A workshop on Institutional and National Digital Repository
Collaborative Framework for African Academic and Research Institutions, has
ended in Accra.
The two-day workshop which began on Tuesday
included delegates from the Association of African Universities(AAU).
Dr Hoba Andoh Pascal, Director of Communications, AAU, told the
Ghana News Agency in an interview, that the AAU had been supporting
universities in Africa to digitalize their research material and set up a
platform containing university research.
The idea is to design a framework where we have a big data base
on research by African universities, Dr Hoba, said adding that by
partnering each other, African universities would be able to compile research
findings into one data base that could be assessed.
He said the University of Ghana-Legon, the Kwame Nkrumah
University of Science and Technology and the University of Abuja, were some of
the members collaborating with each other.
Prof Etienne Ehouan Ehile, AAU Secretary General, said a
programme, dubbed, The Database on African Theses and Dissertations (DATAD),
was initiated at a planning meeting organized by the Project for Information
Access and Connectivity in Nairobi-Kenya, in 1998.
He said the meeting considered measures for contributing to the
creation of capacity in African Universities for the collection, management and
electronic dissemination of theses and dissertations
Prof Ehile said the meeting proposed a study to test the feasibility
of the idea and acknowledged the centrality of the AAU in coordinating and
providing leadership to the project.
He said the report of the feasibility study was approved by the
AAU Conference of Rectors, Vice-Chancellors and Presidents in 1999, after which
a three-year pilot phase, involving 11 institutions, begun in February 2000.
This phase was concluded in August 2003, and the main database
was launched on April 30th, 2003, and was known as DATAD-On-Line.
Prof Ehile said the database had 14,723 records with over 800
institutions that had registered as users of the database.
Today, DATAD has over 100,000 new records, of which more than
30% are in full text.
He expressed the hope that the workshop would provide an
opportunity for government officials, the academic and research communities,
institutions and organisations to share ideas with colleagues, and to inspire
wider participation and establishment of Institutional and National
repositories.
The workshop is organized by the AAU and funded by the African
Capacity Building Foundation.
Source:
Ghana News Agency
No comments:
Post a Comment
Feel free to share your views :-)