The Past On Glass: Sutton Archives, Heritage Lottery Funded Project

The Past on Glass: Sutton Archives, Heritage Lottery Funded Project

The Past On Glass: Sutton Archives, Heritage Lottery Funded Project

March 2016

In March 2016 I had the pleasure of being asked to further develop and deliver three accessible sessions for young people with learning disabilities from Sutton Mencap.The Past on Glass project was created by Sutton Archives with Heritage Lottery Funding. The project digitises and uncovers the stories behind the Knight-Whittome glass plate negative collection. I worked alongside Abby Mathews, Project Officer and Kathleen Shawcross, Borough Archivist and Local Stidies Manager.

Here is an extract from the blog post about that Abby wrote:

One highlight on our activity plan – and something that we have been looking forward to for a long time – was a series of pre-arranged workshops with Sutton Mencap, a local charity, established in the 1940’s by parents and carers. The charity supports over 80 children and 200 adults with a learning disability in the Sutton area ‘to have fun, learn new skills, socialise and make friends’.

Throughout March we ran a series of workshops for a small group of visitors from this charity based on the idea of self-image and photography – using our glass plates as a starting point to think about some of the issues surrounding portraiture, both now, and in the historical context.

We were very lucky to have the help of Sarah Glover an heritage education facilitator, in the running of these sessions. Over three weeks, a group of nine participants plus their carers attended both Sutton Central Library and a local historic building, Honeywood Museum, to learn about the collection and be involved in activities designed to explore the collection: what it is; what it represents; and to see if it held any resonance for them, as young people who have grown up in a world ruled by technology and convenience.

Read more here:

The Past on Glass Blog Post

Abbey Mathews wrote the following recommendation:

Sarah worked with us at Sutton Archives throughout March 2016 to deliver a series of workshops to Sutton Mencap. Her professionalism, creativity, delivery style and flexibility to the needs of the group made the sessions a huge success. It was a pleasure to work with her and we would recommend her without reservation to any Heritage projects looking to offer creative and worthwhile learning sessions.

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Oral History Consent Forms, recording equipment etc

I meant to add this a few days ago. I thought it might be helpful for people to know where I found some resources for making consent forms and making sure I was not infringing on copyright etc, as well as some info about choosing recording equipment:

Advice on recording equipment from GEM:

 http://www.gem.org.uk/soyh/toolkit/mini/mini-toolkit-4.php

Advice on recording equipment from East Midlands Oral History Archive:

http://www.le.ac.uk/emoha/training/no3.pdf

Info about copyright from East Midlands Oral History Archive::

http://www.le.ac.uk/emoha/training/no4.pdf

Oral history interview guidelines and techniques from GEM:

http://www.gem.org.uk/res/howto/ball/res_inter.php

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http://www.oralhistory.org.uk/ethics.php

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http://www.oralhistory.org.uk/practical-advice.php

This has a great guide to all things digital, including equipment by JISC:

http://www.jiscdigitalmedia.ac.uk/

And this great link from a friend which compares main digital recording equipment:

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and finally, this was the video from the same friend -that helped me choose which audio equipment to get:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QmwuS9QOlvs

Fingers crossed it was right :)

As I have said before I was very grateful for the advice I received from the GEM (Group for Education in Museums) discussion mailing list as well as he MCG (Museums Computer Group) mailing list for a lot of this advice. Good luck if you are embarking on the same process....


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ret-uk - untitled travels
untitled travels

Teaching, learning, music, heritage, nature, theatre, stories, art, cats, community, diversity. Kent, U.K. Instagram: @ret_uk

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