The ETD+
Toolkit (https://educopia.org/publications/etdplustoolkit) is an
approach to improving student and faculty research output management. Focusing
on the Electronic Thesis and Dissertation (ETD) as a mile-marker in a student’s
research trajectory, it provides in-time advice to students and faculty about
avoiding common digital loss scenarios for the ETD and all of its
affiliated files.
The ETD+
Toolkit provides free introductory training resources on crucial data
curation and digital longevity techniques. It has been designed as a training
series to help students and faculty identify and offset risks and threats to
their digital research footprints.
About the Toolkit
The ETD+
Toolkit is the result of a project funded by the Institute of Library and
Museum Services. Educopia Institute led the creation of the Toolkit in
partnership with the NDLTD, ProQuest, bepress, and 12 U.S. research libraries.
What it is:
An open set of six modules and evaluation instruments that prepare students to create, store, and maintain their research outputs on durable devices and in durable formats. Each is designed to stand alone; they may also be used as a series.
What each module includes:
Each module includes Learning Objectives, a one-page Handout, a Guidance Brief, a Slideshow with full presenter notes, and an evaluation Survey. Each module is released under a CC-BY license and all elements are openly editable to make reuse as easy as possible.
Who it is for:
Anyone may freely adopt and adapt this toolkit. We especially recommend its use by administrators, faculty, and librarians teaching students and by students seeking practical advice about digital content management.
Give us feedback (Please)
Like the modules? Hate them? Think they’re unique? Redundant? Because these materials have been produced under a grant-funded project, we are requesting feedback that we can share with our funder and that we can use to improve the Toolkit. Please help us to refine the workshops and report back to our funder about how and where they are being used. Contact katherine@educopia.org and sam@educopia.org.
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