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TIPS FOR MANAGING YOUR INFORMATION: SOME “INCONVENIENT TRUTHS!” “Our collective capacity to create and disseminate information is in danger of outstripping our ability to manage it.” (www.jiscinfonet.ac.uk/records management/guide for administrators). PLEASE NOTE:
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TIPS FOR MANAGING YOUR INFORMATION: SOME “INCONVENIENT TRUTHS!” “Our collective capacity to create and disseminate information is in danger of outstripping our ability to manage it.” (www.jiscinfonet.ac.uk/records management/guide for administrators) PLEASE NOTE: This presentation should be viewed in ”Normal View” so that the note field is visible.
MANAGING YOUR INFORMATION:AN INTRODUCTION • The problem spaces: - desktop (paper and electronic) - email - shared network drives - collaborative spaces & sharing files
ORGANIZATION GROUP WORKSPACE ORGANIZATION WORKSPACE INDIVIDUAL WORKSPACE
Problem areas, causes and some solutions • Creating information • Version control • Email management • Disposing of information • Preserving information
Legislation Universities in Ontario come under provincial legislation. Federal legislation covers federal government bodies and commercial enterprises. • Provincial legislation: - Freedom of Information, Protection of Privacy - or FIPPA • Federal legislation: - Personal Information Protection, & Electronic Documents Act - or PIPEDA
Whose information is it? • University records - created as part of the business activities of the university - “means any record of information however recorded, whether in printed form, on film, by electronic means or otherwise …” • Personal • Professional/creative, research • Grey areas - personal agenda books - teaching materials/curriculum - emails
Queen’s University Records Management Program • QU Records Management Policy http://archives.queensu.ca/rm/RMPolicy.htmlhttp://archives.queensu.ca/rm/RMPolicy.html • QU Records Management program: http://archives.queensu.ca/rm/ManagingUR.html
CREATING INFORMATION • Lost information is not only inconvenient, but is a huge waste of time and resources. • Losing information containing personal details of an individual is not compliant with the law. • Use good file names: objective, meaningful, concise, standardized • Scanning and indexing (the “paperless office”) • Electronic records management systems
VERSION CONTROL • Issued or draft - “I” or “D” • Time specific • Point (not attach) • Watermarks
DANGERS OF EMAIL - Mixed messages - Emails are disclosable - Evidence of decisions and actions lost - Sensitive information disclosure - Lack of privacy
MANAGING EMAIL - 2 • Manage your inbox • File core business records • Short term informal messages – keep current only • Personal email – delete once read. • Limit main recipients • Use cc for “information only” • One topic only per email • Be specific in subject lines • Do not include original text when replying
DISPOSING OF INFORMATION • DON’T KEEP MORE THAN YOU NEED • Office of primary responsibility • Ask records management or archives staff for advice on the value • How long should it be kept • Records retention schedules – safeguards • Secure disposal of paper records • Secure disposal of electronic records
PRESERVING INFORMATION • Paper – the deluge and the ark • Digital dilemma - technology changes, how to keep the records • What is “born digital” and why is it important?
SECURITY ISSUES • Due diligence • Smart practices • Mobile technologies • Faxes • Encryption
PRIVACY – RIGHTS AND RESPONSIBILITIES • Collective Agreement – Article 23 • Academic Freedom • Surveillance in the workplace • QU Access & Privacy Office
SOME TYPES OF RECORDS • Information excluded from FIPPA • Research records excluded from the Act • Teaching materials excluded from the Act • Employment related records excluded from the Act • Your own personal information in records held by the University