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Past DPM Workshop Instruction TeamICPSR Workshop 2008-Joanne Kaczmarek (October 2008) - Train-the-Trainer intern 2008 bio: Joanne Kaczmarek is the Archivist for Electronic Records at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign (UIUC). She participates in several internal and external initiatives aimed at managing information resources. Prior to her current position Joanne was the project coordinator for UIUC on the Mellon-funded OAI-PMH Cultural Heritage Repository project. Anne Karle-Zenith (2009) Digital Preservation in Action 2009 bio: Anne is currently managing a project at the University of Michigan Library to build a copyright review management system, funded by a National Leadership Grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services. During her first 3 years at UM, she served as assistant to the Associate University Librarian for Library Information Technology and Technical Services, as well as project coordinator for the UM/Google partnership to digitize the Library's collections. Prior to coming to University of Michigan, she served as Metadata & Cataloging Librarian at the Michigan State University Libraries. She graduated in 2003 from the University of Michigan School of Information with a specialization in Library Services. Before becoming a librarian she lived for many years in New York City, where she worked in the music industry, licensing music as well as other copyrighted works for use in advertising, film, television and other media. Aprille McKay (2008) - topic: legal issues 2008 bio: Aprille Cooke McKay is the Project Manager for the Digital Preservation Workshop program and serves as a workshop instructor, primarily for Legal Issues for Digital Preservation. Previously, she was the Project Manager for the Mellon-funded project, "Developing Standardized Metrics in College and University Archives and Special Collections," based at the UM's School of Information, working with Ax-SNET investigators Elizabeth Yakel, Helen Tibbo and Wendy Duff. She has worked at the Bentley Historical Library, specializing in legal collections, and has also practiced law in the Chicago area. She holds an MSI with a specialization in Archives and Records Management from the UM School of Information, a JD from the University of Chicago and a B.A. from the University of Virginia. She is a member of SAA's Intellectual Property Working Group, Website Working Group and the Standards Committee. Cornell Workshop 2003-2007Anne R. Kenney (Project Co-developer 2003 - 2007; keynote speaker October 2008; Advisory Board 2008-2010) 2008 bio: Anne R. Kenney is Associate University Librarian for Instruction, Research, and Information Services (IRIS) in Cornell University Library. For over fifteen years, she has led research focusing on digital imaging and digital preservation. She is the co-author of the award-winning Moving Theory into Practice: Digital Imaging for Libraries and Archives (Research Libraries Group, 2000) and Digital Imaging for Libraries and Archives (1996). Anne is a fellow and past president of the Society of American Archivists, and served on the RLG/OCLC Working Group on the Attributes of a Trusted Digital Repository, and on the National Science Foundation/European Union Working Group on Digital Preservation. Anne currently serves on the Joint Committee on Cuban Libraries and Archives. Ellie Buckley (2003 - 2006) DPM Project Manager 2006 bio: Ellie Buckley is a digital research specialist for Research and Assessment Services at Cornell University Library. Her current focus is digital preservation and information science. She comes from a medical science background and has experience with developing evidence-based health care initiatives on the Web and telemedicine research projects. Greg Budney (October 2006) - DPM Workshop AV field trip Greg Budney is a curator at Cornell's Lab of Ornithology. Jon Corson-Rikert (August 2003) - topic: geospatial content Undated bio: Jonathan Corson-Rikert has been a programmer and project leader in Information Technology Services at Cornell's Albert R. Mann Library since 2001, working on projects including the VIVO virtual life sciences library, CUGIR (the Cornell University Geospatial Information Repository), and e-Clips, Cornell's collection of digital video clips on entrepreneurship. Prior to joining Mann Library, he worked as research administrator for the Program of Computer Graphics at Cornell, programmed geographic software at the Harvard Lab for Computer Graphics and Spatial Analysis, and developed early digital cartography applications at the Dane County Regional Planning Commission in Wisconsin. Marc Dantzker (2004 - 2006) - DPM Workshop field trip 2006 bio: Marc S. Dantzker is Curator of the Visual Media Collections for the Cornell Lab of Ornithology's Macaulay Library. Marc joined the Macaulay Library in 2000 to lead the development of an animal-behavior video archive as an integrated sister collection to the world's largest natural sound library. Marc is also Project Lead for the Macaulay Library's Digital Asset Management Solution encompassing the development of both hardware and software systems for the storage, annotation, and distribution of the Macaulay Library's audio and video assets. This solution will federate the Library's assets with the NSDL and other online partners. Marc's formal training is in Animal Behavior with a concentration on the evolution of courtship behaviors in frogs and birds. He has brought that experience to bear on the development of a new metadata schema for the Library's biological information that is now serving as a building block for a the development of a consensus ontology for the Animal Behavior research community. Richard Entlich (2003 - 2006) - topics: media, formats, tools, obsolencence 2006 bio: Richard Entlich has over ten years' experience in library- sponsored digital imaging, electronic publishing, and digital preservation initiatives. His work includes project management and technical support of the Chemistry Online Retrieval Experiment (CORE), one of the first large-scale efforts in networked distribution of digitized scholarly journals. He also contributed to the digital imaging components of the Core Historical Literature of Agriculture project, Making of America I, and TEEAL (The Essential Electronic Agricultural Library). Robert Grotke (2004 - 2006) - DPM Workshop field trip 2006 bio: Robert Grotke is the Supervising Engineer for the Cornell Lab of Ornithology's Macaulay Library, the worlds largest collection of natural sound recordings. For over 30 years Bob has been deeply involved in professional audio with extensive experience in music recording, mixing, disk mastering, tape restoration, archival processes, equipment repair/calibration and studio design. He has been with the Library since 1988 and is responsible for the architecture and implementation of the audio digitization process. He is a member of the Audio Engineering Society (AES) and the Association of Recorded Sound Collections (ARSC). William Hatch (October 2006) - DPM Workshop field trip 2009 bio: Managed the development team for the Macaulay Library at The Cornell Lab of Ornithology, where he developed the online digital asset management system for the world's largest collection of audio and video recordings of wildlife behavior (mostly birds). Diane Hillman (May 2005) - topic: preservation metadata 2007 bio: Diane Hillmann is currently Research Librarian at Cornell University Library, working primarily on the NSF-funded NSDL Registry. She was formerly Project Manager and Director of Library Services and Operations for the National Science Digital Library Project at Cornell University. She has worked in libraries and digital libraries for over 35 years, the last 30 at Cornell University Library in various capacities, including Authorities Librarian and manager of the library's MARC database. She is a past member of MARBI (the American Library Association's Committee on Machine Readable Bibliographic Information) and is currently the editor of "Using Dublin Core" (the official usage guidelines for Dublin Core) and a member of the Usage and Advisory Boards of the Dublin Core Metadata Initiative. She recently edited (with Elaine Westbrooks) "Metadata in Practice," published by ALA Editions (2004). Peter B. Hirtle (2003 - 2006) - topics: legal issues, preservation metadata 2006 bio: Peter B. Hirtle is the Technology Strategist for the Library's Instruction, Research, and Information Services Division. He also serves as the Library's Intellectual Property Officer and as the bibliographer for United States and General History. Previously, Hirtle served as Director of the Cornell Institute for Digital Collections where he explored the use of emerging technologies to expand access to cultural and scientific sources through the development and management of distinctive digital collections. He is a Fellow of the Society of American Archivists and a past president. William Kehoe (2003 - 2004) - topic: OAIS 2005 bio: William Kehoe is a Programmer/Analyst Specialist in the Cornell University Library system. After contributing to several of Cornell's digital libraries, including the USDA Economics & Statistics System and the Cornell Geospatial Information Repository, he became involved with digital preservation research in 1998, working on a CLIR-funded project on file format migration. Recently he has participated as an instructor in Cornell's Digital Preservation Management Workshops, and on the technical team for a multi-institution Political Communication Web Archiving project. He is currently the EATMOT project manager for the Cornell Library team building a federated archive of mathematical journals in collaboration with the Göttingen SUB. Marty Kurth (2004) - preservation metadata 2005 bio: Marty Kurth leads a department that provides metadata consulting, design, development, production, and conversion services to Cornell University's faculty, staff, and community partners. Marty holds MAs in English and library science. He has managed cataloging and metadata units in academic libraries for the past seventeen years. Marty's current research emphasis is in managing metadata operations to support digital library collections. Dawn Lawson (October 2003) - repository models 2004 bio: Dawn Lawson was product manager for the OCLC Digital Archive in 2002- 2003, prior to which she was product manager for electronic versions of the Dewey Decimal Classification system at OCLC. She now works at the New York University Division of Libraries as East Asian Studies librarian. Dawn holds a MA in Japanese literature from Harvard University and an MLS from the Palmer School of Long Island University. Jaime Martindale (August 2003) - geospatial content 2003 bio: Jaime Martindale is the project manager for the Cornell University Geospatial Information Repository (CUGIR) and is chiefly responsible for the public service aspects of the project. She coordinates instruction sessions and provides reference and consulting services (both in person and virtual) for GIS and spatial data at Mann Library. Jaime has presented her work with CUGIR at the ESRI International User Conference, San Diego, 2002 and the Northeast ArcUser Conference, New Hampshire 2002. Oya Y. Rieger (2003 - 2006) - topic: digital images production 2006 bio: Oya Rieger is the Associate Director of the Digital Library and Information Technologies division at the Cornell University Library. She manages the Library's Digital Media Group and coordinates the Digital Consulting and Production Services. She has a diverse background in digital libraries, including conducting research on imaging and digital preservation, managing the creation and maintenance of digital collections, implementing content management systems, providing reference services, planning entrepreneurial library initiatives, and conducting usability studies. She has a B.S. in Economics, an M.P.A., and an M.S. in Information Systems. Marcy E. Rosenkrantz (August 2003) - topic: technology infrastructure 2004 bio: Marcy E. Rosenkrantz is Director of Library Systems in the Library's division of Digital Library and Information Technologies. She is a coprincipal investigator of Ensuring Access to Mathematics Over Time, a NSF grant to develop an electronic archive for serial literature in mathematics. Prior to coming to the Library at Cornell she was Associate Director for Supercomputing Technologies at the Cornell Theory Center, and later was Associate Director of the Information Assurance and Intelligent Information Systems Institutes in CU's Computer Science Department. She has a Ph.D. in theoretical chemistry and has published articles in that field. She is a real rocket scientist [ :-) ] and has performed research on novel rocket propellants for the US Air Force. David Ruddy (October 2003) - topic: preservation metadata undated bio: David Ruddy has been with the Cornell University Library since 1998, where he is now Head of Systems Development and Production at the Center for Innovative Publishing (CIP). He joined the staff of Project Euclid at its inception in 2000 and has been closely involved with developing the technical infrastructure that supports this library-based electronic publishing initiative. He currently directs the development and extension of that system (DPubS) and manages the production environment for CIP e-publishing efforts. He has worked with SGML and XML applications and systems for many years, both in the area of humanities text computing and metadata services. He holds an M.A., M.S., and Ph.D., all from the University of Michigan. Elaine L. Westbrooks (August 2003, July 2005) - topic: geospatial content, preservation metadata 2008 bio: Elaine L. Westbrooks is Head of Metadata Services at Cornell University Libraries. In this capacity, she is responsible for analyzing developments concerning standards and best practices for enhancing access to Cornell's information resources. She leads a team of metadata experts responsible for providing consultation, design, and development services for the support of collections at Cornell and beyond. Westbrooks has presented her research at Dublin Core, LITA, and the DLF Forum. She co-edited Metadata in Practice: Building the Diverse Digital Library with Diane Hillmann in 2004 and is currently working on Metadata Fundamentals for all Librarians with Robert H. W. Wolfe. |
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