Finding out more about the use of the NDSA Levels of Digital Preservation

During March-April of 2023 the NDSA Levels Steering Group has been finding out more about how the community uses the NDSA Levels of Digital Preservation.

We put out a set of questions within a Google Form and invited the wider community to respond to a range of different scenarios, allowing them to describe how they use the Levels in practice. 

Though only a small number of responses were received (15 in total), there is some really interesting information included about how the Levels are used by a range of different organizations, from National Libraries, to universities and smaller community archives. This blog post summarizes some of the information that has been gathered and is the first in a series of posts on the results.

The answers to four of the scenarios are discussed in turn in this blog post.

Do you use the NDSA Levels once (for your organization as a whole) or do you use it multiple times, perhaps focusing on different departments, different types of content or different collections?

This scenario was designed to find out about the granularity at which the NDSA Levels are used and was answered by 13 people. Most of the answers to this question stated that the Levels are used just once (for the whole organization) rather than separately for different departments or types of content. It was noted by one respondent that they scope their assessment to cover only the content that is preserved in their repository and not unmanaged content that may be held in other locations across their organization. One respondent however did state that when they first used the Levels they used them multiple times for different parts of their digital collections (for example, separate assessments for digitized content, born digital archives and web archives), but also noted that on the second self-assessment, for strategic reasons, this was performed at organizational level. Another two respondents noted that they had not used the Levels in this way yet, but anticipated using them multiple times for different collections or content types in the future.

It was also noted of course that many organizations do use the Levels multiple times, but this is to check in and see how things have changed after a period of time has passed, rather than to do multiple assessments at the same point in time. This theme is explored further in another of the scenarios and a blog on this will be available at a later date.

 

Does your organization use the NDSA Levels alongside other digital preservation maturity models and/or certification standards? Describe how the NDSA Levels is used as part of a wider process of continuous improvement within your organization.

With this scenario, we were interested to find out a bit more about how the Levels are used as part of the wider process of continuous improvement, and whether they are used alongside other models and certification standards. It was interesting to see the range of other standards and models that were mentioned by the respondents to this question.

Of the 11 respondents, 2 simply replied in the negative, of those who provided more detail of the tools they used, two mentioned OAIS, one mentioned TRAC and one mentioned PREMIS. The DiAGRAM tool from The National Archives UK was also mentioned by one respondent and another mentioned previous use of a maturity model developed for the National and State Libraries Australasia.

Six respondents reported that they had used the DPC’s Rapid Assessment Model (DPC RAM) alongside the NDSA Levels. Of those who mentioned using NDSA Levels alongside DPC RAM a variety of scenarios emerged. One mentioned that they primarily use DPC RAM for tracking and continuous improvement, with the NDSA Levels serving as a more ad hoc reference. Another noted that though they have tried DPC RAM and may use it in the future, the NDSA Levels are a better fit for their current needs. One respondent noted that having completed an NDSA levels assessment in the past helped to frame a follow on assessment done with DPC RAM.

In terms of how organizations use the NSDA Levels for continuous improvement, one respondent noted that they have used their observations from the NDSA levels to determine which areas need work and which would be easiest or most impactful to focus on. Another notes that they use the Levels alongside standards like TRAC, OAIS, and PREMIS, checking against all of these standards when updating policy. 

 

Do you use the NDSA Levels to help project the financial cost or staff time needed to achieve a particular level? If so, do you do this by individual digital object, by collection or for the entire repository? How is this information generated/collected and how is it used in program planning? Who contributes to this exercise?

The financial cost of moving up the NDSA Levels of Digital Preservation has been a topic that the Levels Steering Group has discussed several times. We were interested to find out if those who use the Levels are using it to predict or plan for financial costs, so this scenario was designed to capture information on this, perhaps to inform future work on the Levels if appropriate.

Of the 13 responses to this question, 5 gave very brief answers stating that they don’t or haven’t yet started using the levels in this way. Of the other longer answers, most of them stated that they don’t use the Levels in this way, but more detail was given in relation to their answer and these are summarized below.

One respondent mentioned that they use the Levels to determine their software/hardware needs – for example, establishing a tape backup in order to comply with Level 3 of Storage. Another mentioned they used the Levels for broader planning, for example to prioritize work. It was noted by another that the Levels may also be helpful in the future for projecting the financial costs of improving and expanding their preservation systems and strategies.

A couple of respondents mentioned how the Levels may inform decisions on staff resource, one stating that the Levels can be useful for advocating for more staff (for example, demonstrating what kinds of activities are expected from a mature digital preservation program) and another stating that they use the NDSA Levels to determine the staff time needed to achieve a particular level. A comment from a different respondent however mentioned that the Levels are too high level for more granular planning around staff time and associated costs.

The link between the NDSA Levels and the DiAGRAM tool from The National Archives UK was made by one respondent. DiAGRAM is a tool to help evidence-based decision making for digital preservation and can help an organization define where effort may be best placed in order to gain maximum value. In order to use DiAGRAM, selected values from a self-assessment using the NDSA Levels should be entered. This was an interesting example of the NDSA Levels being used indirectly to aid decision making on where to best allocate financial resource.

 

Do you take environmental impact into account when making decisions about how to manage and preserve digital content? Does this impact your use of the NDSA Levels, perhaps influencing the level that you aim for?

Of the 12 answers to this question, six simply answered no (or in the case of one, “Not yet”). Of the more detailed answers provided there is a real sense that this is a developing area with some organizations just beginning to think on this topic and others having started to take steps to try and limit their impact on the environment.

One organization stated that they are increasing the time between fixity checks to save on power and another agreed that this question mainly comes to the fore when thinking about bitstream preservation (though they did not yet have concrete plans on how to address this or how this might impact their use of the Levels). One mentioned that they have started taking environmental impact into account in their planning but this is not captured in their work with the Levels, but another suggested that environmental impacts are likely to affect their progress up the NDSA Levels, suggesting that they might make a strategic decision to stay at a lower level of the model. In a similar vein, there was an acknowledgement from one respondent that a response to environmental concerns may impact on their work with the NDSA Levels in the future and they may need to annotate their self-assessment with rationale around decisions to aim for a lower level (particularly around environmentally responsible storage options).

It was interesting to see the answers to this question and the Levels Steering Group is keen to explore this topic further. We’d love to discuss this with you at our next ‘Open Session’ (on 16th August at  11:30 AM – 12:30 PM Eastern) which will be on the theme of the Levels of Preservation and Environmental Sustainability. We are keen to hear how the community would like us to engage with this topic and if there is any work required to update the Levels with this in mind.

We also have more to share from our Levels Scenarios Survey so watch this space for further blogs! 

Also a big thank you to those community members who engaged with this survey and shared their practices on using the NDSA Levels of Digital Preservation.

Catching up with past NDSA Excellence Awards Winners: Asociación Iberoamericana de Preservación Digital (APREDIG)

The Asociación Iberoamericana de Preservación Digital (APREDIG) won the 2019 Organization Innovation Award. APREDIG is a nonprofit Ibero-American association founded at the end of 2017 in Barcelona, Spain, with the intention of promoting the importance of digital preservation in Spainish-speaking countries. Its activity has culminated in projects and activities to disseminate a Spanish translation of the original NDSA Levels of Preservation, opening-up significant new opportunities for expanding digital stewardship best practices, and subsequent outcomes, by practitioners in Spain and Latin America. Led by Dr. Miquel Termens and Dr. David Leija Román (Universitat de Barcelona), this group of volunteers, researchers, and disseminators of best practices for digital preservation have created an online self-assessment tool to help Institutions of Spain and Mexico understand recommendations, key concepts, and simple diagnosis of digital preservation practices using the NDSA Levels as a guideline. 

Headshot of David Leija

 

We recently caught up with Dr. David Leija Román to learn more about the organization’s progress in the last few years. His responses, in English and Spanish, are available below! 

1) What have you been doing since receiving the NDSA Excellence Award?

We have supported many Institutions in Latin America to correctly apply the NDSA guidelines with workshops and introductory sessions on digital preservation, as well as publishing articles and providing non-profit support to Institutions in the development of their digital preservation policies.

2) What did it mean for you to receive the NDSA award?

It means a lot and has filled us with great emotion to be part of the excellent effort made by the NDSA, since the work of spreading the importance of digital preservation in institutions with few economic and information resources in Latin America is still a subject in training, so this award motivated us to specialize more in what the NDSA does and communicate it in Spanish to our community.

3) What efforts/advances/ideas in recent years have impressed or admired you in the field of data management and/or digital preservation?

One of the most impressive things I have seen in Latin America is the possibility to innovate in the use of NDSA levels in small archival institutions, since with few technological and human resources they have created programs that start with diagnoses of very specific needs, to be communicated to authorities as the importance of digital preservation and from there to create with science about what should be done. This has only been possible thanks to the guidance of the NDSA levels.

4) How has your work evolved since you won the Award of Excellence?

Mainly, we have become referent disseminators of the NDSA levels guidelines in Spanish, which means a great responsibility to always transmit in the best possible way its objectives and continuous improvements. Today we seek to participate in productive tables and create a network of more integrated in the subject to support each other.

5) What do you currently see as some of the biggest challenges or opportunities in digital preservation?

In short, it is still the lack of culture about the importance of digital preservation, since the administrations in Latin America are periodic and rotating, so understanding what has been done before and preserving the progress, sometimes in the changes of administration must start again. It is where guidelines such as NDSA and the work of solid declarative policies, help to neutralize the advances so that they are transmitted and continue to move forward with the sustainability of these.

6) Are you working on any new projects related to digital preservation? If so, could you share a bit about the project(s)?

We are currently working hand in hand with the wonderful network of digital preservation services CARINIANA, coordinated by Miguel Márdero. We have several work projects at the digital heritage level in Brazil with the collaboration of different Ibero-American experts. In Mexico we are collaborating with digital preservation repository seedbeds in northern Mexico with the Autonomous University of Tamaulipas and in the design and validation of digital preservation policies. From this aspect we have published articles since 2017 on the use of NDSA levels (https://revista.profesionaldelainformacion.com/index.php/EPI/article/view/epi.2017.may.11 ) and on Digital Preservation Policies (https://bid.ub.edu/es/50/leija.htm) to support knowledge transfer in Spanish on the subject.

Click here to read about the other winners of 2019 NDSA Innovation Awards!

Do you know an organization that is working toward clever, inventive, and risk-taking approaches to the challenges and potential of digital preservation? Help us highlight and reward their efforts! Click here to submit a 2023 NDSA Excellence Awards nomination.

Responses in Spanish are below:

1) ¿Qué ha estado haciendo desde que recibió el Premio a la Excelencia de la NDSA?

Hemos apoyado a muchas Instituciones en Latinoamérica para aplicar correctamente las directrices de NDSA levels con talleres y jornadas introductorias a la preservación digital, así como publicar artículos y apoyar sin ánimo de lucro a Instituciones en el desarrollo de sus políticas de preservación digital. 

2) ¿Qué significó para usted recibir el premio NDSA?

Significa muchísimo y nos ha llenado de mucha emoción de ser parte de el excelente esfuerzo que hace la NDSA, ya que el trabajo de divulgar la importancia de la preservación digital en Instituciones con pocos recursos económicos y de información en Latinoamérica sigue siendo una asignatura en formación, por lo que este premio nos motivó a especializarnos más en lo que hace la NDSA y comunicarlo en español a nuestra comunidad.

3) ¿Qué esfuerzos/avances/ideas de los últimos años le han impresionado o admirado en el campo de la administración de datos y/o la preservación digital?

Una de las cosas más impresionantes que he visto en Latinoamérica principalmente es la posibilidad de innovar en el uso de NDSA levels en pequeñas Instituciones de archivos, ya que con pocos recursos tecnológicos y humanos se han creado programas que inician con diagnósticos de necesidades muy específicas, para ser comunicadas a autoridades a modo de importancia de la preservación digital y de ahí crear conciencia sobre lo que se debe hacer. Esto solo se ha podido lograr gracias a la guía de los NDSA levels. 

4) ¿Cómo ha evolucionado tu trabajo desde que ganaste el Premio a la Excelencia?

Principalmente nos hemos convertido en divulgadores referentes de las directrices NDSA levels en habla hispana (español), esto significa una gran responsabilidad de siempre transmitir de la mejor forma posible sus objetivos y mejoras continuas. Hoy en día buscamos participar en mesas productivas y crear red de más integrantes en el tema para apoyarnos mutuamente.

5) ¿Cuáles ve actualmente como algunos de los mayores desafíos u oportunidades en la preservación digital?

En definitiva sigue siendo la falta de cultura sobre la importancia de la preservación digital, ya que las administraciones en America latina son periódicas y rotativas, por lo que el entender que se ha hecho antes y conservar los avances, a veces en los cambios de administración se debe iniciar de nuevo. Es donde las directrices como NDSA y el trabajo de políticas sólidas declarativas, ayudan a neutralizar los avances para que estos sean transmitidos y seguir avanzando con la sostenibilidad de estos. 

6) ¿Estás trabajando en algún nuevo proyecto relacionado con la preservación digital? Si es así, ¿podría compartir un poco sobre el (los) proyecto (s)? 

Actualmente trabajamos de la mano con la estupenda red de servicios de preservación digital CARINIANA, que coordina Miguel Márdero. Tenemos varios proyectos de trabajo a nivel de patrimonio digital en Brasil con la colaboración de diferentes expertos iberoamericanos. En México estamos colaborando con semilleros de repositorios de preservación digital en el norte de México con la Universidad Autónoma de Tamaulipas y en el diseño y validación de políticas de preservación digital. Desde está vertiente hemos publicado artículos desde el 2017 sobre el uso de NDSA levels (https://revista.profesionaldelainformacion.com/index.php/EPI/article/view/epi.2017.may.11 ) y sobre Políticas de Preservación digital (https://bid.ub.edu/es/50/leija.htm) para apoyar en transferencia de conocimiento en español sobre el tema.

¡Haga clic aquí para leer sobre otros ganadores de los Premios a la Innovación NDSA 2019!

¿Conoce alguna organización que esté trabajando para lograr enfoques inteligentes, inventivos y arriesgados para los desafíos y el potencial de la preservación digital? ¡Ayúdanos a destacar y recompensar sus esfuerzos! Haga clic aquí para enviar una nominación a los Premios a la Excelencia NDSA 2023.

 

Upcoming Levels of Digital Preservation and Environmental considerations discussion

Please join the NDSA Levels Steering Group on August 16th for an open discussion about the intersection of the NDSA Levels and environmental concerns. Wildfires in Canada and excessive heat across the globe this summer make the impact of climate change impossible to ignore. As stewards of digital content, how do we balance our obligations to long-term preservation of digital cultural heritage and the sustainability of our planet? A planet we need in order to bother with digital preservation at all. The NDSA Levels themselves have been the subject of critique by practitioners with environmental sustainability in mind – citing the perception that level 4 is the goal, for example, rather than an option. We want to hear from you, and open a discussion about the role of the NDSA Levels of Preservation in a rapidly changing world. 

Call in information is available on the meeting notes document.  We hope to see you on Wednesday, August 16, 2023 at 11:30 a.m. EDT.

~ The Levels of Digital Preservation Steering Group

 

Programs are Live for CLIR’s 2023 Events: DLF Forum, Learn@DLF, and DigiPres

The Council on Library and Information Resources is delighted to announce the release of the full conference programs for our in-person events happening in St. Louis, Missouri, this November: the Digital Library Federation’s (DLF) Forum and Learn@DLF, and NDSA’s Digital Preservation 2023: Communities of Time and Place. This year’s programs are full of exciting content, and you won’t want to miss them.

Explore the Programs

Join us for our events on the following dates:


While each of our events is unique, all three contain exciting content presented in a variety of formats, ranging from focused lightning talks to longer panels, short presentations to half-day workshops. With 4-5 simultaneous tracks, there’s always something interesting happening at CLIR’s fall events. We are grateful to our volunteer Reviewers and Program Committees, without whom these fabulous programs would not have come together. 

Secure the early bird rate, register for our events, book your hotel, browse our new community-written St. Louis local guide, and start planning for yet another memorable week with CLIR. 

DLF member organizations receive one complimentary DLF Forum registration as part of their member benefits. Not sure who received your code? We’d be happy to help. Contact us at forum@diglib.org

If you have any questions, please write to us at forum@diglib.org. We’re looking forward to seeing you in St. Louis this fall.

-Team DLF

Council on Library and Information Resources: https://www.clir.org/
Digital Library Federation: https://www.diglib.org/
NDSA: https://ndsa.org/

P.S. Want to stay updated on all things #DLFforum? Subscribe to our Forum newsletter and follow us at @CLIRDLF on Twitter.

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