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Build an online collecting site

Ever wanted to collect stories, reflections, images, or other digital items from your visitors through the web, but you did not quite know how to plan and launch a site? In this proposed session participants will discuss the steps required to build a friendly and easy-to-use digital archive that encourages public contributions. Sheila Brennan has considerable experience building digital archives and collecting sites, and will share her experience with the group and will encourage others to talk through the challenges they are facing at their own institutions as they try to launch online collecting sites. Other topics that may be discussed include vetting, privacy, content management systems, project outreach, and sustainability.

<10/27/10> Folks, I’ve created a public Google doc for notes and examples during our session. Please annotate, edit, et al before, during, and after our session:  docs.google.com/document/edit?id=1VgbzIp0qX7Md6ffP0bSOmbd1cPkoZWgLxOtQcm-oVUI&hl=en

Session Info
Type: Unconference session
Keywords: digital archive, collecting, tagging
Relevance: The session relates to the conference theme by demonstrating how museums can invite the public to create content and add to a museum’s digital collections. Creating an online collecting site provides another means for a museum to encourage participation from its broad range of publics. Outreach and publicity for these types of sites are as critical to their success as building the site itself, all of which will be covered in this proposed session. This session may interest museum technologists, outreach specialists, curators, and educators.

This entry was posted on October 8, 2010, 3:41 am and is filed under General. You can follow any responses to this entry through RSS 2.0. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

2 Comments

  • #1 by dklevan on October 26, 2010 - 5:18 pm

    spacer

    Love it! I see cross over with crowd sourcing session. In particular I am interested in how history museums can work with the public to document historical sites via mobile devices and curate results to augment collections, interpretation, and exhibitions. Would love to learn more about existing tools, especially ones that play nicely with mobile devices. Too bad this session conflicts with one of my presentations. Come find me during other times to discuss!

    • #2 by Sheila Brennan on October 27, 2010 - 1:44 pm

      spacer

      Sorry to be missing your session! We should definitely talk–in Austin or once we’re back in DC. We have a real crowd-sourcing tool in the works right now meant for transcribing that you might be interested in hearing about as well.

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