User engagement: The key element to Exhibitions and User Generated Content projects: A leading story line - Aubéry Escande (Europeana/The European Library, NL)
Presentation by Aubéry Escande about how user engagement is the key element to exhibitions and user generated content projects.
Presented at the Second EUscreen International Conference on Use and Creativity, which took place at the National Library of Sweden, Stockholm, on September 15-16, 2011.
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User engagement: The key element to Exhibitions and User Generated Content projects: A leading story line - Aubéry Escande (Europeana/The European Library, NL)
1. User engagement - The key element to Exhibitions and User Generated Content projects: A leading story line Aubéry Escande – The European Library / Europeana Second EUscreen International Conference “ Use and creativity”
12. “ Europeana 1914-1918” World War One in pictures, letters and memories www.europeana1914-1918.eu
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14. 2012 2011 2013 2014 The 1914-1918 Europeana programme – 8 stories for the 100 th anniversary Story 1 Story 3 Story 4 Story 5 Story 6 Story 7 Story 8 Story 2
The European Library is a free service that offers access to the resources of the 48 national libraries of Europe. Resources can be both digital (books, posters, maps, sound recordings, videos, etc.) and bibliographical. The European Library became fully operational in March 2005. The partners in The European Library are all members of the Conference of European National Librarians (CENL), a foundation aiming at increasing and reinforcing the role of national libraries in Europe. Members of CENL are the national librarians of all Member States of the Council of Europe. [CLICK] Going back to The European Library, here is a map that shows the new projects bringing in new searchable collections into the portal. This was possible thanks to European co-funding. Projects continue to build upon The European Library service. [CLICK]
The European Library also provides other services to the public on national libraries’ behalf: It provides a quick presentation of national libraries It provides a multilingual interface It provides API’s It communicates to the larger community through its newsletter and rich media content It showcases the added-value of this common platform of exchange through virtual exhibitions [CLICK]
Reading Europe: 23 participating countries 1,000 books all accessible in full text 32 languages including Catalan, Hebrew or Arabic Literary classics: Don Quixote by Cervantes (in Spanish),The Idiot by Fyodor Dostoyevsky (in Russian) National treasures: Jammers Minde (Memoirs of my Wretchedness) in Danish Curiosities: French translation of Edgar Allan Poe’s The Raven by Stéphane Mallarmé and illustrated by French painter Édouard Manet
Project initiated in February 2010 13 partners participate Access to 520 digital items Available in 14 languages
Ongoing User testing: Usability study on Danube prototypes currently being undertaken; Online user survey is set up as we speak, to be online before summer. End user activities: Social media: Europeana is progressively active on facebook and Twitter, with around 5000 facebook friends and 1769 Twitter followers. The First World War archive was launched a few weeks ago. It is based on an initiative at the University of Oxford where people across Britain were asked to bring family letters, photographs and keepsakes from the War to be digitised. Europeana has brought the German National Library into an alliance with Oxford University to do the same in Germany. The collaboration will bring German stories online alongside their British counterparts in a 1914-18 archive.