Building a Web Site for the History of the Atlantic Slave
Trade
By Peter J. Kastor
Some General Thoughts
- How will you use this site? Are you providing an
electronic version of an existing syllabus, a launching point for materials
that you will use in conjunction with your existing course, or are you
rebuilding a class from the ground up? These matter primarily when you
consider how long you will need to prepare the site. An electronic version
of an existing site can be up and running within a few days. It is also a
good way to get familiar with HTML and with the particular network
setup at your institution. As soon as you include additional material
(usually images or supplementary text), the time requirement increases
dramatically. For a class in the fall, you should allow the entire summer
to prepare the Web site. Finally, a site that forms the cornerstone of a
reconceived course is considerably more challenging, both in terms of
technology and time. It is best to begin work on these projects a year
before using them.
- How will your students use this site? It is easy (and
dangerous) to assume that undergraduates feel at home on the internet.
Many do, but it is still the case that a large number of undergraduates have
no extensive computing experience. Even those who consider themselves
"comfortable" on a computer, with hours of time in high school and
college, still have a limited range of skills. Some of the best electronic
projects are undone by their own sophistication, usually because they
require skills that students do not have. Every Web project
requires some kind of orientation for students. For the most basic Web
sites, this can be a quick discussion at the beginning of class. For
anything more complicated, however, it is essential to make certain that
students have an opportunity to learn how the site works.
- Who will have access to your site? This is a matter
of personal pride, not to mention the law of intellectual property and
copyright. Most people who prepare educational material for the World
Wide Web choose to make their material accessible on an unlimited basis.
This is especially important if this is the first site you've built. You may
feel comfortable using it with your students, but you may want to keep it
away from colleagues outside your institution. In addition, some students
are uncomfortable having their work available to the rest of the work. If
you include student projects in your site, you may wish to make restrict
access to particular documents.
Things to Consider Before You Build Your
Site
Contact the System Administrator. If you have not
worked on your institution's network before, it is essential to contact the
people who maintain that network. You should ask them about the
following issues:
- Storage. Every institution has a different policy regarding
how much material an individual or organization can store on the
institution's network. Textual information rarely causes a problem. As
soon as you begin using still images, sound, or video, however, you can
quickly run into problems. This is especially the case at institutions which
automatically refuse to store additional material once you have exceeded a
certain storage quota.
- On-Campus Access. Does your institution have readily
accessible computer labs? Are all of them equipped with a Web browser?
Most colleges and universities have these labs, but their availability varies
dramatically. Even more unpredictable are the kind of computers in those
labs. You may have a new machine capable of running the most
sophisticated Web pages, but your students may have to work on
machines which can do a lot less. Older computers also require
considerably more time to process and show Web files. This is especially
important when considering how many images to use. Likewise, it is
important to learn about the multimedia capability of on-campus
computers. Many universities have chosen not to have sound
capacity in their on-campus computers, primarily to save money and to
limit noise in the labs. If you do want to make use of sound of video, it
will be important to learn where--or even if--your students will be able to
use those files on-campus.
- Off-Campus Access. This matter involves both your
institution and your students. Does your institution have a reliable dial-in
network? At some schools (UVa included), the demand for modem
access has exceeded the institution's resources. As a result, students often
have difficulty even connecting to the system. Once they are on-line, you
then face other questions that can only be answered by surveying your
students. You will need to find out how many of them have home
computers, modems, and internet access. You will also need to learn how
fast those modems transmit and how fast those computers can think. This
information is critical as you decide what sort of information you want to
distribute.
- Institutional Support. Does your institution have a
multimedia lab or any other support facility for faculty who want to use
electronic materials in their courses? Increasingly, the answer is "yes."
At only a few places will the answer be "no." Between these two
extremes are a large number of institutions where technical support is
tucked away in unfamiliar corners. Often it resides in departments that are
unfamiliar to people studying the slave trade. Engineering, environmental
science, natural science, and obviously computer science departments are
often the home to impressive amounts of equipment and support.
Consider the Source of Your Material.
- Copyright. The internet remains a nebulous realm when it
comes to copyright, but some general rules do apply. Most of the same
provisions governing printed material apply to the internet. Placing any
material on-line without restriction constitutes "publishing." As a result,
placing scanned material on-line without permission constitutes copyright
infringement. Universities benefit from fair use provisions, however, and
there are various ways to keep a site safe and legal. The best way is
obviously to use material with permission. Most large public institutions--
including the Library of Congress, the National Archives, and many
university libraries--allow people to use their electronic materials for
educational purposes without any prior agreement. Scanning material
from a published source, on the other hand, is far more complicated. In
those cases, fair use protects materials on-line for a limited amount of time
with limited access. The best way to protect yourself from a legal
standpoint is to place material on-line for the duration of a course and
restrict access to people within your institution.
- Reliability. You should apply the same rules of
provenance to electronic materials that you would apply to printed
documents. Do the materials come from a reliable source? Unfortunately,
this is more easily said than done on the Web. A respected professor at a
prestigious university might well use materials that he got from another
sources. This is neither illegal nor unethical, but it does make establishing
the provenance all the more difficult. The best place to start is with the
original owner. Fortunately, some of the largest document collections,
both public and private, have begun to put their materials on line. Many
of these will also scan materials by request in much the same way
theywould send a photograph or photocopy.
Administrative Considerations
Equipment. Creating materials for the World Wide Web
actually does notrequire a lot of computer equipment. You can
create documents on any word processor, and most new computers can
handle the software necessary to work with images. How much
equipment you need will depend on how much you want to do and
whether your institution already has a computing lab with the equipment
and support necessary to create Web sites. If you want to be able to do
everything from your office, or your institution does not have the
equipment anywhere else, here is what you will need to create a good Web
site:
- Computer. A PC running Windows '95 should have
at least a 200 mhz (megahertz) Pentium chip, 32 MB
(megabytes) of RAM, and 3 GB (gigabytes) or storage on the hard-drive.
Older machines with a 133 or 166 mhz chip can suffice, but less than 32
MB of RAM often makes the machine too limited to handle large images.
An ideal configuration would be a PC with a 300 mhz chip,
64 MB or RAM, and 4 GB storage.
- Scanner. You will need to be able to scan up to 600 dpi
(dots per inch). This figure refers to the level of detail that the scanner can
catch. A document feeder is also useful if you will be scanning a large
amount of textual material.
- ZIP Drive or JAZ Drive. These disk drives enable you
to store large amounts of data. On ZIP disk can store up to 100 MB,
compared to 1.4 MB for a standard diskette. While the final destination
for your Web site will be a server maintained by your institution, ZIP and
JAZ drives offer a way to keep backups or store work-in-progress. They
are most useful if you are using a large number of images. Otherwise,
they are not necessary.
- Image Software. These applications are like word
processors, except they create and manipulate images instead of text.
They are essential for any work on images. While most computers come
with some sort of image manipulation tool, few of them have the kind of
applications that are easy or flexible enough to create images for a Web
site. The most popular image manipulation software at many institutions
is called Photoshop, made by a company called Adobe.
- Text Software. Optical character recognition (OCR)
refers to a computer's ability to see the picture of text and convert that
information into computerized text. OCR remains an imperfect
technology. On a clean sheet of text created by a laser printer, most OCR
applications will make only one or two errors. Anything else, however,
and the software runs into trouble. All OCR documents require
considerable editing. People have tended to overestimate the ability of
computers to scan documents, instead of acknowledging the inevitable
frustration that goes with this process. Omnipage Pro is a highly accurate
and reasonably priced OCR package.
- HTML Editors. While you can create HTML document
on any wordprocessor, many people prefer to avoid the process of
entering tags. The easiest way to convert a word processing document
into HTML is to use a the most recent versions of Microsoft Word and
Wordperfect. Both applications enable you to save files directly into
HTML. Unfortunately, they cannot save footnotes or endnotes. They
also do not have an easy way to insert images or special formatting
information. Another option is to buy an HTML editing application.
Claris Homepage and Netscape Professional both enable you to do far
more than is possible through a standard word processor.
Important note: whatever you choose to do, it is important to
keep in mind that all Web editing tools still have significant
limitations. As a result, it is important to have a basic familiarity with
HTML and to have ready access to an HTML guidebook.
- Total Cost. A multimedia computing package, including
computer, scanner, ZIP or JAZ drive, and software, usually costs about
$5,000. A more basic computer, capable of editing images you've
scanned elsewhere, usually costs about $2,500-3,000.
Institutional Resources
- Information Capacity. This is where the information
you gather from your system administrator comes into play. Storage
capacity, accessibility, and technical support will all play a role in deciding
the scope, and even the aesthetics of your project.
- Library. Find out of your library already has a digital
center. If so, they may be willing to scan materials from their holdings.
This is especially useful for digitizing rare materials. Placing old
documents on-line provides access to an unprecedented number of users,
and finally makes original materials a viable option for large classes.
Equally important, a scanned image of the original document connects
students to primary materials in a way that is impossible with
transcriptions or black-and-white photocopies.
Funding. Information technology remains
expensive, and creating materials for the Web still has a high price tag.
Fortunately, computing remains the only growth field in the humanities.
In addition, there are numerous ways to reduce your own workload,
which is no small concern given the amount of time required to prepare
information to go on line.
- State Legislatures. Public officials are under
tremendous pressure to make information technology available to
students. Indeed, the number of computers at a public school, college, or
university is often a boasting point for legislators. As a result, state
legislatures have opened their coffers to fund electronic projects in way
they have been reticent to do with more traditional research or teaching
projects. Obviously, this is limited primarily to public institutions
- Administrators. Educational administrators are under the
same kind of pressure as public officials (often because they must answer
to those same state legislators). They too have proven willing to provide
seed money or (in some cases) long-term financial commitments to
electronic projects.
- Foundations. Public, private, and quasi-private
foundations are currently investing large amounts of money in electronic
projects. The National Endowment for the Humanities, the Ford
Foundation, and state historical societies, are examples of the kind of
organizations that have provided money for electronic projects. Some of
these have funded specific classroom applications, but most have gone to
broader archival projects designed to increase access to rare materials.
- Libraries and Museums. Some of the most effective
projects have been collaborative ventures involving local repositories.
Major museums and libraries have created their own electronic exhibits,
but many smaller collections remain untouched, often because these
institutions lack the expertise or support to launch a Web site. These
organizations have proven eager to work with universities, which can
offer exactly the sort of resources that libraries and museums often lack.
The most problematic aspect of these relationships usually involves
access. Private collections usually want to keep tight control over their
materials, deciding what can go on line and who should be able to see it.
- Work Study. Undergraduates and graduate students
remain an undervalued resource for electronic projects. Not only do most
of them have some familiarity with computers, but many of them are eager
to learn. This is particularly important, because the absence of people
experienced with scanning, HTML, etc., does not mean you will
encounter difficulty finding people to work on your project. To the
contrary, your own project can provide students with the sort of practical
experience and resumé filler they feel they need to find
employment.