Digital curation fundamentals

Bibliographic Information

Digital curation fundamentals

Jody L. DeRidder

Rowman & Littlefield, c2018

  • : hbk
  • : pbk

Available at  / 2 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Includes bibliographical references (pages 141-150) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Volume

: pbk ISBN 9781538106785

Description

Websites and digital news stories disappear daily; researchers can't access their own data for reuse; students don't know how to make their work last for the next 10 years. Knowledge is built on previously gathered information, but what happens when that information is no longer accessible? And where does the librarian or archivist fit into this picture? This book describes the basic steps of data curation, in clear easy-to-follow language, and clarifies the many potential roles that a librarian or archivist can play to help make our information future viable for generations to come. Digital Curation Fundamentals is for anyone who wants to help save knowledge for future use, but knows little-to-nothing about digital curation or how it fits with their jobs. This book is also for administrators who need to stay on top of things but don't yet have a good grasp on the purpose and scope of digital curation and how central it is to the future. Additionally, this book is a reference handbook for those who are involved in digital curation in some form but who need the context to know how their work fits into the big picture, and what comes next. This book takes a straight-forward, commonsense approach to a complex problem, and portrays the challenges and opportunities in an approachable conversational style which lowers the bar to include those with little to no technical expertise.

Table of Contents

List of Tables and Figures Preface Chapter 1. What Is Digital Curation? Chapter 2. What Can I/We Do? Chapter 3. Models: Which Ones Do I Use When? Chapter 4. Emulation, Migration, or Encapsulation? Chapter 5. How do I Identify and Select Content? Chapter 6. What Foundational Work Will Prepare Content for Preservation and Access? Chapter 7. Storage, Protection, and Monitoring: What Do I Do? Chapter 8. How Do I Provide Access Over Time? Chapter 9. How Can I Leverage the Community? Appendix. Resources Bibliography Index About the Author
Volume

: hbk ISBN 9781538111215

Description

Websites and digital news stories disappear daily; researchers can't access their own data for reuse; students don't know how to make their work last for the next 10 years. Knowledge is built on previously gathered information, but what happens when that information is no longer accessible? And where does the librarian or archivist fit into this picture? This book describes the basic steps of data curation, in clear easy-to-follow language, and clarifies the many potential roles that a librarian or archivist can play to help make our information future viable for generations to come. Digital Curation Fundamentals is for anyone who wants to help save knowledge for future use, but knows little-to-nothing about digital curation or how it fits with their jobs. This book is also for administrators who need to stay on top of things but don't yet have a good grasp on the purpose and scope of digital curation and how central it is to the future. Additionally, this book is a reference handbook for those who are involved in digital curation in some form but who need the context to know how their work fits into the big picture, and what comes next. This book takes a straight-forward, commonsense approach to a complex problem, and portrays the challenges and opportunities in an approachable conversational style which lowers the bar to include those with little to no technical expertise.

Table of Contents

List of Tables and Figures Preface Chapter 1. What Is Digital Curation? Chapter 2. What Can I/We Do? Chapter 3. Models: Which Ones Do I Use When? Chapter 4. Emulation, Migration, or Encapsulation? Chapter 5. How do I Identify and Select Content? Chapter 6. What Foundational Work Will Prepare Content for Preservation and Access? Chapter 7. Storage, Protection, and Monitoring: What Do I Do? Chapter 8. How Do I Provide Access Over Time? Chapter 9. How Can I Leverage the Community? Appendix. Resources Bibliography Index About the Author

by "Nielsen BookData"

Details

Page Top