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More Product, Less Process:. Mark A. Greene, American Heritage Center Dennis Meissner, Minnesota Historical Society. Mark Greene. Director, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming. Why did we work on this?.
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More Product, Less Process: Mark A. Greene, American Heritage Center Dennis Meissner, Minnesota Historical Society
Mark Greene • Director, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming
Why did we work on this? • My experience at four repositories with significant backlogs of unprocessed materials: Carleton College, Minnesota Historical Society, Henry Ford Museum, AHC • Dennis’ experience as processing manager at MHS
The Problem • Archival processing does not keep pace with the growth of collections
The Problem • Archival processing does not keep pace with the growth of collections • Unprocessed backlogs continue to grow
The Problem • Archival processing does not keep pace with the growth of collections • Unprocessed backlogs continue to grow • Researchers denied access to collections
The Problem • Archival processing does not keep pace with the growth of collections • Unprocessed backlogs continue to grow • Researchers denied access to collections • Our image with donors and resource allocators suffers
Findings • Processing benchmarks and practices are inappropriate to deal with problems posed by large contemporary collections
Findings • Processing benchmarks and practices are inappropriate to deal with problems posed by large contemporary collections • Ideal vs. necessary
Findings • Processing benchmarks and practices are inappropriate to deal with problems posed by large contemporary collections • Ideal vs. necessary • Fixation on item level tasks
Findings • Processing benchmarks and practices are inappropriate to deal with problems posed by large contemporary collections • Ideal vs. necessary • Fixation on item level tasks • Preservation anxieties trump user needs
Findings • Arrangement • Practice: Still often at the item level
Findings • Arrangement • Practice: Still often at the item level • Warrant: Literature mixed, but much advises against item level work
Findings • Description • Practice: • Weak commitment to online access • Little focus on item level
Findings • Description • Practice: • Weak commitment to online access • Little focus on item level • Warrant: • Describe all holdings, in general, before describing some in detail • Descriptive level follows arrangement level • Level varies from collection to collection
Findings • Conservation • Practice: Strong commitment to item level work
Findings • Conservation • Practice: Strong commitment to item level work • Warrant: Item-focused conservation prescriptions often contradict advice on arrangement and description
Findings • Metrics • Literature: Range of 4-40 hours per cubic foot
Findings • Metrics • Literature: Range of 4-40 hours per cubic foot • However, a convincing body of experience coalesces at the high-productivity end: • Maher, 1982 (3.4 hours per cubic foot) • Haller, 1987 (3.8 hours per cubic foot) • Northeastern University Processing Manual (4-10 hours per cubic foot)
Findings • Metrics • Literature: Range of 4 - 40 hours per cubic foot • Grant Project Survey: 0.6 – 67 hours per cubic foot (Mode = 33 hours ; Mean = 9 hours)
Findings • Metrics • Literature: Range of 4 - 40 hours per cubic foot • Grant Project Survey: 0.6 – 67 hours per cubic foot (Mode = 33 ; Mean = 9) • Survey of Archivists: 2 – 250 hours per cubic foot (Mode = 8 ; Mean = 14.8)
Recommendations • General Principles for Change
Recommendations • General Principles for Change • Establish acceptable minimum level of work, and make it the processing benchmark
Recommendations • General Principles for Change • Establish acceptable minimum level of work, and make it the benchmark • Don’t assume all collections, or all collection components, will be processed to same level
Recommendations • Arrangement • Description • Conservation • Productivity
Recommendations • Arrangement • In normal or typical situations, the physical arrangement of materials in archival groups and manuscript collections should not take place below the series level
Recommendations • Arrangement • In normal or typical situations, the physical arrangement of materials in archival groups and manuscript collections should not take place below the series level • Not all series andall files in a collection need to be arranged to the same level
Recommendations • Description • Since description represents arrangement: describe materials at a level of detail appropriate to that level of arrangement.
Recommendations • Description • Since description represents arrangement: describe materials at a level of detail appropriate to that level of arrangement • Keep description brief and simple
Recommendations • Description • Since description represents arrangement: describe materials at a level of detail appropriate to that level of arrangement • Keep description brief and simple • Level of description should vary across collections, and across components within a collection
Recommendations • Conservation • Rely on storage area environmental controls to carry the conservation burden
Recommendations • Conservation • Rely on storage area environmental controls to carry the conservation burden • Avoid wholesale refoldering • Avoid removing and replacing metal fasteners • Avoid photocopying items on poor paper
Recommendations • Conservation • Rely on storage area environmental controls to carry the conservation burden • Don’t perform conservation tasks at a lower hierarchical level than you perform arrangement and description
Recommendations • Productivity • A processing archivist ought to be able to arrange and describe large twentieth century archival materials at an average rate of four hours per cubic foot
The goal of all this… • …is to make our patrons, donors, administrators, and funders happy, proving that repositories can use the resources they have to the best advantage and with the greatest efficiency.