FAQ
The Innovations in Jewish Life Collections team has compiled a list of the frequently askedquestions and their answers. Additionally, we offer manyresourcesthat may help you if you are interested in learning about archives and how they work.
If you have a question that is not answered here, please use the contact pageto get in touch with the IJL Collections team.
General
Archives are materials that have been created by individuals, groups or organizations during the course of their life or work and deemed to be worth keeping permanently for the purposes of research. These materials may be personal and unplanned—a photograph, a letter to a friend, notes toward a manuscript—or they may be official and widely shared—financial and legal documents, recordings of public speeches, medical files, and electronic records. The term archive can also mean a place where archives are stored.
To learn more about what archivists do, what an archive looks like, and find additional resources, please visit our What are Archives? 貹.
While libraries, museums, and archives may seem similar, they do have many fundamental differences. Their missions, how material is collected, and how material is viewed are all vastly different.
"Both libraries and museums are repositories, but libraries are user-driven... The role of the library is to provide access to a vast amount of material through which the user freely roams, making his/her own connections between works.The user chooses which items to look at.Museums, on the other hand, are curator-driven. Historically, they have only provided access to limited holdings, usually exhibited through a particular interpretation or context, as provided by curatorial and educational staff. The museum provides a framework of context and interpretation, and the user can navigate within that smaller body.
Archives tend to be research driven. They are accessible, often by appointment, in non-public spaces."
- "" byHoward Besser, NYU
Yes, individual, group, and class viewings of a collection can be arranged by appointment!Our archivists will work with youto curate a selection of materials from a collection for viewing, per the collection finding aid found on the right-hand side bar of each collection page on our website.Please note that due to processing, research, and preservation efforts, there is no guarantee that specific materials will be available for viewing.
Individual, group, or class tours of the collections must be requested one week in advance of the requested visit date.Our team will call or email you to schedule and confirm your visit. Please note that if you have not received a response from us, your visit is not confirmed.
Please read "" in preparation for your visit.
Please visitour contact pageto request an appointment.
The Innovations in Jewish LifeCollections acceptmany types of donations!
Please review our Donating Materials and Giving pages to learn more about the donation process.
The CU 鶹ӰԺ archives accepts donations regardless of format (e.g., published, typescript, audio-visual, and electronic data, such as computer disks and files). For documents in formats requiring any form of machine intervention, such as videotapes and all computer files, consideration will be given to issues of long-term accessibility and preservation.
We do not add to our collection through purchasing items. We will happily accept donations that fit both our mission and guidelines. Please review ourDonating Materials page and then feel free to contact usabout a donation.
It depends.All collections and archives are inventoried soon after they are accessioned into the Archives’ collections so that a basic description of the material is available fairly soon.Depending on the size, complexity, restrictions and conservations issues associated with an archive, processing and cataloging of the material can take anywhere from a few hours to several years.Collections or archives may not be completely open for research until all of the work is completed.
Digitization and Born-Digital Materials
We understand that the expectation of easyonline access to our holdings continues to grow. Research is no longer relegated to libraries and research rooms, but is being done around-the-clock on computers around the world. To meet this need, we are working toward creating, to the greatest extent possible, an “archives without walls.”
We plan to create digital versions of selected records, including those most requested by researchers. Digitizing materials from our holdings will improve access to those holdingsand will help preserve and protect the original materials from excessive handling. To help achieve those goals, we are working with the University of ColoradoDigital Asset Management Committee and the Digital Libraries Management Group to establish priorities and complete digitization projectsthat adhere to professionalstandardsof metadata,preservation, andaccessibility.
"Scanning is theprocess of a creating raster graphic (a dot matrix data structure, representing a generally rectangular grid of pixels, or points of color, viewable via a monitor, paper, or other display medium) that reproduces a document or image by converting reflected or transmitted light into a digital signal that can be stored, transmitted, and reconstructed for display as an electronic image." Simply put, scanning merely renders an item visually in digital form.
- "" from the Society of American Archivists' Glossary, 2017
"Digitization, on the other hand, is theprocess of transforming analog material into binary electronic (digital) form, especially for storage and use in a computer.
The term 'digitized' is used to distinguish materials that have been transformed from the media in which they were created from materials that are born digital. Digitization is distinguished from 'data entry', which is the process of typing textual records, often in forms designed to facilitate the process, into a computer system.
Digitization may start with information that is in electronic or physical form; for example, magnetic audio tape or phonograph discs. Digitization of textual documents typically produces an image of the words, which must be transformed to character data through a process of optical character recognition (OCR). In some instances, the OCR process may preserve text and page formatting."
- "" from the Society of American Archivists' Glossary, 2017
Digitization is much more complex than simply scanning an archival object. The process of archival digitization includes scanning, but it also requires adding layers of metadata (descriptive, structural, and technical), creating multiple copies for various uses (access and preservation), as well as uploading the appropriatecontent/metadatato our digitial repository. Thus, the process requires time and expertise to uphold the professional standards that archivists are required to maintain.
IJL is also one collecting area that is part of a larger archives that has hundreds of collections with materials to digitize. While we are a high priority in the digitization queue, there are always other projects being completed simulatneously.
Only a tiny fraction of the world’s primary resources are available digitally... Why is that?
The PAMA (Peel Art Gallery Museum and Archives) Archivists have put together a blog post with some of the reasoning behind the complicated process and decision-making:
Research
Our archivists are happy to answer questions about the collections. Please make sure that you have read all of the provided information about the collections in whichyou are interested, including the finding aid when avaliable, before contacting our team.
Use thecontact formto submit your research inquiries.
Archivists do not conduct research on behalf of others, however, they will be happy to assist you by pulling materials. Please see more information about conducting research in the archives in the SCA Reading Roomon theUsing Archival Materials page.