Posted on February 24th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp
The latest news from the Repository team at the University of Lincoln:
RSP Winter School 2011
I was lucky enough to attend the three-day Repositories Support Project Winter School (#rspws11), which this year was held in the impressive surroundings of Armathwaite Hall near Bassenthwaite in the Lake District. As you can see from my photos, it was a real hardship.

The programme included a keynote address by the immensely switched-on Professor Martin Hall, V-c of the University of Salford (and the first UK V-c on Twitter!), which touched on archaeology, museums, data preservation, open access, mobile learning, and the meaning of the modern university. The remaining speakers and discussions over the three days seemed to relate to two main topics:
- Data preservation and OA to datasets: Max Wilkinson on the work of the British Library and the BL datasets programme (bl.uk/datasets); Miggie Pickton from the University of Northampton about their ‘KeepIt‘ project to preserve university research data.
The consensus about research data seems to be this: don’t rely on your existing processes for your ‘publications’ repository. Keep a clear wall between a publications repository and a data archive. The requirements for describing/cataloguing, preserving, and providing access (sensitive data, etc.) are all just too different for datasets and publications. Also, there seems to be a general agreement that a more national, shared approach is appropriate for datasets than the strongly institutional focus of publication repositories.

- The options for CRISes and Repositories when gathering data for the REF: presentations from Keith Jeffery; Mark Cox
It slowly emerged that there seem to be at least two different approaches to REF data-preparation that universities are taking: some [generally large, research-intensive universities] are investing heavily in a CRIS (which is impacting on the role of the Repository); others [generally the smaller HEIs, though with notable exceptions] are developing and enhancing their existing Repository systems, and relying on EPrints/DSpace to do more heavy lifting.

Interestingly, there was relatively little talk of e-theses in all this. We did however manage to slip in an advert for the UKCoRR members’ meeting (tomorrow!)
Slides and notes from the various presentations and workshops are available to download from the RSP’s website.
Tweets bearing the Winter School’s hashtag #rspws11 are preserved in a Twapper Keeper archive.

Meanwhile, back home in Lincoln…
And at our regular Repository team meeting on Friday, 18 February. It seems to be a particularly busy time, Repository-wise, at the moment. Welcome to David Young who came to his first Friday team meeting.
Present: Bev Jones (BJ), Paul Stainthorp (PS), Rosaline Smith (RS), David Young (DY).
- We’ve hit 2,800 items on the Repository, which is a credit to Lincoln’s academic staff, as well as to the tireless efforts of RS and BJ! We’re aiming for 3,000 items by the end of April, 2011. If we hit that target, I’ll be doing some more baking.
- There are a number of useful training events on at the moment: some organised by the RSP (e.g. this one), as well as this extremely valuable-looking non-RSP event in Glasgow. Many of the events relate in some way to getting data in/out of repositories for REF purposes (c.f. the discussions at the Winter School, above). Unfortunately, Lincoln people aren’t able to attend many of these events, so PS and DY are going to meet to discuss the possibility of running/arranging a similar event in the East Midlands.
- The group discussed some EPrints tweaks: publisher search, the ability to ‘bounce’ a Repository record from one owner to another, the perennial unique author IDs …all of which are possible and in place in at least one other EPrints repository. We also touched upon our succession/emergency planning (i.e. how would the Library cope if and when the volume of Repository traffic outstrips our resource to deal with it: our “Plan X“.)
- RS updated us on the Kultivate project: there’s another workshop in London on Monday, 28 February; RS is still planning a meeting with the Faculty of Art, Architecture & Design. RS has issued her final reminder by mass email to academic staff, asking them to attend a Repository workshop or/and to get in touch to discuss depositing their items.
- BJ reported that all Repository records from the calendar years 2010/2011 (so far) are now identifiable to a quarter. (We need this level of specificity to produce our Quarterly Research Output Reports.) However, there’s still some confusion over exactly how we can construct date-limited queries in EPrints – BJ is going to ask on the eprints_tech and UKCoRR mailing lists to see if we can get a definitive answer.
- Now-quite-finally, I (PS) ran through a number of things I’m going to bring to the next Repository steering group: including technical developments and where we might need to take EPrints in the run-up to the REF, as well as improving the Repository’s presence on our corporate website. I’m also going to speak to the chair of the steering group (University Librarian, Ian Snowley) about the date of the next meeting.
- Did I mention it’s the UKCoRR meeting tomorrow?

Tags: Armathwaite Hall, Bassenthwaite, BL, British Library, conferences, CRIS, Cumbria, curation, data, events, Keith Jeffery, Kultivate, Lake District, Mark Cox, Martin Hall, Max Wilkinson, meetings, Miggie Pickton, minutes, Open Access, Plan X, presentations, preservation, Quarterly Research Output Reports, REF, reporting, reports, repositories, Repositories Support Project, Repository steering group, requirements, RSP, rspws11, team, training, Twapper Keeper, UKCoRR, University of Salford, Winter School
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Posted on January 13th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp
UKCoRR (the UK Council of Research Repositories – on whose committee I sit) are holding their annual meeting, open to all members of UKCoRR, on Friday, February 25, 2011 from 10:00 AM – 4:00 PM (GMT), in the Conference Room of the Clifford Whitworth Library, University of Salford.
I’ve blogged about it over at: http://ukcorr.blogspot.com/
Booking is now open!
Tags: meetings, repositories, Salford, UKCoRR
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Posted on December 13th, 2010 by Paul Stainthorp
I’ve asked Rosaline Smith (Research Institutional Repository Officer) to act as the University’s contact with the Kultur II Group, a new, informal group of UKHE repository staff involved in “addressing the needs of the UK higher education arts sector including non-text and practice-led research outputs“. We first heard about Kultur II from (University of the Arts’) Stephanie Meece, at a RSP event in October 2010.
The group has a contacts page [with named contacts for each institution], a JISCMail list, and a presence on Twitter. Rosaline will feed back any information about Kultur II and about its initiatives to improve the engagement with art & design researchers and repositories.

Tags: arts, design, Kultur Consortium, Kultur II Group, repositories, Rosaline Smith, Stephanie Meece, University of the Arts
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Posted on November 15th, 2010 by Paul Stainthorp
The entire e-resources and repository team went en masse to the latest Repositories Support Project event, “Doing it differently“, which was held in Sheffield Cathedral on the 27th of October 2010: “to hear about alternative approaches to repository-like functions, open access and the general field of improving research communications“.
Some quick points from the notes I took on the day:
- [I think it was] Stephanie Taylor of UKOLN [who] made a good point in her presentation about the ‘forgotten’ people in libraries, who ought naturally to be interested in the content held in repositories, but who are rarely included in discussions: inter-library loans staff being an obvious example, with the repo. as source of material to reduce the burden on document supply.
- Our own repository was mentioned in Richard Davis (ULCC)’s examples of SNEEP plugins used ‘in the wild’ – it’s good to think that some of the features of the Lincoln Repository (crafted over in the LIROLEM project that gave it its genesis) are still worthy of being held up as examples.
- Stephanie Meece’s demo of the University of the Arts’ repository was enlightening; it gave considered and coherent explanation of some of the low-level culture-clash conversations that we’ve had with our own Art & Design academic staff. It was worth it, too, to hear about the Kultur Consortium and the potential there for mutual support and development of repositories capable of meeting the needs of the Arts.
- Joss Winn was also there, bringing the University of Lincoln contingent to five! Joss gave a talk on using RSS to grease the wheels of scholarly writing and publishing, which has an accompanying blog post.
- Also exciting to see the direction Mendeley is taking [slides], with the potential (in the new year) for new features (“Library Groups”) to support library e-journals admininstration and subscription analysis.
We also took the opportunity (as four of the five committee members were in the room) to conduct an informal, stand-up UKCoRR meeting over lunch, at which we laid the groundwork for the next UKCoRR AGM, which will hopefully take place toward the end of February 2011.
Slides and handouts from the day are on the RSP’s website.
Tags: #rspdiff, cathedral, conferences, events, inter-library loans, Joss Winn, Kultur Consortium, Library staff blog, Lincoln Repository, LIROLEM, meetings, Mendeley, reference management, repositories, Repositories Support Project, Richard Davis, RSP, RSS, scholarly publishing, scholarly writing, Sheffield, SNEEP, Stephanie Meece, Stephanie Taylor, team, UKCoRR, UKOLN, ULCC, University of the Arts
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Posted on October 12th, 2010 by Paul Stainthorp
For more than a year, I’ve been meaning to resurrect my website of tips & tricks for reference management. I finally got around to doing so today, with a new video tutorial about sending references to a RefWorks account from the University of Lincoln Repository.
You can see it at – http://refworks.blogs.lincoln.ac.uk/

Last July, inspired by my colleague (CERD Technology Officer) Joss Winn‘s collection of Google Search Tutorials, I began creating my own screencast videos, with the intention that they would “build up over time into a collection of useful video tutorials to help [people] use RefWorks personal bibliographic management software“.
I still think there’s real potential in creating short, single-issue video tutorials, published in blog form, to address RefWorks / bibliography management FAQs. So I’m now going to attempt to keep on top of it and add a new video every week. I’m creating the screencasts using TechSmith Jing software, and the site itself is running on WordPress (on the University of Lincoln’s own blogs service, at: blogs.lincoln.ac.uk).
Jing (and the associated screencast.com website) makes it reasonably easy to create screencasts with audio, and to embed them in any web page (including a WordPress blog post)…
…and you might assume that six or seven years of presenting live radio would make easy for me to knock off professional-sounding voiceovers straight into a headset mic. Yes; you might very well assume that.
Tags: audio, blog, blogging, Jing, Lincoln Repository, reference management, RefWorks, repositories, screencast, screencast.com, tutorials, video, WordPress MU
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Posted on July 27th, 2010 by Paul Stainthorp
My face has appeared on the committee page of the UKCoRR website.
UKCoRR, the United Kingdom Council of Research Repositories, is an “independent body for repository managers, administrators and staff in the UK“.
Because I manage the Library’s work in supporting our own Lincoln Repository at the University, I’ve been a member of UKCoRR for several years: and since April 2010 I’ve been sitting on the 5-person UKCoRR committee as ‘External Liaison Officer’; my purpose being to “develop the relationship between UKCoRR and other organisations working in repository management & development, publishing & OA, research support, academia and librarianship”.
The UKCoRR website, including minutes of the committee’s meetings, is at: http://www.ukcorr.org/
Tags: committee, external liaison, repositories, repository, UKCoRR, United Kingdom Council of Research Repositories
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