Friday, August 27, 2010

Management of e-Documents and Remote Collaboration Workshop



The Zambia Agricultural Research for Development Information Network (ZAR4DIN), a FAO and FARA supported initiative whose main goal is to develop a national network of institutions and individuals involved in agricultural research for development (AR4D) information/knowledge generation, management, dissemination and exchange, and learning in order to facilitate access to AR4D information and knowledge, including metadata and full-text documents, through interlinked institutional repositories linked to a national AR4D portal, held a training workshop on Management of e-Documents and Remote Collaboration for 15 participants from the following institutions:


The workshop was held in the quite premises of the Palmwood Lodge in Chudleigh, Lusaka from 23 to 27 August 2010.


The workshop, among others, covered:

  • Digital Information Technologies and Information Production and Distribution

  • Types of Electronic Documents and their Advantages/Limitations

  • Workflows for Creating, Processing and Delivering Documents on Different Media

  • Introduction to Metadata

  • Digitization of Documents

  • Building Institutional Repositories – Issues and Tools

  • Web 2.0 for collaboration - Blogging using Blogger, Remote Collaboration using Google Docs and Social Bookmarking using Delicious

  • e-RAILS

Key outputs of the workshop include:


  • ZAR4DIN Blog – to be used for raising awareness on ZAR4DIN, sharing knowledge on agricultural research for development in Zambia, and reporting on ARD activities in Zambia.
  • e-RAILS Zambia Pages
  • Agreement to finalize the MoU for ZAR4DIN
  • Agreement to develop institutional repositories of metadata and full-text documents using OAI-PMH compliant tools.

2 comments:

  1. This ZAR4DIN thing is really really welcome.

    ReplyDelete
  2. The contents has provided meaningful information thanks for sharing info
    and is very much useful for me. Very well written I appreciate & must say good job…
    remote collaboration

    ReplyDelete