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#Internet Archive

    Hidden Gems: The Wiedrick Collection

    by Guest Author January 31, 2023
    written by Guest Author

    The University of Alberta Library offers access to numerous resources that are core for certain disciplines, but also really deserving of wider attention. Here is one of those gems…

    Attention education researchers, students and those fascinated in the evolution of school curricula! Access to primary resources related to the first one hundred years of Alberta’s education history is easier than ever through the Wiedrick Collection, available through Internet Archive. 

    The Wiedrick Collection on Internet Archive

    The Wiedrick Collection contains digitized versions of the over 4000 books and print resources that make up the collection built by Dr. Laurence “Laurie” Wiedrick [1925-1982] over his 30+ year career. Dr. Wiedrick began his career as a teacher-librarian eventually becoming the Supervisor of School Libraries at Edmonton Public Schools and a professor of Education here at the University of Alberta. Among his significant achievements here at the UAlberta were coordinating the Faculty of Education’s Curriculum Laboratory from 1967 to 1981 and helping to establish the University’s School of Library Science. 

    In 2012 the Library received a bequest from Dr. Wiedrick’s wife Marie to digitize the collection built by her husband, so that education researchers and students would have greater access. Throughout the next several years over 20 members of the Library’s staff, including student employees and interns, worked to make Marie Wiedrick’s wish possible. 

    An example of the approval statements and download options available in Internet Archive

    Thanks to this work the entire collection, which contains items used in Alberta’s K-12 school between 1885 and 1985, is available online with the added benefit of Internet Archive’s search capabilities to help researchers pore through the abundance of information these resources contain. It’s possible to do text searches to see when a particular term or concept was first explored in the Alberta curriculum. You can also narrow your search to books used in a certain subject area, or for a certain grade. Each resource even contains an approval statement that indicates the years a text was used and the grades and subjects it was approved for. Internet Archive also allows users to download these materials in a rich array of file formats (DAISY, EPUB Kindle, PDF and more) giving those with special accessibility needs or researchers interested in textual analysis a multitude of options to work with.

    Home and Family: A Home Economics Textbook from 1932
    A page from Clothes: Part of Your World 1968


    Why is this collection such a gem? Well, for starters it offers a window into what Alberta elementary and secondary students were being taught throughout the province’s first century. As you can imagine, a science textbook from 1920 contains much different information than one from 1970. It’s also possible to trace the progression of ideas about certain social aspects, like how young girls were taught about the roles they could inhabit, and how those in other marginalized groups were represented to students during various eras. Those interested in the design and visual representations manifesting in these resources are able to see how ideas and concepts were communicated to students, thanks to the full colour, cover to cover scans made by folks at Internet. This is really just skimming the surface of the research this collection makes possible.

    If you’re looking for more information about the Wiedrick collection and how it is being used to support teaching and research here at UAlberta, we have a video that goes into greater detail.

    January 31, 2023 0 comment
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  • Internet Archive your secret research (and boredom busting) weapon

    by Guest Author July 12, 2022
    by Guest Author July 12, 2022

    Among many commemorative titles including Blueberry Month and International Zine Month, July is also anti-boredom month. When you work at a library there are endless amounts of resources to pour over when you need a brain break. Oftentimes during quiet periods at the desk, I like to poke around in the collections our digitization team have made available through Internet Archive. We’ve examined the process of digitization in a previous blog post,…

  • New Archives Website

    by Meredith Bratland January 26, 2021
    by Meredith Bratland January 26, 2021

    The University of Alberta Archives website has been overhauled and redesigned. It’s looking fabulous, if we do say so ourselves! With the new website, users will be able to: easily search the archives collection from the homepage search bar, read FAQs to help you prepare for a visit to the archive, and discover the Archives Digital Collections hosted on ERA (UAlberta’s digital repository) and the Internet Archive. We hope you enjoy the…

  • New in the Internet Archive: UAlberta’s Growing Digital Collection

    by Emily Zheng January 27, 2020
    by Emily Zheng January 27, 2020

    Written by Sarah Severson Did you know that the University of Alberta Library has a huge collection of digitized items, many of them dating back a century or more? 2019 has been a busy year for the University of Alberta Library’s digitization program and has seen us add almost 22,000 new items to our Internet Archive collection. For several years, we have partnered with Internet Archive as our digitization partner, and this…

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