1 / 12

e-Clips Cornell’s Premier Video Clip Collection on Entrepreneurship, Business, and Leadership

e-Clips Cornell’s Premier Video Clip Collection on Entrepreneurship, Business, and Leadership John Cline Jon Corson-Rikert Metadata Working Group December 15, 2006. The e-Clips Collection. Background and scope Resources & access Partnerships Demo Future of e-Clips and its technologies

Télécharger la présentation

e-Clips Cornell’s Premier Video Clip Collection on Entrepreneurship, Business, and Leadership

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. e-Clips Cornell’s Premier Video Clip Collection on Entrepreneurship, Business, and Leadership John Cline Jon Corson-Rikert Metadata Working Group December 15, 2006

  2. The e-Clips Collection • Background and scope • Resources & access • Partnerships • Demo • Future of e-Clips and its technologies • Discussion

  3. Background • Collection created in 1996 by Dr. Deborah Streeter for use in the classroom • Virtual panel of experts • Clips rather than full-length talks • Open access • Growing daily in content and use • Bootstrapping • Students • Small grants • Partnerships and collaborations • Goals • Increase the adoption and effectiveness of technology in Cornell undergraduate teaching • Preserve and make available a unique and varied collection • Significantly impact national and international entrepreneurship education

  4. Scope 4 principal contributing institutions Cornell, RPI, National Collegiate Inventors & Innovators Alliance, Springboard Enterprises 15 collections e.g., ag- and food-related businesses, young entrepreneur stories 253 themes e.g., pros and cons of getting an MBA, shoot your dogs early 323 interviews/lectures 3668 registered users 67 countries 818 universities – 480 in the U.S., 338 international 7151 video clips

  5. Resources & Access • Free access and clip download with registration • 4 primary paths • Educators • Students • Trainers • Entrepreneurs • Teacher tools • Idea banks • Prepared content • Blackboard links • e-Clips blog • News • Entrepreneur update • Tech tips

  6. Major Features • Short, topical clips • Detailed, consistent, clean, complete metadata • Bios, pictures, company info, interview/lecture profiles • Full-text searchable transcripts • Simple and logical organization • People, companies, interviews/lectures • Collections and cross-cutting themes • Quotes • Bookmarks • Listening lists with annotation • Prepared • Personal

  7. Partnerships • Core content development team • Deborah Streeter, Professor, Applied Economics and Management • Kirsten Barker, Content Manager • D. Jamie Kalousdian, Manager of Media Production • Ongoing library collaboration • Tentative steps ~2002 • First prototype ~2003 • Faculty Grant for Digital Library Collections 2004-05 • Current site launched January, 2006 • New server November, 2006 • CIT FABIT grant • Testing in a large class • Linking with Blackboard

  8. Demos Production site: http://eclips.cornell.edu Blog: http://cornell-eclips.blogspot.com Admin site: http://streeter.mannlib.cornell.edu

  9. Enhancements • Completing the Paths • Student • Trainer • Entrepreneur • Instructional tools • Enhanced listening lists • Assignments • Closer blog & Blackboard integration • RSS feeds • Podcasts • Value-added content • Prepared content • Powerpoints on demand

  10. Challenges Going Forward • Sustaining 4 major efforts • Content capture • Content production • Metadata • Hosting and delivery • Mixing models • Unrestricted educational access • Special audiences • Value-added content • Growing the concept for other resources • Migrating the technologies • Replicating the collaborative model of development

  11. Discussion • As e-Clips gets bigger, how can we maintain easy access to content? • E.g., dealing with the long list of themes • Would a more formal metadata structure be helpful? • Or should we adopt a tagging model or let users rank clips? • Should e-Clips remain a free resource? • Is there a threshold of size, service, or commerce that would argue for a different hosting model?

  12. Credits • Project Director • Deborah Streeter, Bruce F. Failing, Sr. Professor of Personal Enterprise and Small Business Management • Content Development • Kirsten Barker, Content Manager • D. Jaime Kalousdian, Manager of Media Production • Delivery • Melissa Kuo, Web Designer • John Cline, Programmer • Jon Corson-Rikert, IT Manager

More Related