13
New Strategies for Digital Content 18 March 2011 – London Alastair Dunning [email protected] @alastairdunning Paola Marchionni [email protected] @paolamarchionni #digi11 Wi-fi: goodnet Password: wirelesskey07

New Strategies for Digital Content

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

A presentation from the JISC conference New Strategies for Digital Content, 18 March 2011, LondonBy Paola Marchionnihttp://digitisation.jiscinvolve.org/wp/2010/12/09

Citation preview

Page 1: New Strategies for Digital Content

New Strategies for Digital Content

18 March 2011 – London

Alastair Dunning [email protected] @alastairdunning

Paola Marchionni [email protected] @paolamarchionni

#digi11

Wi-fi: goodnet Password: wirelesskey07

Page 2: New Strategies for Digital Content

New Strategies for Digital Content – 18 March 2011

Paola Marchionni – JISC Digitisation Programme Manager

Page 3: New Strategies for Digital Content

A step back

2004-2009 JISC Digitisation programme and Enriching Digital Resources programme

£24m - 47 projects

| Slide 3www.jisc-content.ac.uk

Page 4: New Strategies for Digital Content

Digital Content Boom!

| Slide 4

Page 5: New Strategies for Digital Content

Digital Content Bust?

| Slide 5

Page 6: New Strategies for Digital Content

Making the most of what we have

| Slide 6

Page 7: New Strategies for Digital Content

Challenges

Challenges– Not just creating new digitised content but also:

• Sustainability: developing appropriate strategies, skills and business models for embedding and sustaining content in effective ways

• Breaking down silos of content and joining up content

• Placing the user centre-stage

– Cardiff conference 2007- http://bit.ly/i2CDi0

– JISC Digital Content Conference 2009 - http://bit.ly/h70fAz

– Digital Content Task Force 2010 - http://bit.ly/efvxcG

| Slide 7

Page 8: New Strategies for Digital Content

Questions 1/2

Some questions

How can digitisation activities be embedded in institutional practices?

How do we ensure institutions approach digitisation strategically and not on a project-basis?

How can experience and skills be retained and cascaded within institutions and the community?

What kind of partnerships do we need?

What kind of business models and services are effective for sustainability?

| Slide 8

Page 9: New Strategies for Digital Content

Questions 2/2

Some questions

How do we work more effectively with users?

How can we enhance currently available digitised resources?

How do we bring complementary resources together?

How do we best embed existing resources into teaching and learning?

How can we exploit Web 2.0 methodologies and functionalities?

| Slide 9

Page 10: New Strategies for Digital Content

eContent programme

eContent programme 2009-2011

11 projects - £2.1m

– Strand A: Institutional skills and strategies embed digitisation within institutional strategies and practices; develop effective models of sustaining digitisation; importance of collaboration and partnership

– Strand B: Clustering and enhancement enhancing digital resourcing by improving usability and discoverability; clustering related but isolated resources; embedding into teaching and learning

| Slide 10

Page 11: New Strategies for Digital Content

Strand A

| Slide 11

LIFE-SHARE

CHICC

CeDAAME

RunCoCo

Look Here!

OCRopodium

•Coordinating digitisation strategies for SOAS collections •links with UK-European networks

•Centre for Digitisation Excellence in the North East (CHICC)• digitisation services

•Exploring open source approaches to OCR•Skilling staff

•Institutional and consortial strategies for digital content•Strategy “toolkit”

•Digitisation life-cycle across institutions •Skills transfer•Community of expertise

•Support, training and software for creating a community collection

Page 12: New Strategies for Digital Content

Strand B

| Slide 12

Mapping crime

Visualising China

CEDAR

Grass portal

Connected Histories

•Cross-searching theatre collections•User generated metadata•Embedding in courses

•Thematic linking across different collections

•Cross-searching China collections•Visualisation through maps and timelines •User generated metadata and research spaces•Links to external resources, Flickr, Google books…

•Bringing together major grasses databases•Visualisation tools

•Sophisticated searches across history collections 1500-1900•Collaborative space•Exporting search results for further analysis

Page 13: New Strategies for Digital Content

New Strategies for Digital Content

18 March 2011 – London

Alastair Dunning [email protected] @alastairdunning

Paola Marchionni [email protected] @paolamarchionni

#digi11

Wi-fi: goodnet Password: wirelesskey07