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A National Portal for Canadian Theses Sharon Reeves Manager, Theses Canada Presented at ETD 2003, Berlin Theses Canada Thèses Canada
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Presentation Overview History of Theses Canada Mission Requirements – National E-Theses Program Portal – Phase One Phase One Challenges Portal – Phase Two Phase Two Challenges Digital Preservation Theses Canada Thèses Canada
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History Canadian Theses Service created in 1965 Name changed to Theses Canada April 1, 2003 Theses Canada Thèses Canada
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History (continued) Original purpose – to microfilm theses and make them more widely available Reproduction and sales contracted out to UMI Dissertations Publishing since 1997 Voluntary program – currently 55 universities participate 225,000+ theses in LAC collection Theses Canada Thèses Canada
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History Titles listed in Canadiana, Canada’s national bibliography Catalogue records freely available in AMICUS Web: http://www.nlc-bnc.ca Theses Canada Thèses Canada
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Theses Canada Mission to acquire, preserve and provide access to a comprehensive collection of Canadian theses to disseminate theses by inter-library loan and sale Theses Canada Thèses Canada
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New role – E-theses Support Canadian graduate schools during the transition from print to e-theses Acquisition and preservation of freely accessible collection of Canadian e-theses at LAC Development of capacity for universities to submit e-theses to LAC Theses Canada Thèses Canada
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Requirements – National E-theses Program Comprehensive national coverage Theses digital for entire life cycle; digital version preserved Stored in stable digital format, full text searchable Minimal number of conversions ETD metadata standard used; students supply basic metadata Free access from single access point No redundancy in workflow Theses Canada Thèses Canada
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A National Portal for Canadian Theses Portal designed to function as a comprehensive repository of freely available full text Canadian theses and dissertations Theses Canada Thèses Canada
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Portal – Phase 1 Initial content on portal includes: Approximately 45,000 full text electronic theses in PDF image format Theses processed from 1998 – Aug. 2002 Catalogue records for all theses in LAC collection (with abstracts when available) Information about Theses Canada Theses Canada Thèses Canada
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Phase One - Challenges Securing the funding for the project Technical challenges – getting the e-theses from UMI Coordinating the workflow between Theses Canada, DLCTF and ITSB Theses Canada Thèses Canada
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Portal – Phase 2 Will allow Canadian universities to submit e- theses and metadata directly to LAC Analysis of current workflow resulted in identification of basic operational workflow E-theses will be sent to LAC via FTP, initially in PDF text, later in XML Theses Canada will harvest metadata from universities Theses Canada Thèses Canada
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Portal – Phase 2 (continued) Metadata at LAC will be available for harvesting by other organizations, e.g. NDLTD Standard student submission template under development ETD-ms to MARC format crosswalk Pilot project planned for late 2003 Theses Canada Thèses Canada
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Phase Two Challenges Coordination with many universities at different stages in the transition from print to e-theses Dealing with two parallel systems during the transition Making changes to internal workflow for theses at LAC Theses Canada Thèses Canada
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Digital Preservation Needs to be resolved not just for e-theses but for all e-publications Canadian universities reluctant to give up preservation quality microfiche Theses Canada will continue reproduction service for the foreseeable future Theses Canada Thèses Canada
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Mot final Theses Canada will continue to provide leadership to meet the goal of acquiring, preserving and providing access to a comprehensive collection of Canadian theses and dissertations in electronic or microfiche formats Theses Canada Thèses Canada
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