It was with trepidation that I attended the Research Data Spring sandpit last week. A sandpit has childhood associations with lazy long summers, but reading more about the format of the event it sounded more like an episode of Dragon’s Den.
The ‘sandpit’ event was held at Birmingham’s Aston University campus and we were at least rewarded with summer beach weather on the second day |
The first day of this event was set aside to explore and discuss ideas submitted through Jisc’s latest funding call (Research Data Spring via Ideascale) leading to potential new collaborations and partnerships.
On the second day, idea holders were given the chance to pitch their idea to a panel of judges. In a kind of four minute ‘elevator pitch’ we had to say enough about our project idea to explain what we wanted to achieve, why it was important and what resources were required, as well as persuading the judges that we should receive funding. This was followed by a four minute grilling by the judges on the finer details of the idea. No pressure!
After a late night doing sums, I have a final run through of my pitch |
I was pitching a version of an idea originally submitted by the University of Hull that I had been quick to volunteer to collaborate on. The idea is based around investigating Archivematica for use within a wider technical infrastructure for research data management. We are hoping to plug the digital preservation gap and demonstrate the benefits that Archivematica can bring as part of an automated workflow for ingesting and processing research data.
My poster advertising the idea |
Many universities in the UK will not yet be ready to start thinking seriously about digital preservation, but the hope is that if this idea is funded, our work with Archivematica will help inform future decision making in this area for other institutions.
Jenny Mitcham, Digital Archivist
Congrats Jen! If funded this idea will prove valuable to institutions who have a mandate to preserve and make accessible open research. Figuring out where in the workflow something like Archivematica would fit will be key I suspect.
ReplyDeleteJenny Mitcham, Digital Archivist