Print

Print


The following is a text-only press release from the federal Institute of
Museum and Library Services (IMLS). An HTML version of this release can
be read on the agency's Web site at
http://www.imls.gov/news/2010/020310.shtm. 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February 3, 2010

Press Contacts
202-653-4632
Jeannine Mjoseth, [log in to unmask]
Mamie Bittner, [log in to unmask]

Project Demonstrations Announced for 2010 WebWise Conference

Washington, DC-The Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) has
announced the projects that will be demonstrated at the 2010 WebWise
Conference on Libraries and Museums in the Digital World. Registration
is now closed for the free conference, to be held March 3-5 in Denver,
CO.

The 2010 WebWise conference is sponsored by IMLS and co-hosted by the
University of Denver, the Denver Art Museum, and BCR, a library
collaborative. The theme for this year's conference, "Imagining the
Digital Future," will address the successes and innovations of the past
as well as the opportunities and challenges as museums and libraries
navigate the future. Topics will include digital content creators and
educators who are developing engaging learning spaces, digital
repository management, sustainability of collaborative digitization
programs, development and support of interactive online environments,
new tools and services for discovery and access, and the professional
development of a 21st century cultural heritage information workforce.

Each year, IMLS selects a variety of its cutting-edge, grant-funded
projects to highlight at WebWise. This year, demonstrations will include
the following projects:

The Apiary Project: Framework and Workflow for Extraction and Parsing of
Herbarium Specimen Data: A Standards-Based Approach to Tool Integration
and Metadata http://www.apiaryproject.org/content/about-apiary-project
William Moen, University of North Texas
Millions of specimens in museums and herbaria worldwide need to be
digitized to be accessible to scientists. The Apiary Project combines
human and machine processes to facilitate the transformation of
herbarium label data into machine-processable parsed data. The workflow
and framework integrate a variety of existing technologies and the
application of standards, such as the recently approved Darwin Core
metadata standard. Participants will access a Web-based application with
interfaces focusing on four primary phases: layout analysis, text
extraction, text parsing, and quality control. The technology platform
is composed entirely of open source components; upon completion, the
workflow and framework will be released as an open source project.

Art Conservation Database
Wynne Phelan, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
E-mail: [log in to unmask]
The Art Conservation Database (ACD) combines detailed text and image
records of works on paper, paintings, and three-dimensional art;
comprehensive condition reports; and collection care records into one
database system, in conjunction with an advisory committee of
professionals working in the field. The presentation will cover various
standards and how they have affected the system design. It will
highlight other art conservation documentation system projects and the
commonalities and differences among the three conservation disciplines
being addressed, as well as strategies to enhance communications among
conservation professionals and IT professionals, especially database
developers. It is hoped that these efforts will lead to an ACD that is a
successful communication platform among conservators and others who are
responsible for collection care.

Creativity Resource
http://creativity.denverartmuseum.org
Ellen Spangler, Denver Art Museum
E-mail: [log in to unmask]
Creativity Resource is a new Web site designed especially for teachers
and hosted by the Denver Art Museum (DAM). Its purpose is to make the
DAM collections useful in classrooms and to help educators teach skills
for creativity in visual arts and language arts. The site features art
and creative writing ideas and standards-based lesson plans for early
childhood through grade 12; high-quality images and art information; and
resources about creativity and divergent thinking. Development of the
site was funded by a grant from the Morgridge Family Foundation.

Enduring Communities: Japanese Americans in Arizona, Colorado, New
Mexico, Texas, and Utah - Web tools for K-12 Educators
http://www.janm.org/projects/ec Allyson Nakamoto, Japanese American
National Museum
E-mail: [log in to unmask]
This project focuses on the World War II-era experiences of Japanese
Americans in five states. It engages teachers, scholars, community
members, and educational/cultural institutions in developing narratives
that illuminate local, state, and national histories. Throughout the
project, the project team has discussed the use of primary sources in
teaching. Many teachers are interested in incorporating more primary
sources into the standards-based curriculum, but they need assistance in
locating them and incorporating them into their teaching. Working for
more than four years with educators and museum professionals, the
demonstration team has developed strategies museums and libraries can
use to help K-12 teachers locate and incorporate a wide variety of
primary source materials into their classes.

EthoSearch: The Ethogram Archive Project http://www.ethosearch.org Leah
M. Melber, Lincoln Park Zoo
E-mail: [log in to unmask]
Modern zoological parks serve as valuable and unique resources for
multi-institutional collaborative behavioral research by scientists and
students at all levels, from elementary school through graduate school.
EthoSearch: The Ethogram Archive Project (EAP) is designed to provide a
tool of critical value to zoo managers, researchers, and students.
Ethograms-species-specific lists of observable behaviors-are a
fundamental underpinning of behavioral research, providing a
standardized approach to collecting animal behavioral data. As the
volume of multi-institutional research increases, the need for a
searchable, clearly defined, easily used database of ethograms becomes
more critical. EAP will fill a vital role for various constituencies and
will ultimately become the core tool for behavioral research and
collaborative study.

Media MashUp
http://www.hclib.org/extranet/#mediamashup
Jennifer Nelson, Hennepin County Public Library Media MashUp is a
demonstration project designed to develop an approach to implementing
technology-infused programs for youth in public libraries. The software
application that undergirds the programs is Scratch, freely available,
interactive digital media programs developed by the LifeLong
Kindergarten Lab at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Scratch
is specially designed to teach 21st century literacy skills to youth.
Media MashUp is testing program delivery and assessing critical factors
that will determine the success or failure of programs in these
libraries, as well as establishing a set of best practices for program
implementation. The project is also identifying the critical skills
library staff will need, if they are to implement high-quality
technology-infused programs.

MIT FACADE Project
http://facade.mit.edu
MacKenzie Smith, Massachusetts Institute of Technology The FACADE
(Future-proofing Architectural Computer-Aided Design) project at MIT
Libraries and the MIT School of Architecture and Planning has
investigated how to archive the highly proprietary and complex datasets
of building construction projects donated by prominent architecture
firms. The project aims to prioritize metadata application efforts for
the prime materials (e.g., 3D CAD models, presentations to clients, 2D
design drawing sets) while preserving the mass of other files so end
users of the repository system can access them. The project has also
developed guidelines and best practices for archiving 3D CAD models for
long-term digital preservation. The archive includes a catalog and a
large searchable archive of each building's collection in its entirety.

Oral Histories of the American South
(http://docsouth.unc.edu/sohp)
Natasha Smith, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Documenting
the American South, a digital publishing program at the Carolina Digital
Library and Archives, involved a number of constituencies at the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (the UNC Library, the
Southern Oral Histories Program, the Center for the Study of the
American South, and the School of Education) to publish online oral
history interviews using open source technology. These Web-based oral
histories also underwent rigorous analysis by subject matter
specialists, which adds considerable value to the interviews by
combining the perspectives of historians and the firsthand experiences
of southerners in a transitioning American South. The project includes a
Web interface that simultaneously presents audio recordings and
interview transcripts.

Rapid Imaging Project
Sam Quigley, Art Institute of Chicago
E-mail: [log in to unmask]
The goal of the Rapid Imaging Project was to increase public access to
the Art Institute of Chicago's permanent collection. Collections
specialists and technicians tested various applications and workflow
procedures to find the best solutions for issues related to image
quality, recording metadata, and archiving files. Using off-the-shelf
applications, studio and high-end consumer equipment, imaging
workstations, and workflows optimized for production, the team digitally
captured nearly 35,000 images. The coordinator used the Extensis
Portfolio and Adobe applications to archive the images and handle
technical metadata, and to upload derivatives to the collection
information management system, the Chicago Imaging, Text, and Indexing
system. The project dramatically enhanced the Art Institute's ability to
provide public access to its collections.

Vireo
http://etd.tdl.org
Mark McFarland, University of Texas
The Texas Digital Library (TDL) has produced Vireo, a statewide
electronic submission and management system for theses and
dissertations. Vireo provides a workflow system that incorporates all
the steps in the thesis process, from student submission of the
manuscript to processing by graduate school personnel, publication, and
preservation. To create Vireo, the TDL developers reviewed the workflows
of five graduate schools in Texas and developed a meta-workflow that can
be adapted for use by any school. In addition to the student and
graduate school staff functions, the system enables institutions to
publish the documents in their institutional repositories and in the TDL
Statewide ETD Repository, and to export documents into TDL's planned
preservation network.

Vogel 50X50
http://vogel5050.org
John Gordy, National Gallery of Art
E-mail: [log in to unmask]
The Dorothy and Herbert Vogel Collection: Fifty Works for Fifty States
is distributing 2,500 works from the Vogels' collection of contemporary
art throughout the nation, with fifty works going to an art institution
in each of the fifty states. The program Web site allows each of the
museums to upload images of the works and its own independent research,
essentially bringing the collection back together. The 2,500 works can
be sorted by artist, date, medium, or keywords. The project is a joint
initiative of the Dorothy and Herbert Vogel Collection and the National
Gallery of Art, with additional support from the National Endowment for
the Arts and the Institute of Museum and Library Services.

WGBH Media Library and Archives Vietnam Digital Library
http://ccnmtl.columbia.edu/digitalbridges/projects/vietnam_digital_libra
ry.html
Karen Cariani, WGBH Boston
The Vietnam Digital Library is a collaboration among the WGBH Media
Library and Archives, the University of Massachusetts-Boston, and the
Columbia University Center for New Media Teaching and Learning. The
library contains material from the 1983 series Vietnam: A Television
History, including rare archival footage and hours of in-depth
interviews with key decision-makers and veterans. It enables scholars,
academics, researchers, and the general public to access this historic
collection of key primary source materials, and provides tools that
allow user tagging, user annotations for specific video clips or photos,
citations, faceted search, and video-transcript syncing. The
demonstration will focus on the learning environment Columbia University
has built to enable faculty to use digital media for classroom teaching.

A number of other projects funded by the MacArthur and Morgridge
Foundations will also be demonstrated at the WebWise Conference. For
more on WebWise 2010, go to the conference Web site at
http://www.bcr.org/webwise2010.

About the Institute of Museum and Library Services The Institute of
Museum and Library Services is the primary source of federal support for
the nation's 123,000 libraries and 17,500 museums. The Institute's
mission is to create strong libraries and museums that connect people to
information and ideas. The Institute works at the national level and in
coordination with state and local organizations to sustain heritage,
culture, and knowledge; enhance learning and innovation; and support
professional development. To learn more about the Institute, please
visit http://www.imls.gov.