Sharing Oregon’s Cultural Heritage: Harvesting Oregon Digital’s Collections Into the Digital Public Library of America

Authors

  • Julia Simic University of Oregon
  • Ryan Wick Oregon State University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7710/1093-7374.1962

Keywords:

Oregon, Oregon libraries, academic library, libraries, librarians, northwest, information science, information literacy, social media, writing, library trends, books, donors, library funding, Oregon library association, quarterly, Oregon library association quarterly, American library association, ala, ola, reading, library success, success, evolving roles, OSU, Oregon state, University, web services, public, new discipline, changes in libraries, career, careers, library careers, library career, professional journal, scholarly, academic, circulation, Portland, Multnomah County Library, innovative, inventive, solution, oregon librarians, librarian, political, politics, political action, association, civics, civic education, inspiring, engagement, role, participation, skills, create, creating, resources, develop, source, evaluate, evaluation, evaluating, University of Oregon, UO, learn, learned, program, job, for, a, an, the, leadership, institute, liola, digital repositories, data harvests, data, digital public library of america, mountain west digital library, archives, archive, archivist, history, photograph, osu, oregon state, university, southern oregon, state library of oregon, state library, harvester, newspaper, special collections, alliance, consortium, orbis cascade, archives west, dpla, mwdl, heritage, culture, cultural, navigating, collaborate, navigate, platform, National Endowment for the Humanities, Library Services and Technology Act, lsta, MARC, commision, lewis & clark college, uo, university of oregon, maureen, flanagan, battistella, preservation, curation, curate, midwest digital library, oai, edtf

Abstract

Oregon Digital, the library digital collections platform of Oregon State University and the University of Oregon, joined the Mountain West Digital Library (MWDL) and the Digital Public Library of America (DPLA) in 2016 to increase the visibility of our collections. This article discusses the process of becoming participants in the hub-network structure of the two organizations, remediating metadata in compliance with best practices, and modifications to the digital collections platforms, both locally and at MWDL, to successfully harvest over 100,000 items into DPLA.

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Author Biographies

Julia Simic, University of Oregon

Julia Simic is the Assistant Head of Digital Scholarship Services at the University of Oregon Libraries. Her primary areas of responsibility include the management of all stages of the digital lifecycle, and participation in initiatives related to digital collections and scholarship projects. Julia assisted in developing training for the Orbis Cascade Alliance’s LSTA grant to become a DPLA Service Hub and is the Institutional Representative to the Unique & Local Content Team. She holds a BA and MLS from Indiana University.

Ryan Wick, Oregon State University

Ryan Wick is an Analyst Programmer at Oregon State University Libraries and Press, with both the Special Collections and Archives Research Center and the Emerging Technologies and Services department. Beginning as a student worker in 1999, he has been involved in many digitization and digital collections projects, including publication of The Pauling Catalogue, OSU Sesquicentennial Oral History Project, ScholarsArchive@OSU, and Oregon Digital. He is also active in the Samvera and Code4Lib communities.

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Published

2019-08-01

How to Cite

Simic, J., & Wick, R. (2019). Sharing Oregon’s Cultural Heritage: Harvesting Oregon Digital’s Collections Into the Digital Public Library of America. OLA Quarterly, 24(4), 34–40. https://doi.org/10.7710/1093-7374.1962