ArchivesSpace Virtual Member Forum 2024




Thank you to everyone who attended the ArchivesSpace Virtual Member Forum!

We ask all attendees complete the forum evaluation at https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/SZZ2WRQ

When:  
March 26-27, 2024

March 26, 2024, 1pm-3pm UTC (6-8am PT, 9-11am ET, 1-3pm GMT) - Find your local time

March 26, 2024, 5pm-7pm UTC (10am-12pm PT, 1-3pm ET, 5-7pm GMT) - Find your local time

March 27, 2024, 3pm-6pm UTC (8-11am PT, 11am-2pm ET, 3-6pm GMT) - Find your local time

Where:

All online via Zoom, with opportunities to join via computer or phone

Who Can Attend:

Anyone from an ArchivesSpace member organization is welcome to attend.  This is a free event but registration is required.

Registration is available to individuals from ArchivesSpace member institutions only. Registration is required for each session and registration for each session can be found at the beginning of that session's agenda. If you register for any event during the forum, you will receive connection information via Zoom.  If you register for one session, you are guaranteed a spot in that session only.  You must register for all activities you plan to attend. 

Registration:

Registrations for each session of the forum are separate.  You can register for as many sessions as you wish. If you register for any event during the Virtual Member Forum, you will receive connection information via Zoom. 

March 26, 2024 - Session A registration: closed 

March 26, 2024 - Session B registration: closed

March 27, 2024 - Session C registration: closed 


Program:

March 26, 2024

ArchivesSpace Virtual Member Forum - Session A


1:00pm UTC

(find your local time)

Welcome and Announcements

Jessica Crouch, Community Engagement Lead, ArchivesSpace

1:05-1:30pm UTC 

(find your local time)

Training and Managing Multiple ArchivesSpace Repositories at a Very Large Institution

Bri McLaughlin, Indiana University

Presentation Recording

Presentation Slides

Indiana University’s ArchivesSpace instance hosts 31 repositories across 7 campuses. Each campus has its own needs, and each repository’s needs are even more specific. Contemplating how to introduce a new application to dozens of collection managers while training myself was overwhelming, to say the least. I relied on the documentation shared by other institutions, but the majority included recommendations for 1-3 institutions. I will present a use case of how to address the specialized needs of multiple institutions while providing broad instruction. Training materials span written documentation, tutorial videos, and consultations. After almost four years of creating documentation, I have streamlined the training process so it can be done mostly independently. This presentation will be useful for any ArchivesSpace member institution getting started creating local workflows, but especially for very large institutions. The primary ArchivesSpace modules covered in this presentation are Resources, Accessions, Agents, and Subjects. In addition to practical training recommendations, I will also express the importance and benefits of cultivating and maintaining relationships with collection managers. I will also share my experience with managing the impossibly large amount of metadata shared by all repositories.

1:30-1:55pm UTC

(find your local time)


Found in Translation: Update on Multilingual Description Task Force from the Usability Sub-team

Cory Nimer, Brigham Young University and Susannah Broyles, Texas State University

Presentation Recording

Presentation Slides 

This session will review the results of a community survey on multilingual description, and the development of use cases based on these results. This initial work, undertaken by the Usability Sub-team with the assistance of an advisory group of community volunteers, seeks to identify and document staff and public user needs. The resulting use cases will serve as the basis for a specification for future development work. This session will present the survey results and use case drafting process to solicit community feedback.

1:55-2:05pm UTC 

(find your local time)

BREAK

2:05-2:10pm UTC 

Return from Break 

Jessica Crouch, ArchivesSpace 

2:10-2:35pm UTC

(find your local time)


Creating Actionable Feature Requests

Thimios Dimopulos, ArchivesSpace

Presentation Recording

Presentation Slides

A major part of the interaction between Users Developers and Testers of ArchivesSpace happens through Feature Requests. In this session we will talk about what makes an Actionable Feature Request and introduce Behavior Scenarios as a way to describe features. Relevant links: https://archivesspace.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/ADC/pages/19202060/How+to+Request+a+New+Feature

2:55-3:00pm UTC


Closing Remarks and Thank You

Jessica Crouch, ArchivesSpace

March 26, 2024

ArchivesSpace Virtual Member Forum - Session B


5:00-5:05pm UTC

(find your local time)


Welcome and Announcements

Jessica Crouch, ArchivesSpace

5:05-5:30pm UTC

(find your local time)


Migrating Legacy Data to ArchivesSpace: Lessons from a migration project at University of Wisconsin-Madison Archives and Records Management

Tony Lattis, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Presentation Recording

Presentation Slides

This presentation will give an overview of a project to migrate legacy accession data into ArchivesSpace. In the fall of 2023, University of Wisconsin-Madison Archives executed a project to migrate a Microsoft Access database which contained 40+ years of accession records into ArchivesSpace which has resulted in much better data management and searchability for the accession register as well as better linkages between accession and resource records. The project has greatly increased the usability of ArchivesSpace as a mode of discovery for Archives staff. This presentation will describe the process as an example of successful legacy data migration including the proof of concept, data cleanup, data mapping, and processing of new records as well as some of the pitfalls, assumptions, and considerations that go along with mutating legacy data. This project included the use of Python as a way to assemble json data for loading with the ArchivesSpace API. There should be plenty of time for questions and discussion of successes or failures with this type of migration as well as prospective projects regardless of technical complexity.

5:30-5:55pm UTC

(find your local time)


Pathfinding Toward ArcLight: The Journey to Discover Our Next Website Framework

Corey Schmidt, University of Georgia

Presentation Recording

Presentation Slides

In 2023, the UGA Libraries reaffirmed our decision to implement ArcLight as our next framework for our publicly available finding aid website. This decision came after beginning to implement an early version of ArcLight and the ArcLight community gaining new traction with significant code development and interface changes. With a year to monitor community contributions, evaluate the landscape of what frameworks were available, and interview and compare what other institutions were doing with ArcLight, we based our decision on customizability, maintainability, and user experience. In this presentation, we will dive into these factors more deeply, along with evaluating our analysis between using the ArchivesSpace PUI versus ArcLight and the next steps of the project. ArchivesSpace users who are interested in learning more about the differences between the two platforms and what it takes to get a customized version of ArcLight running are encouraged to attend.

5:55-6:05pm UTC

(find your local time)

BREAK

6:05-6:35pm UTC

(find your local time)


Connecting Metadata and Digital Assets: ArchivesSpace and Preservica

John Dewees, University of Rochester

Presentation Recording

Presentation Slides

Bringing together a metadata management system like ArchivesSpace and a digital asset management system like Preservica so that they can communicate with each other can be a complicated process. This presentation will discuss how the University of Rochester developed their workflow to create digital objects within ArchivesSpace efficiently at scale, as well as provide access to the digital surrogates or born digital assets that researchers want to have access to. This process utilizes the catalog sync option that Preservica developed, and specifically discusses how to create SIPs suitable for ingest into Preservica, after which they are synced with ArchivesSpace. These SIPs are difficult to create manually but can be generated more easily with programmatic intervention like Python scripting. This workflow was ultimately unlocked by using the Digitization Work Order Plugin developed by New York University Libraries to pull out the necessary data from ArchivesSpace to satisfy all the needs of the Preservica catalog sync. Ultimately this allows for the import of digital assets into Preservica in such a way that the metadata held in ArchivesSpace could be pulled over to Preservica (and then kept in sync over time) as well as populate ArchivesSpace with digital objects associated with each relevant archival object. These Python scripts were then also turned into a small graphical utility, opening the possibility of leveraging these workflows without having to work in the command line, and instead just being able to press a few buttons to generate SIPs that satisfy both platform’s needs.

6:35-6:55pm UTC

(find your local time)


A Matter of Scale

Kate Herbert, Maine State Archives

Presentation Recording

Presentation Slides

Presenting the Maine State Archives perspective on working in ArchivesSpace when your institution has Very Large collections: how this changes some uses of the platform, and its effects on workflows and data entry. This is a case study of the roadblocks MSA has come up against and how we have overcome them, and a conversation with others with Very Large resources, to share issues and solutions.

In 2020 the Maine State Archives had to move its collection from its building into temporary storage, while major building repairs were performed. This required a push to quickly enter our entire collection into ArchivesSpace (something we have been done slowly for several years to this point). At this point our system has 200,000 archival objects in 31 resources and just under 60,000 top containers. We also launched the PUI, as having the collections stored off site requires an appointment-only reading room.

Rather abruptly, the API was our best option for updating and tracking our large resources, for adding new locations to all of the top containers., and even for running some reports. Data clean-up, which was a must after a massive data dump, became harder. At the same time the resources were just too big for parts of the system to handle.

6:55-7:00pm UTC


Closing Remarks and Thank You

Jessica Crouch, ArchivesSpace 

March 27, 2024

ArchivesSpace Virtual Member Forum - Session C


3:00-3:05pm UTC

(find your local time)

Welcome Remarks and Introduction

Jessica Crouch, ArchivesSpace

3:05-3:55pm UTC

(find your local time)


ArchivesSpace Governance and You

Julia Novakovic, ArchivesSpace Governance Board; Rochester Institute of Technology

Presentation Recording

Presentation Slides 

As a member-driven organization, ArchivesSpace relies on the insight and contributions of users from member institutions to drive the nation's leading Archival Information System platform forward. In this session, members of the ArchivesSpace Governance Board, with support from the Chairs of the Technical Advisory Council (TAC) and User Advisory Council (UAC), will present an overview of the Governance Board and its member representatives. The Board Chair will talk about recent initiatives and discussions among the group. Then, the speakers will hold a panel discussion about the benefits of participating in Governance and other ArchivesSpace community opportunities (like the TAC and UAC). There will be additional time for an open Q&A from attendees.

3:55-4:05pm UTC

(find your local time)

BREAK

4:05-4:10pm UTC

Return from Break 

Jessica Crouch, ArchivesSpace

4:10-4:30pm UTC

(find your local time)


Modernizing the ArchivesSpace Codebase

Brian Zelip, ArchivesSpace Program Team

Presentation Recording

Presentation Slides

This lightning talk provides a high-level technical overview of recent and ongoing upgrades to ArchivesSpace that improve security, performance, and other modernization efforts.

4:30-4:55pm UTC

(find your local time)


Tobar an Dualchais and the ArchivesSpace API

Scott Renton, University of Edinburgh

Presentation Recording

Presentation Slides

Tobar an Dualchais (Kist o' Riches)- https://tobarandualchais.co.uk is one of the most important Scottish cultural heritage collections, gathering together audio recordings of songs, stories, poems, radio shows and beyond, in English, Scots and Gaelic. Recently, the University of Edinburgh Library took on the job of providing data to a new (third party) front end for TAD, and opted to use the trusted and reliable ArchivesSpace infrastructure to store this. Interactions between the website and ArchivesSpace take place through the API, and I would like to demonstrate the workflows we've undertaken to make this possible, including making audio recordings playable on the site, and allowing a multi-lingual aspect to the content.

4:55-5:05pm UTC

(find your local time)

BREAK

5:05-5:10pm UTC


Return from Break

Jessica Crouch, ArchivesSpace 

5:10-5:30pm UTC

(find your local time)


Simultaneous Audio Collection Processing and Digital Library Uploading Using Python, ArchivesSpace, and Islandora 8

Paul Sutherland, American Philosophical Society

Presentation Recording

Presentation Slides 

We recently received digitized audio from a vendor of several large unprocessed audio collections. We needed to find a way to simultaneously process the collection in ArchivesSpace, upload to our Digital Library, and associate the two, with minimal duplicated effort and tedious copy-pasting.

I will describe a new internal workflow for our archivists processing audio collections. The workflow involves using Python libraries to facilitate creating and updating CSV and XLSX files (ArchivesSpace's Bulk Import AO template, Bulk Update Spreadsheet and Islandora 8's Workbench), validating metadata, retrieving information from file directories, and extracting and updating audio file metadata. The process is designed so that each of these steps can be applied individually and combined into other workflows.

5:30-5:55pm UTC

(find your local time)


Troubleshooting PDF Export Errors

Valerie Addonizio, Atlas Systems

Presentation Recording

Presentation Slides 

This presentation will include demonstration and troubleshooting of some common PDF export errors, guidance for understanding error log messages, and tips for identifying and resolving the encoding issues that are usually to blame.

Troubleshooting PDF Exports - Handout

5:55-6:00pm UTC


Closing Remarks and Thank You

Jessica Crouch, ArchivesSpace

Virtual Member Forum Planning Team

Katerina Dimitriadou-Shuster, Cornell University 

Sarit Hand, Associated Press Archive

Regine Heberlein, Princeton University

Jacky Johnson, University of Miami

Christine Liebson, Case Western University

Alexandra McGee, Georgia Tech


Jessica Crouch, ArchivesSpace Program Team

Bailey-Grace Harrell, ArchivesSpace Program Team

Code of Conduct

Our Virtual Member Forum adheres to the ArchivesSpace Code of Conduct. We seek to provide a welcoming, fun, and safe community experience for everyone. The full text of the code of conduct is available at https://archivesspace.org/archivesspace-code-of-conduct

Evaluation

Virtual Member Forum Evaluation: https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/SZZ2WRQ