NDSA:Public Awareness of Digital Preservation Issues and Challenges: Difference between revisions

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The activity of raising public awareness is the most significant activity of the NDSA Outreach Working Group. This encompasses an number of different interrelated efforts:
The activity of raising public awareness is the most significant activity of the NDSA Outreach Working Group. This includes at least two high-level activities:
 
 
 
Authoring/framing/describing the high-level “[[NDSA:Outreach Mission Action Team | Statement of Purpose]]” that drives any digital preservation public awareness campaign, at whatever level. Is there a single dominant message that the NDSA hopes to propagate regarding the preservation of digital information? Are different messages (or variations on a single message) necessary to reach different audiences? What are the 1-word, 3-word, sentence and paragraph messages that NDSA is trying to propagate?
 
The [[NDSA:“Audience”]] explorations touch on the different audiences for digital preservation information, working to paint a clearer picture of the issues facing each audience, and considering ways that the mission of the NDSA can be presented to each audience. Audiences include the general public, practitioners, funders, legislators, etc.
 
 
 
 
The implementation of "messages" and "audiences" is implemented in a number of discrete activities:


Identifying and promoting key digital preservation information resources:
Identifying and promoting key digital preservation information resources:

Revision as of 17:15, 2 November 2011

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The activity of raising public awareness is the most significant activity of the NDSA Outreach Working Group. This includes at least two high-level activities:


Authoring/framing/describing the high-level “ Statement of Purpose” that drives any digital preservation public awareness campaign, at whatever level. Is there a single dominant message that the NDSA hopes to propagate regarding the preservation of digital information? Are different messages (or variations on a single message) necessary to reach different audiences? What are the 1-word, 3-word, sentence and paragraph messages that NDSA is trying to propagate?

The NDSA:“Audience” explorations touch on the different audiences for digital preservation information, working to paint a clearer picture of the issues facing each audience, and considering ways that the mission of the NDSA can be presented to each audience. Audiences include the general public, practitioners, funders, legislators, etc.



The implementation of "messages" and "audiences" is implemented in a number of discrete activities:

Identifying and promoting key digital preservation information resources: