creating digital collections through crowdsourcing
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Creating digital collections through crowdsourcing
Dr Ylva Berglund Prytz Education Enhancement
Academic IT University of Oxford
ylva.berglund@it.ox.ac.uk| @runcoco
CC BY-SA @ RunCoCo, University of Oxford unless otherwise stated
Petros Hadjichristodoulou @Όμηρος Χατζηστυλλής
Július Kňazeje @Jana Judinyová – Babirátová
Vittorio Cortelletti @Daniela Andreotti
Domenico Zappettini @Domenico Zappettini
Alphonse Reubrecht @Joseph Keersebilck
Oswin Arthur Ellrich @Helge Hemme
Henri Vanderdonck @Eddy Verschueren
Walter Fielder @Keith Fielder
Image by Martin Dennis Fryatt CC BY-SA http://europeana1914-1918.eu/en/contributions/11231
Community Collection material shared by the general public or a particular community (usually through crowdsourcing)
Crowdsourcing “asking the general public to help contribute to shared goals” (Ridge 2014)
“a convenient label for a diverse range of activities and projects involving the public doing something to, or with, content.” (Dunn and Hedges 2014)
© Stuart Lee
© Ashmolean Museum
© B
ruce
Gilc
hrist
© Ian Harvey
© Dr Sara M. Pons-Sanz
These items are from Project Woruldhord, University of Oxford (http://projects.oucs.ox.ac.uk/woruldhord);
All items from
© The Warden and Fellows of Merton College
© Barry Press
© Chris Madell
Merton@750: An Anniversary Collection at http://share.merton.ox.ac.uk
These items are from The Great War Archive, University of Oxford (www.oucs.ox.ac.uk/ww1lit/gwa) made available under the JISC Model Licence (use for educational, non-commercial purposes)
@Tony Carr
@Robert Johnson
@ Janet Mercer
Collection
© Age Exchange
“Since we cannot experience everything, other people’s experiences, and hence other people, become the surrogate for knowledge.” Stephenson (1998)
© Age Exchange
“When information – the basis of knowledge – changes, the knowledge of a field also changes”. Siemens (2006)
Three questions:
• What happens if you invite people to share their objects and stories through an online collection?
• How do you get contributions from people who are not digitally literate, or who do not have time to take part?
• Are there any benefits or drawbacks of turning to
the public instead of doing it all yourself?
Contact us:
RunCoCo , University of Oxford http://runcoco.oucs.ox.ac.uk/ Email: runcoco@it.ox.ac.uk Tel: 01865 283 686 @runcoco
RunCoCo, University of Oxford
Creating digital collections through crowdsourcing
Dr Ylva Berglund Prytz Education Enhancement
Academic IT University of Oxford
ylva.berglund@it.ox.ac.uk| @runcoco
CC BY-SA @ RunCoCo, University of Oxford unless otherwise stated
http://youtu.be/wsUnCAPwv90
Further context. Video interview (3 min 13) illustrating what we do and why we are doing it
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