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  Partner: UNT Libraries
 Department: Newspaper Digitization Unit
 Decade: 2010-2019
Beyond Google: Promoting Digitized Primary Sources in First-Year Writing

Beyond Google: Promoting Digitized Primary Sources in First-Year Writing

Date: March 15, 2013
Creator: Krahmer, Ana
Description: This presentation discusses promoting digitized primary sources in research. Topics include the background and interest in the subject, key term definitions, examples of items and usage, National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) K-12 teaching resources, and FYC application.
Contributing Partner: UNT Libraries
Crossing State Lines For Collaborative Newspaper Digitization: The Gateway to Oklahoma History

Crossing State Lines For Collaborative Newspaper Digitization: The Gateway to Oklahoma History

Date: May 24, 2012
Creator: Day, Jennifer; Newell, Mallory; Williams, Chad & Fisher, Sarah Lynn
Description: This presentation discusses a collaborative project between the Oklahoma Historical Society and the University of North Texas (UNT) to digitize all of the pre-1923 newspapers in the Oklahoma Historical Society's collection. The project involved building The Gateway to Oklahoma History, which allows easy access to newspapers for students, researchers, and journalists. The project is funded in part by the Excellence and Ethics in Journalism Grant.
Contributing Partner: UNT Libraries
Defining What Preservation Through Access Means in Digitizing Community Newspapers

Defining What Preservation Through Access Means in Digitizing Community Newspapers

Date: August 9, 2012
Creator: Krahmer, Ana & Howe, Joseph
Description: This poster discusses what preservation through access means in digitizing community newspapers. University of North Texas Libraries' Portal to Texas History partners with nearly 200 cultural memory institutions to represent digitized, historic materials from across Texas. This poster will represent statistics, case studies, audience feedback, and grant funding data to demonstrate what digitization and preservation of historic newspapers on The Portal to Texas History has meant to preserving the identities of their respective communities.
Contributing Partner: UNT Libraries
Digital Curation Micro-Applications: Digital Lifecycle Management with AutoHotkey

Digital Curation Micro-Applications: Digital Lifecycle Management with AutoHotkey

Date: May 7, 2013
Creator: Weidner, Andrew; Wilson, Robert John & Alemneh, Daniel Gelaw
Description: This poster discusses open source software tools coded with AutoHotkey that the UNT digital libraries group has developed for digital curation during the pre-ingest stage of the digital resource lifecycle.
Contributing Partner: UNT Libraries
Digital Curation Tools: Metadata Enhancement with Selenium IDE

Digital Curation Tools: Metadata Enhancement with Selenium IDE

Date: February 2013
Creator: Alemneh, Daniel Gelaw & Weidner, Andrew
Description: This poster discusses metadata enhancement with Selenium IDE. Digital lifecycle management starts when an item is created (born-digital) or selected for digitization (analog) and continues through image post-processing, metadata capture, derivative creation, and preservation for long-term access. Quality metadata is crucial to implementing reliable, usable, and sustainable digital libraries. Recognizing the role of standardized metadata in digital resource lifecycle management, the University of North Texas (UNT) Libraries actively promote metadata-based digital resource management. The UNT Digital Libraries Division utilizes various tools to ensure metadata consistency and precision across all digital resources and facilitate digital curation activities. This poster illustrates a workflow that uses Selenium IDE to edit large sets of published metadata records quickly and accurately with minimal human intervention.
Contributing Partner: UNT Libraries
Digital Curation Tools: Metadata Enhancement with Selenium IDE

Digital Curation Tools: Metadata Enhancement with Selenium IDE

Date: February 2013
Creator: Alemneh, Daniel Gelaw & Weidner, Andrew
Description: This document accompanies a poster and discusses metadata enhancement with Selenium IDE. Abstract: Maintaining usable and sustainable digital collections requires a complex set of actions that address the myriad challenges at various stages of the data lifecycle. Digital curation activities enhance access and retrieval, maintain quality, add value, and facilitate use and re-use over time. Digital resource lifecycle management is becoming an increasingly important topic as digital curators actively explore tools and applications that directly perform curation and management tasks. Accordingly, the University of North Texas (UNT) Libraries develop and/or adopt various tools, workflows, and quality control mechanisms that enable quick and effective analysis and quality assurance. This brief paper demonstrates automated metadata enhancement with Selenium IDE, an open source, Web-based tool which UNT has adopted for use during the post-ingestion stage of the data lifecycle.
Contributing Partner: UNT Libraries
Metadata Quality Enhancement for Large Digital Collections: Web Browser Automation with Selenium IDE

Metadata Quality Enhancement for Large Digital Collections: Web Browser Automation with Selenium IDE

Date: May 24, 2012
Creator: Weidner, Andrew & Alemneh, Daniel Gelaw
Description: This poster discusses metadata quality enhancement for large digital collections. Creating and maintaining accurate descriptive metadata for digital objects is one of the best ways to connect with digital library users and maintain those connections over the long term. Good metadata empowers users to not only discover exactly what they searched for, but also to locate relevant resources that they did not expect to find. Metadata quality characteristics for digital libraries depend on many factors, including: the types of resources the repository offers and the users' needs, which vary across the spectrum of user communities. The metadata quality issue is particularly acute if there are multiple institutions participating in collaborative digital projects that employ diverse naming schemes for their documents and files. Furthermore, harvesting large sets of documents from open repositories presents a number of challenges for creating accurate descriptive metadata. For example, metadata schema do not always map well, creating disconnects when published in the local repository. In the aforementioned cases, substantial rework is usually required to create descriptive data that meets local repository standards. The University of North Texas (UNT) digital libraries group utilizes various tools and mechanisms to ensure metadata consistency and precision across all digital resources. ...
Contributing Partner: UNT Libraries
Newspaper Metadata Manual

Newspaper Metadata Manual

Date: 2013
Creator: Weidner, Andrew
Description: This document describes the process that the University of North Texas (UNT) Libraries' Digital Newspaper Unit (DNU) uses to create metadata for the scanned newspapers published on The Portal to Texas History as part of the Texas Digital Newspaper Program (TDNP). High quality metadata helps users find what they want more quickly. Over time, accurate descriptive metadata fosters trust among the Portal's user community.
Contributing Partner: UNT Libraries
Newspapers In The 21st Century: How NDNP State Projects Deliver The News

Newspapers In The 21st Century: How NDNP State Projects Deliver The News

Date: September 2012
Creator: Howington, Ann & Fisher, Sarah Lynn
Description: This poster discusses newspapers in the 21st century and how the National Digital Newspapers Program (NDNP) state projects deliver the news. NDNP Awardees' are creating their own digital newspaper sites to provide free access to content digitized through NDNP and beyond.
Contributing Partner: UNT Libraries
Pancho Villa and the Battle of Columbus: Frontiers in Digital Newspapers

Pancho Villa and the Battle of Columbus: Frontiers in Digital Newspapers

Date: June 29, 2012
Creator: Weidner, Andrew
Description: This poster discusses frontiers in digital newspapers. Since early 2011, the University of New Mexico and the University of North Texas have been engaged in a historical newspaper digitization project. The endeavor is part of the National Digital Newspaper Program (NDNP): a long-term project coordinated by the Library of Congress with the goal of digitizing 100,000 pages of historical newspapers from each of the 50 states and publishing them to the Web at Chronicling America (chroniclingamerica.loc.gov). NDNP New Mexico is funded by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities. After digitizing and creating metadata for approximately one hundred reels of microfilmed newspapers, New Mexico NDNP has completed its 100,000 page goal. Contemporary accounts of many noteworthy historical events in New Mexico history are now readily available online. One such event is General Francisco "Pancho" Villa's cross-border attack on Columbus, New Mexico, an important episode in the Border War spurred by the Mexican Revolution.
Contributing Partner: UNT Libraries
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