Wednesday 28 October 2009

Results of Career Survey


Are you interested in how your career progression and salary banding compares with others in the record-keeping profession?

A survey undertaken earlier this year in relation to the profile of the record-keeping profession in Scotland, identified differences between the salary levels and experience of archivists and record managers. Records management roles typically required more on the job experience and commanded a higher salary, whereas archives roles were more often filled by staff earning in the lowest pay scale.

The variations of salary scales in the local authority, higher education and business sectors showed that roles in universities and businesses were generally better paid than those in local authorities. There was not enough data from the survey to allow for meaningful analysis of pay banding and experience levels within the sectors.

The questionnaire addressed job vacancies advertised in the last 12 months, finding that these were evenly split between those which required a professional qualification in archives and records management and those that did not.

Read the report or download it here
Susan Fisher
SoAS Careers Officer

Thursday 1 October 2009

Society of Archivists (Scotland) Regional Meeting, September 2009

The recent Society of Archivists Regional Meeting in the Borders looked at how archivists can use the new technology of Web 2.0 and blogs. For those of us at conference this followed on nicely from some of the talks there.

Kiara King from Glasgow University Archives gave us an overview of the tools that are available and an overview of two of the blogs she is involved in the Ballast Trust Blog and the GUAS Business Archives Blog. Kiara’s excellent presentation can be found here.

I spoke about our own work at the Scottish Borders Archive turning Victorian family diaries into daily blogs. The diary of Sir George Henry Scott Douglas has been available since April. It follows him on his Mediterranean voyage where he encounters pirates and as a tourist tries a new food, the kebab! His sister Charlotte’s diaries are publishing in weekly installments which give an insight into her love life and the mystery of her ‘dreadful secret’!

One thing that we all took away from the meeting is that Web 2.0 is a useful tool and there are many different ways to employ these technologies. If you want to see examples of how other archives are doing this take a look here.

Juline Baird
Assistant Archivist
Scottish Borders Council

Wednesday 16 September 2009

The Society of Archivists Conference 2009: A personal reminiscence.




The annual Society of Archivists Conference was held from the 1st-4th September in the comfort of the Marriott Hotel in Bristol. As always such an event provided an opportunity for archivists and records managers from around the United Kingdom (and beyond) to come together for 4 days of intellectual stimulation, to meet old friends and make some new acquaintances whilst partaking of some good food (and no doubt the odd drink).


Andrew Motion kicked off proceedings on Tuesday morning with the presentation that, for this observer, stole the week. Discussing the Poetry Archive, Motion gave us the full weight of his intellect, experience, depth of reading, and the occasional tease that he may burst into impressions of some of his favourite poets. At the core of his paper was the understanding that the full sense of a poems meaning can emerge through hearing the poet give voice to his own poems. As Robert Frost said “the ear is the best reader” and it benefits the listener to hear the interpretation of the poet, the pauses and the line endings. The Poetry Archive is currently receiving around 175,000 visitors per month and this archivist will soon be joining the crowd – hearing Robert Browning forgetting one of his own poems provided the biggest laugh of the week from me! Motion should also be congratulated for inducing something I never thought I would come across during an archives presentation – bringing a fellow member to tears. Jenny Moran informed Motion and the audience that the sound of a Cornish poet presenting his poems two weeks before he died had made her well up.


Following Motion was Randall Jimmerson from Western Washington University and his paper ‘Archivists and the Call of Justice’. To his credit Jimmerson acknowledged his forebears in his paper – for example, the call for justice is a notion heavily associated with the South African archivist Verne Harris whose writing on this subject is unlikely to be bettered. Jimmerson identified three key areas – accountability, openness and social justice – which the archivist should promote through the work we do in order to further a drive for a better society. Undoubtedly this was a stimulating and thought-provoking presentation although this author must concede that he has spent the past 3 years attempting to produce a thesis that somewhat argues against the thoughts offered by Jimmerson. Although I believe that, in general, most archivists wish to reach the same end-point regarding the documentation of all aspects of society it seems to me that Jimmerson’s advocacy of, for example, personal morality over professional ethics would lead us into a minefield (involving issues of trust, ideology, the fiduciary role of the archive) rather than removing the professional straitjacket. Such issues were raised by Patricia Whatley in her paper on Thursday. Is there a clear answer here? Probably not, although these two papers certainly aided me in dissecting the issues.


Some mentions should be made of the following papers:


Janet McBain issued a cautionary warning that Digital Preservation is not a substitute for the celluloid itself. Digital storage was also found to be 11 times more expensive than traditional storage of film cans. I apologise to Janet but, as with Motion and his sound recordings, what will live long in the memory was her choice of film. We were shown the 4th Marquis of Bute’s wedding in 1905. The highlight was surely the Pipe Band in a rowing boat following the happy couple as they were transported to the steamer for their honeymoon. McBain also explained why social networking sites were not necessarily advantageous to the role and functioning of the archive. Mentioning YouTube and film McBain raised the following issues: (1) Provenance – Film is broken up into clips and given a new title through which they take on a new life. Is this the commodification of our heritage?; (2) The moral rights of the individuals documented; (3) Ripping and re-use – there is easy access to corrupt the original; (4) Is their value in the new user? McBain raised the cheap and offensive comments that are sometimes attached to pieces of archival film on YouTube.


Steve Bailey presented one of the more out-of-the-box presentations of the week by using the example of Amazon to explain how records management decisions should be made from analysing user behaviour. I sense that many practitioners will take a lot of persuading that this is a suitable means through which to make RM decisions (in itself no bad thing) but questions of legislation, regulation, and business requirements instantly made me sceptical. I look forward to Steve’s continuing work in this area to see how it can be developed over the following years.


Tim Padfield spent an hour taking the audience through every conceivable facet of copyright in the digital environment; George Oates presented a riveting take on how collections could be awoken from their conceptual slumber in the archival repository to take on a new life in environments such as Flickr (in some respects this functioned as a counterpoint to McBain); and Susan Healy and Richard Blake provided an overview of the review of the Records Management Code of Practice. This is a Code which, in my limited experience, has aided RM practitioners immensely in ensuring compliance with regulatory and legislative procedures and it was interesting to see how they are planning to alter and tweak it.


A mention should also go to the Pump Rooms at Bath where we followed in the footsteps of the Romans (I may have had an illicit touch of the water – very warm!). A Gala Dinner with accompanying pianist made for a very pleasant meal and atmosphere which I enjoyed in the company of many of my fellow HATII graduates who can be seen in the photograph above. (From left to right: Stephanie Archibald (guest of Craig Gauld); Craig Gauld (Shetland Archives); Gemma Tougher (GUAS); Emma Yan (GUAS); Laura Brouard (Lothian Health Services Archive); Juline Baird (Borders); Chris (Centre for Buckinghamshire Studies)). Other conference photos can be found at http://soaconference2009.wordpress.com/


Craig Gauld


Shetland Archives/SoAS Publicity Officer


Monday 14 September 2009

Strathclyde University Archives has moved!


The University Archives has moved from its cramped quarters in the McCance Building to join forces with the University Library’s Special Collections Department in a light and spacious area on level 5 of the University Library. The new combined department, called Archives and Special Collections, comprises the archives of the University and its antecedent institutions from 1796, other important archive collections and the Library’s collections of rare books. The new facility, which was formally opened by the Principal, Professor Jim McDonald, on 29th May, now offers users the chance to consult the archives and rare books together in a bright and comfortable reading room. New facilities include plenty of laptop places and tables for group or individual research.

Our new address is:

Archives and Special Collections
Andersonian Library
University of Strathclyde
101 St James' Road
Glasgow G4 0NS
Tel: 0141 548 2497
Email: archives@strath.ac.uk
URL: http://www.strath.ac.uk/archives

All visitors are welcome!


Victoria Peters
Strathclyde University Archivist

Thursday 27 August 2009

Summer Event


Following the recent meeting of the national SoA council a drinks reception was held at the Scottish Catholic Archives in Edinburgh. This was an opportunity for members to meet their national representatives and have discussions in a relaxed environment. The event was attended by both members and students and a good time was had by all! (Pictured are Society President Alan Cameron, Honorary Secretary Jenny Moran and Chairman Peter Emmerson.)

Juline Baird,
Secretary, Society of Archivists, Scotland

Tuesday 25 August 2009

National Strategy for Business Archives - Focus Group

A focus group session for archivists and records managers in Scotland who work with or care for business archives is being held at the National Archives of Scotland on Thursday 24 September 2009 from 1030 until 1230.

This focus group is your chance to feed your ideas and thoughts into a National Strategy for Business Archives in Scotland. The focus group is an opportunity to:

- find out the purpose of the proposed strategy in a UK context
- help identify the issues that you feel affect your custodianship of business archives
- identify links and partnerships that could be created to raise the profile of business archives
- identify actions that could be undertaken to ensure business archives are captured, preserved and made accessible to as wide an audience as possible

As you may be aware a National Strategy for Business Archives has been published for England & Wales. This strategy aims to "raise the profile of business archives, ensuring they are utilised by business and research alike and that future collection are more representative of the UK's diverse economic activity."

With the support of the National Archives of Scotland and the Scottish Council on Archives, the Business Archives Council of Scotland and the Ballast Trust are working to create a similar strategy for Scotland that reflects our national context. Similar focus groups will be taking place in September aimed at users, academics and non-archivists who care for records.

Following the focus group sessions a draft strategy will be formulated and put out to wider consultation with the aim of a final version being agreed in the new year.

If you would be interested in attending, please contact David Powell
(d.powell@archives.gla.ac.uk) on 0141 330 4159 or Kiara King at k.king@archives.gla.ac.uk

Further information about the strategy's development and planned events will also be available at our blog

Kiara King
Assistant Archivist (Ballast Trust)

Tuesday 9 June 2009

New online resource: GUAS - International Archives Day

To celebrate International Archives Day, University of Glasgow Archive Services has launched a new online resource highlighting the international scope and reputation of the University and its archive collections.

Through the collections map, users can gain an appreciation of the impact of Scottish businesses on the development of the world economy and the influence that University of Glasgow, its staff and students have had on the history and development of many countries.

Archive Services staff have selected a number of highlights from the collections for the launch on International Archives Day. The digitised archives give a fascinating insight into a broad range of activities, from geological surveys in Antarctica and Iran to zoological expeditions in South America and medical service in Nigeria; the building of ships and locomotives for service in China, Japan and New Zealand and management of international shipping; the export of sugar machinery to Mauritius and Java, and of beer to Burma, Malta and Australia; and the running of branches and mills in India, Romania, Malawi and Canada. Each entry gives a tantalizing taste of what is available in the wider collection, into which users are welcome to delve.
The collections map can be found at: http://www.gla.ac.uk/services/archives/collections/internationalarchiveday/.

Please do have a look!

Clare Paterson
Assistant Archivist (Scottish Business Archive)

Friday 29 May 2009

NCA Volunteering in Archives

The National Council on Archives has published their report on volunteering in the archive sector. This is the outcome of a survey carried out earlier this year of volunteers to “celebrate and re-investigate the role of volunteering in the archive sector.” The report is available from the NCA website and provides an insight into why people volunteer, what the benefits are, the procedures different archives use and several case studies.
The Ballast Trust , is the only Scottish case study in the report. The Ballast Trust is a small charitable organisation based in Johnstone which processes technical archives (shipbuilding, railway and engineering plans and photographs) for other archive repositories. We rely heavily on the work of our volunteers and without them it would be very difficult for us to make sense of the material we work with. Because of the unique nature of the Trust’s operations and our use of volunteers with highly specialised knowledge we provided a good example of the benefits of matching specialist records with the appropriate specialist expertise to understand them. To find out more, please read the report or visit our website.


Kiara King
Assistant Archivist (Ballast Trust)

Friday 15 May 2009

Securing the Future Award for Perth & Kinross Family History Services

At Perth & Kinross Council's "Securing the Future Awards" at Perth Concert Hall last night Family History Services received a silver award as one of the shortlisted submissions in the "Improving Services through Partnership" category. To our delight we then received the prestigious Provost's Award as his choice from all the entries shortlisted under five categories.

The project has involved staff from Perth & Kinross Council Archive, Local Studies, Registration Services, Bereavement Services, Arts & Heritage and the Black Watch Museum. One of the major achievements has been the publication of Keekin for Kin - Researching your Family History in Perth and Kinross. There is also a Genealogy Group representing all the partners which organises events like the Family History Days we have held in recent years.

If anyone wants to see Keekin for Kin they can access a pdf from this link:

http://www.pkc.gov.uk/NR/rdonlyres/00841355-EBDD-4692-B8B6-6FF8ED21436A/0/FAMILYHISTORYA5.pdf

Steve Connelly
Archivist
Perth & Kinross Council Archive

Wednesday 13 May 2009

SoAS Shetland Mini-Conference

The Shetland mini-conference experience had some memorable high spots. Certain aspects of getting there and back by way of the Aberdeen ferry (12.5 hour each way) also stand out, but hopefully only in my short term memory. The Shetland Museum and Archive centre at Hay's Dock, Lerwick, was a wonderful venue. Archivist Brian Smith and his new colleague, Craig Gould, could not have been more welcoming, as were the volunteers who guided us through the collections and staff who served up a delicious lunch. The conference was informative, with excellent speakers presenting talks on a range of topics on the theme of ‘Holding Archives in Trust’. Instant camaraderie was assured from the start by company well met, resulting in plenty of good *craic over coffee and lunch. A guided tour of the museum and archive revealed an astounding array of artefacts representing the complex history and cultural heritage of the Shetland Isles. Alongside the great many original items on display are some very convincing reconstructions, including the model head of a young female reconstructed from an actual skull found at the Old Scattness Broch and Iron Age Village archaeological site. Other items from the site include bone, stone and metal implements and stone slabs engraved with animal symbols.

One of the earliest documents is 13th century manuscript written in 'Norn', an old language once peculiar to the Shetlands, which refers to a local woman's complaint against her overlord, who having the upper hand and a lot to lose was in complete denial. Among the many fine examples of handicrafts on display are gossamer thin shawls and a wide variety of the intricately patterned knitwear for which the Shetland Isles are renowned. Hardships of a seafaring society are exemplified by traditional crafts such as the 'sixareeen', a six seater boat used by the inshore fishing fleet, and somewhat incongruously elsewhere by a vintage Singer saloon car set beside its ex owner and whaling tycoon's harpoon gun. Our guide told us that she often finds visitors (generally male) attempting to get inside it or lifting the bonnet to inspect the engine; on one occasion she spotted a pair of feet sticking out from beneath it.

On the domestic side, reconstructed kitchen has a model of a 'grice' (an extinct kind of boar or pig) tethered by the hearth. A domestic cow and dairy equipment are also to be seen, as is an ancient block of butter that most likely served for barter. An astonishing horde of Pictish silver found by a school boy on St Ninian's Isle had been replicated for the museum. Sadly there was not enough time to see everything, but a straw pole of delegates suggested that most of us will be back to look around.Moving on to the swish archive store our intrepid group of 'mini-conference archivists' did what they generally tend to do on such occasions - gather in the rolling stacks to marvel at shelves of neatly packed standard archival cardboard boxes. The electronic stacking system can move of its own volition: a novel way to squish staff.A memorable Conference Dinner was partaken at the Grand Hotel, with yet more guid craic (I blame the wine), and with **guisers having a hooley in the snow below. Brian Smith delivered a highly original after dinner speech with his usual dry and ready wit; proving something of an impressionist in a hilarious account of the more unusual curios he has dealt with in his archival career, not to mention staff. His several abortive attempts to reach the Isle of Fetlar, along with Orcadian exile Peter Anderson, to collect one particular acquisition was undoubtedly a high point. The Sunday tour began with a trip to Scalloway Castle. This was led by Peter, who enlightened us as to the scandalous life and inevitable fall from grace of Robert Stewart, Earl and Sheriff of Orkney, an illegitimate ne'er do well son of King James V. Who amongst us will ever forget Peter's detailed account of how the metal ring at the top of the tower rumoured to have been used to dangle miscreants and complainers from couldn't possibly have worked as a hanging device because victims would have to be launched from a nearby turret, and in doing so would smash into the battlements rather suffering a fatal drop, receiving little more than a nose bleed and ***sair heid rather than a broken neck? Why bother going to the trouble anyway when there was an ****Iron Maiden with which to pulverise folk? History brought to life and, indeed, death! Who amongst that same glad company wasn't secretly wishing Brian would hurry up with the key to the castle for fear of freezing to death whilst ruminating on the dubious pros and cons of public execution? Our next stop was Scattness archaeological site, which consists of a system of amazingly well preserved brochs and wheelhouses discovered when builders of the Sumburgh airport road smashed through the North wall of the largest building during excavation. The site has since yielded over 40,000 artefacts, including some of those we saw in Shetland Museum and Archives. A fascinating place. Not even the worsening weather kept us back, but the peat fire in the reconstructed broch was very welcome, as was lunch at Sumburgh Hotel, where we eventually thawed out. On the personal comfort front, mine was assured by a cosy room at the Queens Hotel on Saturday night, with stunning views to the beach and seawall below. Indeed, I thought I was still at sea. How nice to be lulled to sleep by waves beating off same wall, and awoken by the cry of gulls; not unlike being back home in the East Neuk. There is no escape. Quite a treat though after a sleepless night on the ferry the evening before in a force 8 North-Easterly with raging seas crashing off the hull like Neptune gone berserk with a lump hammer ... How ironic then that the return trip on Sunday evening met with the full swelling, swaying, clanging, banging, nerve-jangling glory of a Force 6 Southerly. Sleep no more …and heave-ho me hearties! All in all a most enjoyable weekend, organised to perfection by Alison Diamond, Rachel Hosker, Peter Anderson and Brian Smith. I will be returning to Shetland. A boat trip in calmer weather seems a pleasant idea. Flying is always an option.
* Chat.
** As 'in disguise' or costume. Perhaps stragglers from Up Helly Aa?
*** Sore head
**** With apologies to all heavy metal fans.

Pamela Cranston
Photographic Research and Preservation Officer
University of St Andrews Special Collections

Monday 11 May 2009

Archives and auteurs - Filmmakers and their archives University of Stirling, 2nd - 4th September 2009

Registration is now open for Archives and auteurs, a conference examining the ways in which the study of the archives of filmmakers and the film industry can provide new perspectives and insights into the history of cinema. Panels will look at a variety of topics including collaboration and authorship; Ingmar Bergman’s archival legacy; the cinema authorship of Lindsay Anderson; the role of the producer; the transition from script to screen; and new insights into British cinema history. There will also be panels devoted to archival issues reporting on current projects and examining the challenges of creating and collecting film archives, as well as screenings, discussions and a major exhibition of material from the University of Stirling’s Lindsay Anderson Archive.Further details including a full conference programme, abstracts, registration forms and accommodation information are available at: http://www.is.stir.ac.uk/libraries/collections/anderson/Conference.php

Please note an early-bird rate of £150 is available until 31st May 2009.

Wednesday 22 April 2009

Fife Council Archives Centre Drop in Days

Fife Council Archives are hosting the following drop in days during 2009. For more information please see the Fife Council Archives' website.

Thursday 30 April 10am-5pm
Mrs Brand’s Lodging House in Methil, 1916-31

Wednesday 27 May 10am-5pm
Alexander Swan and the Managers of the Burgh of Kinghorn

Tuesday 23 June 10am-5pm
Andrew Young, photographer in Burntisland

Thursday 28 July 10am-7pm
Some records of the Burgh of Leslie

Wednesday 19 August to be announced

Tuesday 29 September 10am-5pm
Fife Education Television Service

Thursday 29 October 10am-7pm
Archives Awareness Event

Wednesday 25 November 10am-5pm
Rat Week