Though sometimes we create our own standards - a local set of topical subject headings, for example - the best standards are those that are published and maintained by a standards setting body (such as ISO, W3C, NISO, ANSI, or NIST). There are standards to guide us in almost any activity that we engage in as archivists:
- records retention and appraisal (ISO 15489);
- the ingestion, management, preservation, and access of digital or physical archives (ISO 14721, better known as OAIS);
- linking objects with their associated metadata (METS);
- capturing preservation data about our objects (PREMIS);
- capturing descriptive metadata about our objects (Dublin Core);
- migrating our objects into more stable formats (JPEG 2000, PDF/A)
- and making sure our digital objects are stored in a secure manner (TRAC)
Because SAA generously allows multiple people to view their webinars for the cost of one registration (though each attendee must pay for his or her examination fee), we had a good-sized audience of full time staff and interns in a conference room at the Library. For our interns, most of whom are current graduate students in Library Science at Simmons College, it seemed like much of the information presented echoed what they've already learned in class. I took that as a positive sign that graduate programs are adapting to our increasingly digital world. Archives students graduating now will start their careers already armed with skills and knowledge that more established professionals must actively seek out (by pursuing the DAS certificate, for instance). Of course it has always been thus, everywhere and in every profession, but my perspective until recently has been that of the recent graduate; now that I have been out of school for almost ten years, I find that I am suddenly among those who must rush to catch up or be left behind.