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Speaking from Experience: Uses and Users of the Archival Record. Presentation for the World Bank Information Solutions Group October 16, 2001. Overview. Changing tools and methods Changing customer Smithsonian Institution Archives approaches Suggestions for the World Bank Archives. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Speaking from Experience: Uses and Users of the Archival Record
Presentation for the World Bank Information Solutions Group
October 16, 2001
Overview
• Changing tools and methods• Changing customer• Smithsonian Institution Archives
approaches• Suggestions for the World Bank Archives
When I first entered the archival field . . .
• It was the olden days.
Things were simpler, life was slower
“The day of the curator as a scholarly hermit is past.”
Kenneth Duckett, Modern Manuscripts, 1975 (p. 270-271)
What Archivists Do
• Identify/appraise• Acquire• Arrange and Describe• Preserve• Make Available• . . . . If there’s time, Promote
“Outreach” was not a known term for archives
• There was public education
• Or public service• Or public awareness
Public Service consists of . . .
• Exhibits• Publications
– Repository Guides– Finding Aids– Microfilm publications– Circulars, brochures
• Tours• Friends Group
Public Service . . . .
• Presentations• Media exposure• “It is sometimes difficult to determine
whether the press release . . . is intended to serve its nominal function or to enhance the reputation of the curator.”
Preferred Users
1. Scholarly researchers
2. Institutional staff
Others/General Public
• Unfamiliar with archival processes• Often arrive unprepared• Need a lot of assistance• Fewer psychic rewards
Scholars, yes!
In-house Staff, okay
Others, do I have to ?. . .
Questioning the status quo . . . .
Elsie Freeman, “In the Eye of the Beholder: Archives Administration from
the User’s Point of View” in The American Archivist, Spring 1984
Misassumptions About Users
• That archivists are oriented toward users.• That we know who our users are• That we understand how research is done• That we provide adequate help in doing it• Freeman, Spring 1984
Freeman on Users . .
• “My proposition . . . would turn our administrative, descriptive, reference, and training practices upside down.”
• “. . . we must begin to think of archives administration as client-centered, not materials-centered.
• “We must . . . learn . . . who our users are; what kinds of projects they pursue, in what time frames, and under what sponsorship; and most importantly, how they approach records.” p.112
Keeping Archives (Australia, 1987)
• User Education and Public Relations– Exhibitions– Publications– Publicity– Seminars and Workshops (convert novice users
into competent researchers)– Community Support Groups
• Friends and other fundraising mechanisms
Managing Archives and Archival Institutions (1989)
• Chapter on Public Programs• “Public programs are an essential element
of a healthy archival program. The enormous effort expended to acquire, describe, and make resources available merits an equally strong commitment to facilitating use.” p. 227
Subject Indexing for Archives (Bureau of Canadian Archivists,
1992)
• “Archivists increasingly must serve a heterogeneous clientele with diverse needs and expectations.” p. 23
The American Archivist, Fall 1995
• The success of an archival program, of the archival profession, depends on the extent to which we can make our archives . . . into people’s archives. (Eric Ketelaar, p. 454)
Uses and Users of Smithsonian Institution Archives
• What is the Smithsonian Institution• About SI Archives• Uses and Users
Smithsonian Institution
• James Smithson’s bequest• Founded August 1846• Receives both Federal and trust funds• Primarily a scientific institution for its first
one hundred years
Smithsonian Institution
• Largest cultural complex in the world– sixteen museums and the Zoo– Astrophysical Observatory (MA)– Tropical Research Center (Panama)– Environmental Research Ctr (Chesapeake Bay)– Center for Folk life and Cultural Studies
• Many other programs
Smithsonian Institution Archives
• Documents the Institution through– 22,000 cu. ft. of records and personal papers– oral history program
• Provides services through– records management program– National Collections Program
Staffing base of 27
• Archivists• Archives Specialists• Historians• Conservators• Collections Management Specialists• Technicians• Administrative staff
Organizationally,
Consists of four subdivisions:– Archives– Institutional History– Technical Services– National Collections Program
• Reports to Chief Technology Officer
SIA Tools for Service
• On-site assistance• Finding Aids/Guide• Specialized dbases• Website
• SIRIS• Reference• Loans for Exhibition
Tools for Internal Service
• Fact checking• Exhibitions• In-depth research
• Publications– Annals– Collection Statistics
• Guidance
Tools for External Service
• Talks to outside groups
• Fellows• Methodology online
• Publications– Henry Papers– Collection Highlights
www.si.edu/archives
Integrated Online Catalog
Guidance
SIA online exhibits
SIA online exhibits
• Smithsonian Scrapbook• This Day in Smithsonian History• Expeditions: 150 Years of Smithsonian
Research in Latin America• Baird’s Dream: History of the Arts and
Industries Building
150 Years of Smithsonian Expeditions in Latin America
Service to Archivists
Service to Archivists
SIA reference for FY 2000
• SI-related: 912 (466 on site)• Non-SI: 2,591 (335 on site)• E-mail : 1,737• From 1997, a major increase in non-SI users • (SIRIS searches in archives and manuscripts
database: approximately 60,000)
Why New Users?
Technology
How to add more new Users?
Technology+
Knowledge
Apply Technology to . . .
• Tools for accessing records– Finding aids– Links to other resources
However,
– “In a world of electronic mail, computerized information databases, and the World Wide Web, a traditional finding aid leading to boxes and boxes of archival records appears both primitive and intimidating. . . .” Todd Welch in “Green Archivism . . . .” The American Archivist, Spring 1999, pp. 91-92
Apply Technology to . . .
• Sets of records– Significant groups of documents– Illustrative examples of records– Cohesive collections
Provide Access to Archival Knowledge
• Where institutional information is• What the relationships are • What the decision-making process is• Who the knowledgeable parties are• What the history is
We must think in terms of institutional information
Not historical records
We must simplify access to institutional information
To do this right, we must . . .
• Clearly identify the intended user• Create simple, clear methods of access• Organize and present information, not
pointers to raw materials • Target key constituencies within or outside
of your organization.
For the World Bank Archives
• Lessons in development• Role of records in nation building• Topical conferences open to the public
Bring people to the archivesBring archives to the people
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