Still time to book: Heritage & the community – top tips from the CILIP Local Studies Toolkit – Free online session, 20 November, 2pm

Heritage resources can make a difference to individuals: the young couple in their first house who visited because they had chopped down some trees which were inside their fence only to find that their neighbour claimed the land and the trees; the schoolteacher who said that her students’ A level results had improved as a result of class visits to the local studies library; the family who were helped to find essential evidence about a local company and were able to obtain compensation for the loss of a loved one.

Heritage projects have the power to engage people from widely different backgrounds and generations. Interesting and creative projects have the power to motivate individuals to overcome barriers to learning, to experience digital technologies, to build new social networks (combatting isolation, depression and related health issues) and to rekindle an in interest in life through informal learning opportunities.

Heritage people working creatively, and in partnership with a wide range of educational providers, facilitators and artists, and others, can ensure that opportunities exist to engage different levels of ability and ranges of interest.

But how do you do this? Some of the finest and most experienced local studies librarians have come together to form a free online resource, The Local Studies Toolkit, that can help guide heritage people to the right answer for them.

In this session, we will explore the toolkit and hear some top tips from those who wrote some of its sections.

Speakers include:

  • Terry Bracher, Heritage Services Manager, Wiltshire & Swindon History Centre
  • Tracey Williams, Heritage & Local Studies Librarian, Solihull (Recorded)
  • Tony Pilmer, Librarian & Archivist, Royal Aeronautical Society & formerly Local Studies Librarian, Slough (Chair)
  • José Luiz Pederzoli Jr., Unit Manager – Strategic Planning, ICCROM (Recorded)

This event is organised by the CILIP Local Studies Group & The Historic Society of Lancashire & Cheshire

Heritage & the community – top tips from the CILIP Local Studies Toolkit – Free online session, 20 November, 2pm

Heritage resources can make a difference to individuals: the young couple in their first house who visited because they had chopped down some trees which were inside their fence only to find that their neighbour claimed the land and the trees; the schoolteacher who said that her students’ A level results had improved as a result of class visits to the local studies library; the family who were helped to find essential evidence about a local company and were able to obtain compensation for the loss of a loved one.

Heritage projects have the power to engage people from widely different backgrounds and generations. Interesting and creative projects have the power to motivate individuals to overcome barriers to learning, to experience digital technologies, to build new social networks (combatting isolation, depression and related health issues) and to rekindle an in interest in life through informal learning opportunities.

Heritage people working creatively, and in partnership with a wide range of educational providers, facilitators and artists, and others, can ensure that opportunities exist to engage different levels of ability and ranges of interest.

But how do you do this? Some of the finest and most experienced local studies librarians have come together to form a free online resource, The Local Studies Toolkit, that can help guide heritage people to the right answer for them.

In this session, we will explore the toolkit and hear some top tips from those who wrote some of its sections.

Speakers include:

  • Terry Bracher, Heritage Services Manager, Wiltshire & Swindon History Centre
  • Tracey Williams, Heritage & Local Studies Librarian, Solihull (Recorded)
  • Tony Pilmer, Librarian & Archivist, Royal Aeronautical Society & formerly Local Studies Librarian, Slough (Chair)
  • José Luiz Pederzoli Jr., Unit Manager – Strategic Planning, ICCROM (Recorded)

This event is organised by the CILIP Local Studies Group & The Historic Society of Lancashire & Cheshire

Event: Heritage Interpretation Workshop

Next Tuesday, University of Leicester Special Collections are running a free, public webinar looking at key ideas for interpreting and exhibiting archives.

Dr Peter Lester (School of Museum Studies) will lead a workshop looking at different types of exhibitions and a selection of interpretation techniques, as well as some thoughts around writing effective exhibition labels. The workshop will use examples of online exhibitions from archives and museums around the world, with the aim of inspiring you to start exploring these exciting resources. For participants planning and working on interpretation, the workshop will also help you to start thinking creatively about designing exhibitions. There will be opportunities to ask questions and to share your own examples of exhibitions you have visited.

Details

Heritage Interpretation Workshop

Tuesday 14 July 2020

10:30 – 12:00 BST

Sign-up via Eventbrite.

Event: Archives and Learning for All – Engaging Diverse Communities

A date for your diaries in 2019. The ARA are holding a free event on the 29 January  on how to engage diverse communities with archives.  This is a topic of interest to many involved in local studies collections, and would also be an good CPD opportunity.

Speakers and topics include: 

Penny Allen (The Courtyard Hereford) & Elizabeth Semper O’Keefe (Herefordshire Archives and Records Centre)

Who lived in a house like this: creatively engaging care home residents’

Julie Melrose (Islington Local History Centre)

‘Lost Trades of Islington: a collaborative and cross-general project’

Paul Dudman,  University of East London

‘Archives, Activism and Action: Participatory Cultural Heritage and Hidden Voices – the Role of Civic Engagement in Enhancing Archives?’

See the full program and book details  here.