SELECTION AND APPRAISAL OF DATA FORM EDITH HOPE CHAVULA (MLIS0225)
SELECTION AND APPRAISAL OF DATA.
Introduction
Selection and appraisal serve as the foundational gateway within the digital curation lifecycle, directly dictating which data assets merit long-term preservation infrastructure. The rapid expansion of information generation renders the preservation of all digital assets financially and operationally impossible (Higgins, 2018; Whyte & Wilson, 2010). Digital curation systematically mitigates this information overload by employing objective criteria to separate transitory data from materials with enduring secondary research value (Lee & Tibbo, 2021). Consequently, appraisal functions not merely as a passive storage filter, but as an active workflow ensuring that limited organizational resources support authentic, accessible, and high-value historical records (Madu & Enyinnah, 2021; Niu, 2016).
Establishing
Policy and Compliance Safeguards
The
first phase of appraisal requires establishing formal institutional guidelines
that harmonize with broader regulatory mandates. Selection decisions must
respect legal property constraints, public record directives, organizational
collection policies, and privacy boundaries (Madu & Enyinnah, 2021; Niu,
2016; Whyte & Wilson, 2010). Curators utilize these mandates to construct
collection profiles that prevent arbitrary or biased retention behaviors.
Evaluating
Core Data Characteristics
Curators
evaluate incoming assets using a strict framework consisting of evidential,
informational, and historical values (Niu, 2016; Tallman & Work, 2022). A
dataset is only selected if its provenance is clear, its structural integrity
is intact, and it contains rich administrative and technical metadata (Lee
& Tibbo, 2021). This ensures the resource remains understandable to future
user groups independent of the original creator (Chawinga & Zinn, 2020).
Assessing
Technical Viability and Long-Term Costs
Modern
curation policies prioritize the technological feasibility of long-term
preservation over simple historical interest. Materials reliant on proprietary
or rapidly decaying software applications incur unsustainable maintenance costs
[Higgins, 2018]. Curators weigh the anticipated research value against the
technical complexities of format transformation, migration pathways, and
emulation before committing resources (Chawinga & Zinn, 2020; Tallman &
Work, 2022).
Executing
Early-Lifecycle Intervention
Unlike
paper-based practices, appraisal in digital ecosystems must happen close to the
time of data creation. Waiting until a project concludes often results in
severe context loss, missing metadata, or corrupted file states (Chawinga &
Zinn, 2020; Higgins, 2018; Whyte & Wilson, 2010). Early validation allows
curation practitioners to capture data while the links, dependencies, and
internal logic remain functional.
Figure 1 Data curation cycle
In conclusion, the appraisal and selection stages function as the critical architectural filter for trusted digital repositories. By balancing legal constraints, user demands, and technical sustainability, information professionals systematically insulate archives from digital clutter while preserving authentic cultural assets. As data sets expand, these rigorous selection paradigms remain essential for maintaining a highly discoverable and useful digital heritage for the future.
References
Chawinga, W. D., &
Zinn, S. (2020). Research data management at an African medical university: Implications
for academic librarianship. The Journal of Academic Librarianship, 46(4),
102161.
Higgins, S. (2018).
Digital curation: The development of a discipline within information science. Journal
of Documentation, 74(6), 1361–1376. doi.org
Lee, C. A., & Tibbo,
H. R. (2021). Research data curation and management bibliography. LLRX. llrx.com.
Madu, U. W., &
Enyinnah, A. U. (2021). Research data curation and management: Emerging roles
for academic libraries in Nigeria. In Libraries in the Era of Digital
Technologies (pp. 348–363). Zeh Communications Limited.
Niu, J. (2016). Appraisal
and selection for digital curation. International Journal of Digital Curation,
11(2), 65–75. doi.org
Tallman, N., & Work,
L. (2022). Appraisal and selection for digital preservation: Framing
criteria for selecting digital content. Pennsylvania State University
Libraries. nathantallman.com
Whyte, A., & Wilson,
A. (2010). How to appraise and select research data for curation.
Digital Curation Centre. dcc.ac.uk
Nice work
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ReplyDeletethis is very easy to understand and straight forward, good read!
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ReplyDeleteYour analysis is top-notch.No process can be a success without following legal standards.Your inclusion of legal compliance has even made your post easier to understand.Good job.
ReplyDeleteIndeed, regulatory framework provides a platform for consistency and conformity on appraisal processes.
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