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The People’s Media Record (PMR) is planning a series of workshops about
preserving time-based content for community media-makers and community
archivists in the Philadelphia area, and is looking for instructors for
three workshops on digital preservation and a two-part workshop on
digitization. The workshops will take place in July and August 2023, with
dates tentatively scheduled. Instructors will be paid. The content, form,
and structure of the workshops aren’t complete and PMR would like to work
with instructors to finalize them. Drafts of the workshop descriptions are
below. The workshops will be about two hours long and could be done
face-to-face or remotely.
PMR is a Philadelphia-based community organization that is an archive of
community-produced media, particularly of social justice movements.

Questions and applications should be sent to
[log in to unmask]

*Preservation Planning for Community Media Collections*

In this workshop, participants will learn how to approach digital
preservation planning for their collections. We will explore best practices
for planning, including documentation and metadata, and we will reflect on
how to develop effective strategies for preservation planning in
community-based settings with limited capacity. Participants will leave
with the ability to assess their preservation practices and to start
designing their own preservation plan.

*Digital Preservation for Community Media Collections* [might merge with
the first workshop]

You have gathered and digitized your materials, but now what? This workshop
will guide you through the next steps of archiving your collection,
including digital storage & metadata management, forensic technologies,
documentation, and maintenance. Participants will leave with a general
understanding of digital preservation fundamentals and with a roadmap for
preserving their collection in a sustainable way.

*Metadata for Community Media Preservation* [looking for a co-facilitator
with experience with audiovisual metadata]

This workshop will prepare you to understand the process of creating and
enriching metadata–the “data about your data” such as date, creator, file
format, and cataloger–for cataloging and preserving digital collections.
Among the topics that will be explored are the different types of metadata,
metadata standards, best practices for metadata creation and management,
possible tools, and critical community-based approaches to metadata work.

*Digitizing Community Media Collections – 2 Parts*

Workflows for Preparing to Digitize
This workshop will offer users a general overview of the media digitization
process. You will learn the essential steps that are needed to digitize
media effectively: how to appropriately identify your media for
digitization, how to determine the necessary software and hardware for
digitization, and how to think about and set up storage and file management
in order to ensure the successful preservation of your materials

Workshop – Digitizing Media Collections
This hands-on session (or all-day drop-in or appointment style) will guide
participants through the process of digitizing an artifact from their
collections. You will have the opportunity to test out the lessons about
digitization from the previous workshop. In addition, you will have the
option of submitting some of your digitized materials as part of a group
screening.

*Tentative dates:*

Preservation Planning for Community Media Collections: 7/14, 7pm-9pm EST
(virtual)
Digital Preservation for Community Media Collections: 7/21, 7pm-9pm EST
(virtual) — possibly integrated with the former
Digitizing Community Media Collections Part 1: 8/10, 7pm-9pm EST (virtual)
Digitizing Community Media Collections Part 2: 8/17 (TBD) (in-person)
Metadata for Community Media Preservation: 8/31, 7pm-9pm EST (virtual)

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