Subject: Glasgow Summer School 2001; Maastricht Seminar 2001
NINCH-ANNOUNCE (david@ninch.org)
Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2000 09:27:22 -0500
Message-Id: <v04210102b62484e70675@[192.100.21.22]> Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2000 09:27:22 -0500 To: ninch-announce@CNI.ORG From: NINCH-ANNOUNCE <david@ninch.org> Subject: Glasgow Summer School 2001; Maastricht Seminar 2001
NINCH ANNOUNCEMENT
News on Networking Cultural Heritage Resources
from across the Community
October 31, 2000
Humanities Advanced Technology & Information Institute
Digitization Summer School 2001
July 8 - 13 2001: Glasgow University
http://www.hatii.arts.gla.ac.uk/DigiSS01/
DIGITAL CULTURAL HERITAGE III:
FINDING AIDS AND ANALYSIS TOOLS IN ARCHIVES AND MEMORY INSTITUTIONS
11 - 14 July 2001, Maastricht
<http://www.amsu.edu/> (after January, 2001)
Glasgow's successful digitization summer school is taking
reservations now for its fourth session next summer. The Maastricht
Seminar also announces its third year.
David Green
===========
Humanities Advanced Technology & Information Institute
Digitization Summer School 2001
July 8 - 13 2001: Glasgow University
http://www.hatii.arts.gla.ac.uk/DigiSS01/
>Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2000 10:20:40 +0000 (GMT Standard Time)
>Subject: Glasgow International Digitisation Summer School
>From: Liz Lewis <liz.lewis@ahds.ac.uk>
>To: ahds-all@mailbase.ac.uk
--- Begin Forwarded Message ---
Apologies if you receive this message more than once.
HATII is pleased to announce the fourth international
Digitisation Summer School, July 8 - 13 2001.
Full information and course details can be found on the HATII web
pages at:
http://www.hatii.arts.gla.ac.uk/DigiSS01/
The availability of high-quality digital content is central to
improved public access, teaching, and research about heritage
information. Archivists, librarians, and museum professionals are
among the many groups that are increasingly involved in creating
digital resources to improve access and understanding to their
collections. Skills in understanding the principles and best practice
in the digitisation of primary textual and image resources have broad
value. Participants in the course will examine the advantages of
developing digital collections of heritage materials, as well as
investigate issues involved in creating, curating, and managing access
to such collections. The lectures will be supplemented by seminars and
practical exercises. In these, participants will apply the practical
skills they acquire to the digitisation of an analogue collection
which they have selected (print, image e.g. photographic or slide,
music manuscripts, or map). The focus will be on working with primary
source material not otherwise available in digital form.
The one-week intensive course will consist of 10 lectures; 5 seminars;
5 lab-based practicals (offering both guided tuition, as well as an
opportunity for individual practice); and visits to the Glasgow
University Library.
Places are limited on the course, so please register early to
confirm a place.
COSTS, REGISTRATION, AND DEADLINES
Course Fees (including study materials, mid-morning coffee, lunch,
and afternoon tea breaks, not including accomdation):
- Advanced booking price: £650 sterling (if a place is booked and the
course fees are paid by 13 April 2001).
- Normal price: £700 sterling (if a place is booked and the course
fees are paid after 14 April 2001)
Please use the web page to register online at:
http://www.hatii.arts.gla.ac.uk/DigiSS01/
or contact:
Mrs Ann Law,
Secretary,
HATII,
George Service House,
11 University Gardens
University of Glasgow
GLASGOW G12 8QQ, UK
Tel. and Fax: (+44 141) 330 5512
Email: a.law@arts.gla.ac.uk
-------------------
Ann Gow Tel: (+44) 0141 330 5997
Resource Development Officer Fax: (+44) 0141 330 3788
HATII email: A.Gow@hatii.arts.gla.ac.uk
Glasgow University http://www.hatii.arts.gla.ac.uk
======================================================================
==========
DIGITAL CULTURAL HERITAGE III:
FINDING AIDS AND ANALYSIS TOOLS IN ARCHIVES AND MEMORY INSTITUTIONS
11 - 14 July 2001, Maastricht
<http://www.amsu.edu/> (after January, 2001)
>Date: Mon, 30 Oct 2000 10:16:36 -0500
>From: Terry Kuny <terry.kuny@xist.com>
>Subject: [CFP] Digital Cultural Heritage III (2001.07.11-14: Maastricht)
>To: DIGLIB@INFOSERV.NLC-BNC.CA
DIGITAL CULTURAL HERITAGE III:
FINDING AIDS AND ANALYSIS TOOLS IN ARCHIVES AND MEMORY INSTITUTIONS
11 - 14 July 2001, Maastricht
Introduction
All over the world, the titles and contents of the great libraries, museums,
art galleries and archives are becoming available on-line. While
interoperable, technological standards are emerging, problems of
interoperable applications, tools, interfaces and usability remain.
The Maastricht McLuhan Institute (MMI) was set up to study and develop methods
for knowledge organisation and knowledge management in a digital, distributed,
multimedia world. The aim of the MMI is to create comprehensive strategies for
searching, structuring, using and presenting digital resources more coherently
and efficiently; to integrate past knowledge and to produce ordered knowledge
that leads to new understanding and insights.
This year's seminar is concerned with integrating developments in finding aids
(virtual reference rooms) with innovations in text and other analysis tools
which will allow the most varied and rich access to cultural and historical
information and knowledge. Following on from the experience gained in the last
two cycles which focused on implications of digitalisation (1999) and
interoperability of content (2000), this seminar will continue to explore how
multimedia is transforming learning, knowledge organisation and knowledge
management and will focus on archives.
The cycle of attention given to all three kinds of memory institutions
(museum, library, archive) is conceived to be a building and integrative
process. The
seminar provides an opportunity to gain exposure to the most recent
developments in cultural heritage science and to interact with other
professionals who share similar concerns.
The conference will be limited to a maximum of fifty persons, with speakers
and discussions in the morning and small workshops with a maximum of
fifteen in
the afternoons. A general foundation will be laid in the opening session
by the
Scientific Director of the MMI, Kim Veltman. This will be followed by
treatment of finding aids and analysis tools, as they are used or projected
for archives
and other memory institutions. Among others, speakers will include Peter
Horsman from the Archival School in Amsterdam, Manfred Thaller from the
University of Cologne and author or KLEIO, Michele Paoli from the Information
Research Center on Culture, Pisa, and Pat Young of the Cultural Heritage
Information Network, Canada. On the last day a synthesis of the different
topics will be offered by experts who will take a broader perspective on
cultural heritage preservation and access. The afternoon discussion groups
will be divided among those interests relevant to the current work of those in
attendance. All seminars, presentations and debates will be in English.
The seminar will take place at the Maastricht McLuhan Institute, Grote Gracht
82, Maastricht, The Netherlands.
Application & Registration
The application fee of NLG 1500 (Euro 681) includes access to the complete
programme, daily lunches and refreshments, and admission to the cultural
evening programme of the Amsterdam-Maastricht Summer University. For more
information including application procedures, please contact Alana Henry,
alana@amsu.edu, Amsterdam Maastricht Summer University, P.O. Box 53066,
1007 RB, Amsterdam, the Netherlands, tel: +31 20 620 0225, fax.: +31 20
6249368.
Information will also be available on our website:
<http://www.amsu.edu/>www.amsu.edu after January, 2001.
European Commission on Preservation and Access (ECPA)
P.O. Box 19121, NL-1000 GC Amsterdam,
visiting address: Trippenhuis, Kloveniersburgwal 29, NL-1011 JV Amsterdam,
The Netherlands
tel. +31 - 20 - 551 0839 fax +31 - 20 - 620 4941
URL: http://www.knaw.nl/ecpa/
******************************************************************
Sun Microsystems, Inc. has published the second edition of its
popular "Digital Library Toolkit", a valuable resource for anyone
planning a digital collection. To download a free copy, go to:
http://www.sun.com/products-n-solutions/edu/libraries/digitaltoolkit.html
******************************************************************
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