ohda7.png

Oral History in the Digital Age

  • Home
  • About
    • Rights and License
    • Authors and Participants
    • Editorial Board
    • Publications
    • Contact
    • Donate
  • Best Practices
  • Getting Started
    • Glossary
      • Archives Glossary
      • Audio Glossary
      • Video Glossary
    • Playlists
      • Access
      • Cataloging and Metadata
      • Digital Preservation
      • Equipment
      • Legal Issues
      • Outcomes
      • Partners
      • Planning
      • Transcription
      • Use
  • Essays
    • Collecting
    • Curating
    • Disseminating
  • Thinking Big
  • Resources
    • Linda Shopes: A Very Selected Oral History Bibliography
    • Linda Shopes: web guides to doing oral history
    • Workshop
    • SI Workshop

Return to Playlists

Use

Playlist: Use

The following essays, written by individuals with a wealth of experience in many areas of the field, will help you to use your equipment in the best, most efficient, and most effective ways:

  • See Essay: Quick Tips for Better Interview Video, Scott Pennington and Dean Rehberger
  • See Essay: Microphones and Room Effects: Audio Exemplars and Some Recommendations for Enhancing the Quality of Oral History Recordings, Brad Rakerd
  • See Essay: Speech in Quiet and Speech in Noise:  Audio Exemplars and Some Recommendations for Enhancing the Quality of Oral History Recordings, Brad Rakerd
  • See Essay: Microphone Strategies for Recording Video for Oral History Interviews, Doug Boyd
  • See Essay: The Art of Lighting for Recording Video Oral History Interviews, Doug Boyd
  • See Essay: Achieving Good Audio Recording Levels, Doug Boyd
  • See Case Study: Using video in oral history—learning from one woman’s experiences, Joanna Hay
  • See Essay: Digital Video Preservation and Oral History,  Kara Van Malssen
  • See Case Study: Noise Reduction and Restoration for Oral History: The Stars of Ballymenone, Doug Boyd
Tweet

Permanent link to this article: /gettingstarted/playlists/use/

In this section

Playlists Planning Equipment Use Legal Issues Partners Digital Preservation Transcription Cataloging and Metadata Access Outcomes

Categories

  • Accessing
  • Archives
  • Case Study
  • Collecting
  • Curating
  • Disseminating
  • Diversity
  • Ethics
  • Evaluating
  • Featured
  • Folklore
  • How To
  • Legal Issues
  • Managing
  • Metadata
  • OHMS
  • Oral History Sites
  • Pedagogy
  • Planning
  • Preservation
  • Preserving
  • Projects
  • Recording
  • Resources
  • Teaching
  • Technical
  • Thinking Big Videos
  • Transcribing
  • Uncategorized
  • Video

Tags

access accessing access points american folklife center analog analog to digital audio best practices case study CMS collecting collection content curating curation digital preservation digitization digitize doug boyd Dublin Core ethics folklore how to interview interviewing legal issues limiter metadata microphone microphones nunn center OHMS omeka Oral History Metadata Synchronizer ownership planning preservation recording technical technical metadata transcribing transcription transcripts video XLR

Partners

  • American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress
  • American Folklore Society
  • Matrix
  • Department of Communicative Sciences and Disorders, Michigan State University
  • Louie B. Nunn Center for Oral History University of Kentucky Libraries
  • Oral History Association
  • Michigan State University Museum
  • Michigan State University
  • IMLS

Archive

  • February 2017
  • October 2015
  • March 2015
  • November 2014
  • June 2013
  • August 2012
  • July 2012
  • June 2012
  • May 2012
  • November 2011
  • June 2011

Recent Comments

  • Thuy Vo Dang on Contact

© 2024 Oral History in the Digital Age.

Made with by Graphene Themes.