade and Commerce’ and ‘Phœnix guano from McKean’s Island, Pacific Ocean : imported by the Phœnix Guano Company’ / Williams & Haven, general agents (1851) - (in response to remote research queries)

• Theatre programmes from the Theatre Collection linked to Ausstage (approx 70 items) plus approx 40 programmes and images of Ballets Russes material – in support of the Ballets Russes ARC project. Other programmes and images are added via our Theatre Programme Collection Volunteers Project.

• 5 texts from the Alan Wilkie – Frediswyde Hunter-Watts Theatre Collection including the Australian section of Wilkie’s unpublished autobiography

• Gillen ms of ‘Notebooks on anthropology of the Aranda people and Aranda vocabulary’ (5 volumes) - in support of the Spencer and Gillen ARC project

• Approx 70 texts from the Rare Book Collection, including D’Urville’s Voyage de la corvette l’Astrolabe : exécuté par ordre du roi, pendant les années 1826, 1827, 1828, 1829M. in support of the Baudin Legacy ARC Project
The Fisher Digital Archive has been the only funded project. Most of the digitisation has been performed in-house in response to requests by users for copies/scans which are supplied to the requester and also added to our Digital repository – see http://digital.library.adelaide.edu.au/dspace/handle/2440/5
Most requests for scans are channelled through our Document Delivery Section which handles the financial invoicing and delivery.

University of Ballarat

The Library does not have a formal digitisation program in place at the moment. However UB is currently participating in a collaborative pilot project to create records, including digitised images, for items from the Art & Historical Collection, designed to share records with other Victorian collecting organisations and the general public.


University of Canberra Library

N/A
University of Melbourne

The following is a sample of material digitised from the Library collections in the last 12 months:
• Colonial Fiction – (completed 200 of approx 550 titles)
• Melways editions 1,2 and 4 (total 30 editions)
• Victorian Parliamentary Papers (Ned Kelly)- 16 titles 18-1900’s
• Victorian Parliamentary Papers (Gold) 18-1900’s
• Sir Andrew Grimwade Speeches – 3 boxes of loose material 1970-80’s
• Maps - Sands and McDougall, MMBW
• Middle Eastern Manuscripts 189 manuscripts
• Foy and Gibson collection (catalogues 1901-1967)
• Speculum: Journal of the Melbourne Medical Students' Society (1884-1914)
• Final report of the Constitutional Commission 1988.
• Programs of the Marshall-Hall Orchestral Concerts 1892-1910

With the exception of the Speculum these have not been funded projects. The following link has the broad range of digitised material available via the digital repository


http://library.unimelb.edu.au/digitalcollections/cultural_and_special_collections

Work is also undertaken on a ‘on demand’ basis for research projects i.e. questionnaires, surveys, medical records, CPA archives (majority of this work is fee for service)

Corporate support – Digitisation of invoices for University corporate systems, Minutes of governance committees of the University , legal agreements (latter two are fee for service) .

Library collections and archival collections digitised are all potential research material. Much of this material is in hard copy i.e. books, prints, loose leaf archival material is directed through the central digitisation service. Although a portion of this is object based and in particular collections like those held by the Grainger Museum require digital photography and rendering into 3D objects to provide the best online access experience. The Library also has central resources for professional digital photography and expertise in creation of 3D objects as well as digital media services (audio and video digitisation) all on a fee for service basis.

Digitisation of hard copy Library collections are primarily undertaken through internal resources but grants and sponsorship are sought where possible to increase throughput.



Download 299.79 Kb.

Share with your friends:
1   2   3   4   5




The database is protected by copyright ©ininet.org 2024
send message

    Main page