[Dialogue] Values for the Archives | creating a prototype database

R Williams rcwmbw at yahoo.com
Thu May 21 09:06:42 EDT 2009


Could there be, should there be, any connection between the archives and the repository?
 
Randy Williams

--- On Wed, 5/20/09, David Dunn <dmdunn1 at gmail.com> wrote:


From: David Dunn <dmdunn1 at gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [Dialogue] Values for the Archives | creating a prototype database
To: "Colleague Dialogue" <dialogue at wedgeblade.net>, "Order Ecumenical Community" <oe at wedgeblade.net>
Date: Wednesday, May 20, 2009, 11:15 AM




On May 19, 2009, at 6:50 PM, Marilyn R Crocker wrote:


We are wondering, is there a way we (collectively) might be able to identify and fill gaps in the official archives with the gifts of items from our dispersed family archives?  Otherwise we're thinking the whole lot may get chucked given the "down-sizing" time of life we are all entering, or "the dumpster strategy" that our kids would likely choose if they were the ones left "holding the files."

Hello Marilyn and other colleagues.


Walt Epley and I have been custodians of the Paul Evans personal archive that Gini Natali passed on to me for temporary care until the Global Archives is ready to receive it. We've begun by cataloging Paul's audio recording collection and researching what is involved in digitizing the audio cassettes. The tool we're using is a Filemaker Pro database that we expect to have online by the end of this week. (See the attached 'screenshots.')


Though we began experimenting with this prototype before Bill Parker's values email arrived, our experiment is in some sense an attempt to further the discussion about his three values: preservation, accessibility, and flexibility. 


As it stands, the structure of this prototype database is more like a "participatory archive processing management" tool that addresses the question Marilyn raises. We see it as a way to engage a dispersed network in the exercise of visualizing and growing the Global Archive.


We began building a prototype with several principles in mind: 


1) accommodate the data in the present Global Archive catalog in Marge's care
2) access with a web browser over the Internet with an evolving structure and functions
3) colleagues can catalog their personal archives
4) colleagues can identify their priorities for processing and interpreting particular categories of materials
5) colleagues can specify particular materials they are seeking for current use
6) colleagues can indicate the arenas of our common memory in which they have "subject area" expertise or interest (dispersed archive "curatorial teams")
7) colleagues can link contemporary institutional or programmatic examples of their use and impact (ToP, Training Inc, etc., etc.) with arenas of our common memory
8) colleagues processing the Global Archive collection in Chicago can update the online catalog and track their activities in real time
9) ICA staff can track the amount of volunteer time invested in work related to the Global Archives
10) URL links to each of the items that are available in the Repository
11) an online database visible to the public that can only be added to or changed by users with access credentials (secure login and specific usage privileges)







When we get the database online, we'll let you know where to find it and how to try it out so that you can give us feedback.


David




---
David Dunn
dmdunn1 at gmail.com


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