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VISUAL RESOURCES ASSOCIATION PUBLISHES WHITE PAPER ADVOCATING FOR VISUAL 
RESOURCES MANAGEMENT IN EDUCATIONAL AND CULTURAL INSTITUTIONS

LOS ANGELES, California -- The Visual Resources Association (VRA), the 
international organization for image media professionals, has published a White 
Paper to promote holistic thinking about effectively meeting institutional as 
well as individual image user needs. In an environment of rapid technological 
change and in the face of challenging economic conditions, Advocating for 
Visual Resources Management in Educational and Cultural Institutions identifies 
six strategic areas for consideration in planning for the future: multiple 
sources for images; ways of integrating personal and institutional collections; 
social computing and collaborative projects; the life-cycle continuum of image 
assets and their description; rights and copyright compliance; and visual 
literacy.

The paper argues that managers of image collections have successfully 
re-aligned operations to meet digital demands and that new technologies, 
extended responsibilities, and closer alliances with related services-such as 
information technology, rights management, and course management-typify the 
changes in the work of visual resources professionals. This work now involves 
building institution-wide resources tied into central digital information 
infrastructures for the management and preservation of content in a variety of 
media. Image managers are increasingly involved in inter-institutional efforts 
to share collections and distribute labor-intensive tasks.

VRA asserts that eliminating visual resources services carries high risk during 
this transitional era and does not serve an institution's broader educational 
mission. Current VRA President Allan Kohl states "At a time when more academic 
disciplines are using images as primary teaching resources, and visual literacy 
is increasingly understood as being central to learning, it is more important 
than ever to support the building of shared collections to reduce redundancy, 
facilitate resource sharing, increase efficiencies, and minimize costs." In 
fact, many institutions have begun to re-examine the appropriate administrative 
home of visual resources collections in response to the changes brought about 
by the increasing demand for digital media in pedagogy. The VRA White Paper 
concludes by describing several successful administrative scenarios that offer 
flexible options for building shared image collections and providing support 
for the constituents of educational and cultural institutions.


Advocating for Visual Resources Management in Educational and Cultural 
Institutions is available online and may be freely distributed: 
http://www.vraweb.org/resources/general/vra_white_paper.pdf

--


Maureen Burns, Ed.D.
Images and Education
moaburns at gmail.com<mailto:moaburns at gmail.com> or maburns at 
uci.edu<mailto:maburns at uci.edu>
(sent by Rebecca Moss, University of Minnesota)

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