The Digital Curation program is a one to two-year graduate certificate, taught online, intended for professionals looking to work in museums, archives, libraries, laboratories, studios, offices, and anywhere else that people need to manage digital files. The program walks students through the phases of managing digitized or born-digital artifacts and data including acquisition, representation, access, and preservation.
Educational Objectives:
Students develop expertise in the following areas:
- Identifying analog and born- digital objects that merit short-term or long-term preservation, from individual audiovisual files such as videotapes to complex multimedia objects such as Web sites.
- Digitizing and preserving selected materials, including using metadata and databases to catalog objects.
- Improving access to public material and managing access to restricted digital material.
- Understanding the cultureal context and technical skills required to develop, present, and promote digital exhibitions and interpretations of this material, on the Web and in real or mobile space.
Required Courses:
1. Acquisition (digitization, recording, selection, law)
DIG 500: Introduction to Digital Curation
2. Representation (documentation, metadata)
DIG 510: Metadata
3. Access (database, collection, presentation, network)
DIG 540 Digital Collections and Exhibitions
4. Preservation (obsolescence, conservation, media formats)
DIG 550: Digital Preservation
Optional courses:
5. Internship
DIG 580: Digital Curation Internship
6. Elective
See list of Certificate website.
Students who choose the “fast-track” option may complete the four required courses within two semesters plus a summer term.
To make things easier for students currently working in collecting institutions, we have designed DIG 580 as an internship that may take place in the student’s own workplace.
For up-to-date information, please visit http://DigitalCuration.UMaine.edu.