Description
While PhD dissertations are typically accessible many other terminal degree projects remain invisible and inaccessible to a greater audience. Over the past year and a half, librarians at Arizona State University collaborated with faculty and departmental administrators across a variety of fields to develop and create institutional repository collections that highlight and authoritatively share this type of student scholarship with schools, researchers, and future employers. This poster will present the benefits, challenges, and considerations required to successfully implement and manage these collections of applied final projects or capstone projects. Specifically, issues/challenges related to metadata consistency, faculty buy-in, and developing an ingest process, as well as benefits related to increased visibility and improved educational and employment opportunities will be discussed. This interactive presentation will also discuss lessons learned from the presenter’s experiences in context of how they can easily apply to benefit their respective institutions.
Details
Title
- Developing Applied Projects Collections in an Institutional Repository: Challenges & Benefits
Contributors
- Pardon, Kevin (Author)
- Dyal, Samuel (Author)
- Harp, Matthew (Author)
Date Created
The date the item was original created (prior to any relationship with the ASU Digital Repositories.)
2017-05-02
Resource Type
Collections this item is in
Collaborating institutions