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 Collection: Digital Frontiers
The Impact of Digitizing Resources: Content Partner and User Perspectives

The Impact of Digitizing Resources: Content Partner and User Perspectives

Date: September 21, 2012
Creator: Belden, Dreanna
Description: This presentation discusses the impact of digitizing resources. The Portal to Texas History℠ is a gateway to humanities collections within the digital library of the University of North Texas (UNT) Libraries. The Portal provides access to more than 190,000 digital objects, comprising over 2.6 million image files. The range of primary source materials includes maps, books, manuscripts, newspapers, diaries, photographs, and letters from the unique collections of Texas libraries, museums, archives, historical societies, genealogical societies, and private families. The Portal was launched in 2003 with collections from five content partners and currently includes materials from more than 190 partners. While increasing numbers of partners and assets are signs that making digitized resources Web-acessible is a desirable thing, digital libraries are increasingly expected to identify the impacts that have resulted from digitizing assets. In 2012, UNT Libraries began to investigate the impact of digitizing assets on two of the Portal's key stakeholder groups: content partner and users. An environmental scan identified seven possible impact categories: cultural, economic, educational, environmental, operational, political, and social. These categories served as the framework for data collection activities, which included five key informant interviews with content providers and surveys of both content partners (N = 58) ...
Contributing Partner: UNT Libraries
Personal Response to Digital Frontiers Roundtable: Michael Blair

Personal Response to Digital Frontiers Roundtable: Michael Blair

Date: September 21, 2012
Creator: Blair, Michael
Description: This response paper is for Dr. Jennifer Way's graduate art history seminar on 20th-21st century art. Students in Way's seminar attended 'Social Media and Digital Communities: A Roundtable Discussion,' a session featured at the Digital Frontiers 2012 conference. Way charged her students with writing a short paper to explore connections between the roundtable and their seminar studies. What follows is a short paper by graduate student, Michael Blair.
Contributing Partner: UNT College of Visual Arts + Design
The Handbook of Texas: Past and Future

The Handbook of Texas: Past and Future

Date: September 21, 2012
Creator: Calder, J. Kent
Description: This presentation discusses the Handbook of Texas. A program of the Texas State Historical Association (TSHA), the 'Handbook of Texas Online' is a multidisciplinary digital encyclopedia of Texas history, geography, and culture. It comprises more than 27,000 articles on people, places, events, historical themes, institutions, and a host of other topic categories. It began with TSHA Director Eugene C. Barker, who had proposed a biographical dictionary project in 1932. Historian Walter Prescott Webb became director in 1936 and enhanced Barker's idea to encompass "a combination dictionary, biography and encyclopedia." The first edition of the 'Handbook of Texas' appeared in 1952. A third volume supplement was published in 1977. Not long after the publication of the supplement, the board and staff undertook an even more ambitious idea, a new completely revised edition. In the July 1996 the 'New Handbook of Texas' was published in six volumes. Less than three years later, the Association officially released 'The Handbook of Texas Online' on February 15, 1999, offering it free to the public. Today 3 million individuals come to the TSHA website for a total of around 4 million visits and 10 million page views in the course of the year. The central challenge ...
Contributing Partner: UNT Libraries
Personal Response to Digital Frontiers Roundtable: Rachel Christensen

Personal Response to Digital Frontiers Roundtable: Rachel Christensen

Date: September 21, 2012
Creator: Christensen, Rachel
Description: This response paper is for Dr. Jennifer Way's graduate art history seminar on 20th-21st century art. Students in Way's seminar attended 'Social Media and Digital Communities: A Roundtable Discussion,' a session featured at the Digital Frontiers 2012 conference. Way charged her students with writing a short paper to explore connections between the roundtable and their seminar studies. What follows is a short paper by graduate student, Rachel Christensen.
Contributing Partner: UNT College of Visual Arts + Design
Personal Response to Digital Frontiers Roundtable: Chance Dunlap

Personal Response to Digital Frontiers Roundtable: Chance Dunlap

Date: September 21, 2012
Creator: Dunlap, Chance
Description: This response paper is for Dr. Jennifer Way's graduate art history seminar on 20th-21st century art. Students in Way's seminar attended 'Social Media and Digital Communities: A Roundtable Discussion,' a session featured at the Digital Frontiers 2012 conference. Way charged her students with writing a short paper to explore connections between the roundtable and their seminar studies. What follows is a short paper by graduate student, Chance Dunlap.
Contributing Partner: UNT College of Visual Arts + Design
Personal Response to Digital Frontiers Roundtable: Madeleine Fitzgerald

Personal Response to Digital Frontiers Roundtable: Madeleine Fitzgerald

Date: September 21, 2012
Creator: Fitzgerald, Madeleine
Description: This response paper is for Dr. Jennifer Way's graduate art history seminar on 20th-21st century art. Students in Way's seminar attended 'Social Media and Digital Communities: A Roundtable Discussion,' a session featured at the Digital Frontiers 2012 conference. Way charged her students with writing a short paper to explore connections between the roundtable and their seminar studies. What follows is a short paper by graduate student, Madeleine Fitzgerald.
Contributing Partner: UNT College of Visual Arts + Design
Personal Response to Digital Frontiers Roundtable: Justin Strickland Hoff

Personal Response to Digital Frontiers Roundtable: Justin Strickland Hoff

Date: September 21, 2012
Creator: Hoff, Justin Strickland
Description: This response paper is for Dr. Jennifer Way's graduate art history seminar on 20th-21st century art. Students in Way's seminar attended 'Social Media and Digital Communities: A Roundtable Discussion,' a session featured at the Digital Frontiers 2012 conference. Way charged her students with writing a short paper to explore connections between the roundtable and their seminar studies. What follows is a short paper by graduate student, Justin Strickland Hoff.
Contributing Partner: UNT College of Visual Arts + Design
Personal Response to Digital Frontiers Roundtable: Ann Howington

Personal Response to Digital Frontiers Roundtable: Ann Howington

Date: September 21, 2012
Creator: Howington, Ann
Description: This response paper is for Dr. Jennifer Way's graduate art history seminar on 20th-21st century art. Students in Way's seminar attended 'Social Media and Digital Communities: A Roundtable Discussion,' a session featured at the Digital Frontiers 2012 conference. Way charged her students with writing a short paper to explore connections between the roundtable and their seminar studies. What follows is a short paper by graduate student, Ann Howington.
Contributing Partner: UNT College of Visual Arts + Design
Personal Response to Digital Frontiers Roundtable: Allison Jarek

Personal Response to Digital Frontiers Roundtable: Allison Jarek

Date: September 21, 2012
Creator: Jarek, Allison
Description: This response paper is for Dr. Jennifer Way's graduate art history seminar on 20th-21st century art. Students in Way's seminar attended 'Social Media and Digital Communities: A Roundtable Discussion,' a session featured at the Digital Frontiers 2012 conference. Way charged her students with writing a short paper to explore connections between the roundtable and their seminar studies. What follows is a short paper by graduate student, Allison Jarek.
Contributing Partner: UNT College of Visual Arts + Design
Personal Response to Digital Frontiers Roundtable: Sean Miller

Personal Response to Digital Frontiers Roundtable: Sean Miller

Date: September 21, 2012
Creator: Miller, Sean
Description: This response paper is for Dr. Jennifer Way's graduate art history seminar on 20th-21st century art. Students in Way's seminar attended 'Social Media and Digital Communities: A Roundtable Discussion,' a session featured at the Digital Frontiers 2012 conference. Way charged her students with writing a short paper to explore connections between the roundtable and their seminar studies. What follows is a short paper by graduate student, Sean Miller.
Contributing Partner: UNT College of Visual Arts + Design
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