mapping the interoperability landscape interoperability working group
DESCRIPTION
This afternoon’s task… Each group should come up with three next steps to progress work towards a shared approach to interoperability Keep in mind these three themes: –The need to understand interoperability in designing new systems –The open publication of data dictionaries –Sharing data across systems But also consider other themes that may have emerged for youTRANSCRIPT
Mapping the interoperability
landscape
Interoperability Working Group
Action examples
• Support for Johnathon’s work• ARC project on complex systems• ICT technology strategy• Particular projects (standards mapping)• Etc etc
This afternoon’s task…
• Each group should come up with three next steps to progress work towards a shared approach to interoperability
• Keep in mind these three themes:– The need to understand interoperability in designing
new systems– The open publication of data dictionaries– Sharing data across systems
• But also consider other themes that may have emerged for you
Part 1
Practice centric technology leadership
How should this landscape look?
Part 2
Publishing of sector basedstandards and schemas
Time and versioning
Publishing protocols
SEC
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FRA
STR
UC
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Current version of standard 1
Previous version of standard 1
Sector publishing of individual standards (or data dictionaries)
Example of the sorts of standards (not published in this way as yet)
Example 1: Quality Assurance standards: Evidence Guide for Registered Community Service Organisationshttp://tinyurl.com/bxwy3l
Example 2: IRIS Data Dictionary for Family Serviceshttp://tinyurl.com/b6z79h
Acknowledge Gavan McCarthy: e-Scholarship Research Centre – University of Melbourne
Part 2: Publishing of schemas and standards
Enterprise 1 Enterprise 2 Enterprise 3
Publishing protocols
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Enterprise publishing of individual standards and schemas
Acknowledge Gavan McCarthy: e-Scholarship Research Centre – University of Melbourne
Part 2: Publishing of schemas and standards
Linking sector and enterprise IM systems: through partnership protocols
PAR
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SHIP
PRO
TOC
OLS
Part 2: Publishing of schemas and standards
Acknowledge Gavan McCarthy: e-Scholarship Research Centre – University of Melbourne
Publishing protocols allows for
AUTOMATED VERSIONING;
AND HARVESTING OF METADATA
Allowing automated versioning updates and harvesting of data and metadata
Acknowledge contribution of Gavan McCarthy: e-Scholarship Research Centre – University of Melbourne
Part 2: Publishing of schemas and standards
Dramatically lifting productivity of evidence collation for quality systems
Tagging of authorised records to different quality standards elements
Part 2: Publishing of schemas and standards
Time and versioning
Standards published through the Encoded Archiving Context standard
Internal schemas and standards published through the Encoded Archiving Context standard
Enterprise 1 Enterprise 2 Enterprise 3
Publishing systems are OAI compliant
Internal standards and schema publishing system is OAI compliant
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SHIP PR
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INTEROPERABILITY
Current version of standard 1
Previous version of standard 1
Part 2: Publishing of schemas and standards
Acknowledge Gavan McCarthy: e-Scholarship Research Centre – University of Melbourne
Part 3
Semantic interoperability across multiple sectors
Patterns from these different sectors emerge
Standard 1
Standard 2 Standard 3
Standard 4
Enterprise schema
Enterprise schema
Enterprise schema
Enterprise schema
Is a developmental approach required?
Break out groupsWe look forward to continued emergence
Thank you