Introducing…The New TARO Logo!

By Robert Weaver

Greetings, TARO colleagues!

The TARO Steering Committee has some excellent news. TARO has a new logo!

For the last several months, Rebecca Romanchuk (TARO’s Immediate Past Chair) led a group of archivists from the TARO Steering Committee, various TARO subcommittees, and members of UT Libraries through a maze of almost a dozen concepts and color palettes. Ideas varied wildly, ranging from off-beat, mid-century-modern circles and diamonds framing the TARO acronym to a magnifying glass replacing the ‘O’ in TARO. But at last, the group’s hard work paid off. Without further ado, here it is!

Much thanks goes to graphic designer Neil Barrett. He poured hours of work into crafting and refining many, many potential images, all the while guiding us toward the best decision with his keen aesthetic eye. This was no easy task with a group of archivists passionate about making TARO look its best. He deserves as much credit as we can give him.

We hope you love the logo as much as we do! It was a crucial element of the requested support generously afforded to TARO through the NEH Implementation Grant, and for good reason. This logo will be the centerpiece of TARO 2.0’s new aesthetic, tying together redesigned and vastly more patron-friendly searching and browsing, reorganized finding aid web pages, and other bells and whistles. The logo was a big step toward making the site what we dreamed it could be nearly three years ago.

The new website, dubbed TARO 2.0, is scheduled to debut on September 28, 2021. If you’re curious about the work going into it thus far, how repositories can help to make their finding aids work their absolute best with the site, and a host of other information, please view this YouTube video of our recent TARO 2.0 Kickoff.

As always, don’t hesitate to contact Carla Alvarez (c.alvarez@austin.utexas.edu), the TARO Product Owner, or myself (robert.g.weaver@ttu.edu) with questions or comments. Also, keep an eye out for messages from the TARO listserv for updates or opportunities to interact with the site should they become available.

Robert Weaver
2021 TARO Steering Committee Chair

 

The TARO 2.0 implementation project has been made possible in part by a major grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities: Democracy demands wisdom.

TARO 2020 Report

Greetings, TARO colleagues!

This year has been a momentous one, especially due to the continuing COVID-19 pandemic and all the ways we have had to adapt to public health safety precautions while continuing the important work we do at our institutions to the greatest extent possible. Despite these trying circumstances, archives professionals have risen to the challenge and optimized productivity through new ways of working remotely and forging online connections that are anything but “virtual,” with fellow staff, volunteers, and our audiences. TARO is no different—our Steering Committee and subcommittees have moved to holding Zoom meetings this year rather than conference phone calls, and we believe these face-to-face interactions (even though through a screen) are building stronger collegial relationships that benefit TARO as well as reinforcing the many connections among our member repositories.

2021 Steering Committee members
TARO held its annual Steering Committee open-office election in November, filling the calendar year 2021 vacancies for the offices of vice chair/chair-elect and secretary. Officers who completed their terms this year are Secretary Irene Lule (2019-2020) and Immediate Past Chair Carla Alvarez (having also served as vice-chair and chair, 2018-2020, and previously as an at-large member, 2017). Their dedication to their duties and excellent work are much appreciated. Officers for next year are:

Chair: Robert Weaver, Texas Tech University, robert.g.weaver@ttu.edu

Vice-Chair: Samantha Dodd, Southern Methodist University, smdodd@smu.edu

Secretary: Alexandria Suarez, Texas Digital Library, asuarez@austin.utexas.edu

At-Large Member (2020-2022, 3-year term): Penny Castillo, Fort Worth Public Library, drpencil9@gmail.com

At-Large Member (2020-2021, 2-year term): Ada Negraru, Southern Methodist University, anegraru@mail.smu.edu

At-Large Member (2020-2021, 2-year term): Rachael Zipperer, University of North Texas, Rachael.Zipperer@unt.edu

UT Libraries Representative: Aaron Choate, UT Libraries, achoate@austin.utexas.edu

Programmers: J.J. Bennett and Joanna Jackson, UT Libraries, lib-taro@austin.utexas.edu

Immediate Past Chair: Rebecca Romanchuk, Texas State Library and Archives Commission, rromnchk@tsl.texas.gov

News and Major Accomplishments

NEH Implementation Grant
All-Hands Meetings
TARO Steering Committee members and subcommittee chairs met several times this year to discuss the processes and decision points for our implementation grant work. Our initial meeting (and our last chance to meet in person this year) was in February, with three further online meetings in October. We discussed website functional requirements and the minimum viable product requirements as outlined in our NEH implementation grant application; these factors form the basis for our web application development. We also discussed how the data TARO uses (member repositories’ finding aids) will need to meet a minimum level of encoding completeness and correctness to ensure the new website functions for search/facet/browse and data export/reuse  return expected results. Coordination to assist members in understanding and applying this minimum level of required encoding is being led by an ad hoc data remediation subcommittee.

TARO Web Application Development
Our grant-funded web applications developer, Minnie Rangel, as part of the Valkyrie Squad led by UT Libraries Lead Agile Scrum Master Jade Diaz, has been developing high-quality and efficient front- and back-end web applications for the new TARO2 site with accompanying validation, testing, and documentation. Appointed by TARO Program Manager Aaron Choate as TARO Product Owner in this Agile process, UT Libraries Benson Latin American Collection Latino/a Archivist Carla Alvarez has been meeting regularly with the Valkyrie Squad and gathering stakeholder feedback from the Steering Committee and subcommittee chairs, who receive regular updates on this development via sprint demo presentation slides shared with us on a biweekly basis and regular email communications.

TARO Metadata Analyst
Our grant project hired Devon Murphy, a metadata and digital collections professional, to work with us from September 2020 through August 2021 to analyze the controlled access vocabulary in TARO in order to validate existing metadata terms against authority files, create approved lists of controlled access vocabulary, and write training documentation for TARO members to use to edit their own subject headings.

TARO Logo Design Development
Beginning in September 2020 and continuing through January 2021, Steering Committee members and subcommittee chairs are meeting on a biweekly basis with our grant-funded web graphic designer, Neil Barrett, as he guides us in the process to design a new TARO logo to replace our original logo (a taro plant leaf, if you hadn’t identified it as that) and choose a new color palette, all to debut on the new TARO2 website later next year.

TARO Virtual Brown Bag
This year our TARO Brown Bag, usually held at the Society of Southwest Archivists annual meeting, was conducted as a webinar with over a hundred TARO member repository staff and others attending. Our Steering Committee officers and subcommittee chairs talked about the scope of their work and presented on their current activities, and those attending were engaged with poll questions, a Q&A, and a post-webinar survey to elicit their helpful feedback. We plan to continue to hold an annual webinar or online meeting to share our recent and upcoming activities and take advantage of this method of allowing anyone to attend who has an hour to spend with us.

New Member Repositories
TARO welcomed four new member repositories this year, all of whom produce their own EAD finding aids without vendor encoding support:

Anomaly Archives of the Scientific Anomaly Institute
Fort Worth Public Library
Galveston and Texas History Center, Rosenberg Library
Special Collections and Archives, Southwestern University

In addition, four new participating repositories have joined our New Member Initiative, with funding for vendor encoding provided by the Summerlee Foundation:

African American Museum
C.L. Sonnichsen Special Collections Department, University of Texas at El Paso
Moore Memorial Public Library
St. Mary’s University

For more details about New Member Initiative activities this year, see the Year 2 report by 2020 QA Subcommittee Chair Carla Alvarez.

National Archival Finding Aid Network Participation
TARO is one of twelve finding aid aggregator partners in the “Building a National Finding Aid Network” collaborative research and planning initiative led by the California Digital Library, which received a $982,175 grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services this year. The funding will support a two-year research and demonstration project, to run September 2020 to August 2022 and intended to build the foundation for a national archival finding aid network (NAFAN). TARO has pledged to participate in several aspects of the grant activities. Currently, TARO is working with NAFAN grant project staff to provide a link to a survey on the TARO website, designed to gather demographic data and information about why and how researchers use finding aid aggregations. TARO Today will announce when that survey link becomes available so that our member repositories can encourage their researchers to participate in the survey.

Looking Ahead

  • The coming year will see our new TARO2 website launch in fall 2021, whose development will have taken advantage of usability testing led by our Website and Technology subcommittee.
  • Assistance to our member repositories will be provided in the form of approved lists of controlled access vocabulary, training documentation for editing subject headings, and minimum required encoding instruction and support. Our Standards subcommittee will adjust our Best Practice Guidelines documentation as needed to reflect TARO2 processes and requirements.
  • An online EAD training is being coordinated by our Funding and Sustainability subcommittee in tandem with our Outreach and Education subcommittee, to be available in early 2021. Once pandemic restrictions on travel and meeting in groups are lifted, in-person trainings held at host member repositories will resume, possibly in late 2021.
  • New TARO membership period deadlines will occur on May 30, 2021 (for membership to begin in July 2021), and on November 30, 2021 (for membership to begin in January 2022). If your repository wants to join TARO, or you know of another repository who is interested, please get in touch using the contact link on our How to Join page.

Stay in Touch
TARO Today
TARO wiki
TARO Best Practice Guidelines

On behalf of the TARO Steering Committee, I extend my sincere thanks to all TARO member repositories for their continued participation in our indispensable, statewide EAD consortium, and to all subcommittee chairs and members for their expert contributions and tireless commitment and service. I also offer my personal thanks to my fellow Steering Committee officers, whose leadership and teamwork have made a challenging and eventful year a successful one for TARO.

Rebecca Romanchuk
2020 TARO Steering Committee Chair


Program Manager Briefing: an introduction to our Agile development process

The TARO 2.0 refresh team has completed our second all-hands meeting and I would like to provide some background for our TARO community members on how we are doing our work as well as providing some brief highlights of some of the accomplishments that the teams have already made. 

A bit about Agile:

The UT Libraries development team, Libraries IT, has been following a software development approach called Agile.  Agile has become quite popular in the software development community so you are likely to have run across it elsewhere.  However, a simple definition is that agile is “an iterative approach to project management and software development that helps teams deliver value to their customers faster and with fewer headaches. … requirements, plans, and results are evaluated continuously so teams have a natural mechanism for responding to change quickly.”  Instead of spending a great deal of time planning up front as we might if we were following traditional project planning techniques, the team works to identify the elements of the minimum viable product (MVP) and starts working on the elements of that product in ways that allow the results to be evaluated by the stakeholders as they become available.  The idea is to identify the things that are not working quickly and correct them or accomplish those things that can be finished as quickly as possible.  In this way, stakeholders are not waiting until the end of a project to see the end product or provide feedback, making the product more likely to meet their needs.

While all agile approaches derive from the original Agile Manifesto : https://agilemanifesto.org/, you will find that each group implementing it has identified what works for them in their context.  Wherever you are, agile tends to make use of common roles or organizational techniques such as stakeholders, product owners, backlogs, sprints, stand up meetings, and demo days.  

A stakeholder is both a general term and a specific group of people.  In this case, we have a group of University of Texas staff who have been working with TARO for many years as our internal stakeholder group.  They serve as a set of stakeholders for the development team and meet regularly to give guidance on time-sensitive development queries.  We also have the broader TARO community as represented by the TARO steering committee, the chairs of its working groups and through them the working group members who serve as partners and stakeholders in this project.  

As the goal in agile is to have rapid iteration, agile development teams rely on a single individual to guide them on what the deliverables are, what work to prioritize and to gather and interpret the response of the stakeholders to the progress that has been made.  This is known as the product owner and due to the time commitments and high levels of trust involved is usually a staff member of the institution doing the development work.  In our case, we had an excellent opportunity to have a heavily TARO-invested UT Libraries Benson Latin American Collection staff member take this role as my, the UT Libraries TARO program manager, appointee.  Carla Alvarez is the immediate past chair of the TARO steering committee.  She has served on the standards working group for many years as they worked to prepare the Best Practice Guide that serves as the basis for our finding aid compliance program.  And finally, she is also responsible for helping to guide the participants in learning to encode as well as do quality control for the Summerlee Foundation-supported New Member Initiative as the 2020 Summerlee QC chair.  

Carla has worked with the TARO stakeholders to guide the work of the dev team by taking the proposed features as specified in the implementation grant and defining the minimum viable product (MVP) and explaining the needs to the development team.  The MVP is the definition of the elements that must be accomplished for the product to be considered a success.  The MVP serves as a way to consistently ensure that the work of the development team remains within the original scope of the project.  As work is proposed over the course of the project, it is measured by the product owner against what elements of the MVP it will directly support.  

To preserve development momentum, the product owner is called upon to make decisions on behalf of the various stakeholders, weighing situational knowledge and feedback against the deliverables the project partners have committed to.  For the product owner to succeed, the entire project team must agree to ultimately respect their decisions.  

As the development team does their work, the product owner provides guidance on how they prioritize that work by managing their “backlog”.  The backlog is the term used to describe the list of tasks that they will need to accomplish over time.  By regularly “refining” this list, the product owner guides what the team will be doing in the near term but also ensures that the overall goals of the project will be achieved. 

This refining is a vital activity and must be done constantly as it is the element that determines what the teams will be doing during their “sprints”.  The sprint is the key element in the iterative aspect of agile.  At UT Libraries, work is structured into these 2-week time-boxed work sessions.  

While we have a single developer devoted to this project in the NEH grant (Minnie Rangel) and also in the Host Institution Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the UT Libraries, agile organizes development teams into squads who are then jointly responsible for the outcomes of their projects.  In the process of forming, the teams choose their own name and the squad doing the TARO development work is the Valkyrie Squad.  In sprint planning, the squad pulls prioritized tasks from the top of the backlog based on the task’s size and complexity and based on their bandwidth over the next two weeks.  

The squad meets briefly on most days in a “stand up” meeting where each developer outlines recent progress, next steps, and surfaces any blockers.  These are intended to be brief discussions amongst the dev team and the purpose is to make a plan for the day.

Finally, at the end of each sprint, the dev team gives a demonstration of the elements of the project that have been completed during the sprint.  This is a more formal presentation and it provides an opportunity for the stakeholders to see the progress, but also to ask questions and provide feedback for the team.

So, that’s a bit on the development process.  So far, this has resulted in a great deal of progress over the past 6-8 months, many aspects of which we will be shared in more detail as we make the slides from the demos available.

  • First, the team worked with the stakeholder community through Carla as the product owner to agree on the elements of the MVP guided largely by the grant narrative —
  • Then, they turned to identify what tools to use to build the TARO admin interface/backend —
  • Then they identified the elements of the admin interface and started building it — 
  • Then they demoed an EAD submission interface —
  • Then they identified the requirements for the compliance checking and produced a functioning prototype —
  • Then they worked on a migration prep tool that evaluated the readiness of the existing collections —
  • Then, working with the standards committee, the TARO Steering and Working Group Chair stakeholders provided feedback on the compliance elements —
  • Then they refined the requirements for the technology “stack” that will be used to build the end-user interface/website —
  • Now they have turned to prepare for the development of the end-user interface and have several documents out to our stakeholders for review and comment.

Some of the people in the roles involved in this process

TARO Steering Committee Chair – Rebecca Romanchuk
UT Libraries TARO Program Manager – Aaron Choate
TARO NEH Development Product Owner – Carla Alvarez
TARO NEH Software Developer – Minnie Rangel
TARO NEH Metadata Analyst – Devon Murphy

UT Libraries IT Valkyrie squad:

J.J. Bennett
Tori Brown
Brandon Cornell
Jade Diaz
Joanna Jackson
Minnie Rangel (TARO NEH developer)

TARO Steering & Working Group Chair stakeholders:

Julianna  Barrera-Gomez, University of Texas San Antonio
Amy K Bowman, University of Texas Briscoe Center for American History
Penny Castillo, Fort Worth Public Library
Amanda Focke, Rice University
Molly Hults, Austin History Center
Irene Lule, University of Texas Harry Ransom Center
Ada Negraru, Southern Methodist University
Rebecca Romanchuk, Texas State Library and Archives
Robert Weaver, Texas Tech University
James Williamson, Southern Methodist University
Rachael Zipperer, University of North Texas

University of Texas local TARO stakeholders:

Erin Harbour, Reference Archivist, Briscoe Center for American History
Evelina Stulgaityte, Archivist, Tarlton Law Library
Stephanie Tiedeken, Archivist, Alexander Architectural Archives
Stephen Mielke, Archivist and Collections Librarian, Harry Ransom Center

In closing, on behalf of myself and Becky Romanchuk, the Chair of the TARO Steering Committee, I want to say thank you for your time and your continued commitment to this project.  It is a challenging time to be working on such an endeavor and your diligence is making this work possible. 

/Aaron Choate

The TARO 2.0 implementation project has been made possible in part by a major grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities: Democracy demands wisdom.