New case study highlights improvements in using online archive content

Posted by Tim O'Riordan on Tuesday 09 April 2013
Tags: case studies | digital collections | teaching |

New case study highlights improvements in using online archive content

Home page/EDINA, JISC MediaHub/University of Edinburgh ©2013

Our latest case study (Using Newsfilm on JISC MediaHub) on the use of archive newsfilm in learning, teaching and research at the University of Manchester and Leeds Trinity University, published today, coincides with important announcements from EDINA and the British Universities Film and Video Council (BUFVC). Last week EDINA announced major improvements to its JISC MediaHub service and the BUFVC recently launched new citation guidelines for moving image and sound.

Our case study looks at how learners are developing their knowledge of history and online resources using newsfilm hosted by JISC MediaHub. We explore two modules that use this JISC eCollections service to examine the usefulness of news reports in the study of historical subjects. With access to more than 50,000 digital video newsfilm items, students consider impartiality and different styles of reporting through analysing and evaluating news media reports.

Currently over 200 HE/FE institutions subscribe to JISC MediaHub, allowing their staff and students to view and download more than 3,500 hours of digital image, video and audio items. As part of its ongoing improvements programme, the service has added new bookmarking, tagging and commenting features, enabling users to more easily collect and manage items of interest to them. Searching has also been improved with many new functions, including ‘explore by place’.

If your institution isn’t subscribed, you can’t view or download the video assets, but you can access newsfilm descriptions, shotlists and frame grabs - and watch example clips at: on the BUFVC ‘Newsfilm’ website. To find out how to subscribe, see JISC Collections’ Agreements website.

The BUFVC’s new AV Citation guidelines cover the whole range of moving image and sound objects including: film, TV and radio programmes, DVD extras, games, online clips, trailers, adverts, amateur footage, archival material, podcasts, and DVD study materials. They provide straightforward referencing rules that make it much easier for students and researchers to quote time-based content and aids the discovery, use and re-use of av materials - for example, archive newsfilm hosted by JISC MediaHub.