- Archives
- Records Management
- FIPPA
- Digital preservation
- Resources
- About
- Mission, vision and values
- Contact us
- Feedback and comments
- Our blog
- Archival Film Flashes Back to 70s Student Life
- Manuscript Traces SFU's Architectural History
- Early University News Publications Now Digitally Available
- Digitized Programs Commemorate SFU’s Opening & Installation Ceremonies
- Archives Celebrates Fall Convocation with Release of Digitized Programs
- Films Capture Visual History and Sentiment of Time Gone By
- Lost and Found: Simon Fraser Letters
- Oral History Provides Glimpse into Mind of SFU’s First Chancellor Gordon Shrum
- Early SFU Photos Tell a Story That Frames Our World
- Aerial Photos Capture Campus Landscape & Photographer’s Legacy
- You have what...?!! and other interesting things you didn't know about the SFU Archives
- Charting the course of history: documenting SFU's early days from the student perspective (Part 1)
- Charting the course of history: documenting SFU's early days from the student perspective (Part 2)
- Helping others find their history in the future: Preserving the records of the Students of Caribbean and African Ancestry at SFU
- Preserving the sparks of global revolution in the Adbusters Media Foundation fonds
- Reflections of a co-op student
- Debunking popular myths and conspiracies with the Barry Beyerstein fonds
- In "The Beginning...": First student film returns to SFU
- "Got any pictures of Terry Fox?"
- My summer in the archives: a co-op placement retrospective
- Seeing the world through Arthur Erickson's eyes
- Beer (records) in the Archives!
- Quartet in the Quadrangle: PSQ Records Come to SFU
- Navigating silences and filling gaps: finding Black stories in the Archives
- Boxes, boxes, and more boxes: my summer co-op at SFU Archives
- Finding queer joy in the SFU Archives: Out On Campus records now available
- Glossary
How to donate your records - faculty (current and retired)
See Guidelines for Donating Faculty Papers for advice on how to identify and select records for potential donation to SFU Archives.
If you think you might want to donate records to SFU Archives, you can help us determine whether your records would be a good fit in our repository by preparing some background information about your potential donation.
Following Steps 1-10 below will provide valuable context to your records and aid in our assessment. Don't worry if you cannot provide answers to all of these steps. Just do your best to supply the details that you know. You can download our Donation Assessment Form as a convenient way to record these details.
Alternatively, contact the Staff Archivist to make arrangements for a site visit so that s/he can inspect the records and, with your help, collect the details described below. Unfortunately, we are unable to accommodate site visits outside British Columbia's Lower Mainland.
Resources
Donation Assessment Form
Step 1
Describe the subject areas to which your records might relate. See the subject headings we use to index our holdings for an overview of our collecting strengths. if you are interested in browsing our holdings, see our online catalogue, SFU Atom.
Step 2
Describe the research audiences that might be interested in your records. You know your records better than we do and we value your insights.
Step 3
Prepare a description of the records to be donated. For example:
- File list (PDF)
- Descriptive narrative (e.g. correspondence, offprints, manuscripts, committee records, research notes, etc.)
Step 4
Describe the approximate size of the donation. For example:
- How many boxes of records?
- How many GB of data on electronic storage media?
- How many photographs or films?
- How many sound recordings?
Step 5
Identify the outside dates of the records (earliest and latest dates of the records as a whole).
Step 6
Describe whether the records are unique and original:
- Does the proposed donation consist entirely of originals or copies or some mixture of both?
- Are the records unique or might other individuals, organizations, libraries or archives hold the same records?
- Does the proposed donation include publications?
Step 7
List the types of records included in the proposed donation. For example:
- Textual records
- Architectural drawings
- Maps
- Photographs
- Films and videos
- Sound recordings
- Electronic records
Step 8
Confirm ownership:
- Are the records your property?
- Do the records belong to another individual (e.g. family member, work colleague)?
- Do the records belong to an organization (e.g. university, company, society)?
Step 9
Describe any prior transfers of ownership or custody and control of the records:
- Did someone else own the records previously (e.g. family members, friends, work colleagues, etc.)?
- Were the records stored in multiple locations over time (e.g. offices, residences, storage facilities, etc.)?
Step 10
Are the records fairly complete and representative of your life and career? If there are significant gaps, describe them. For example:
- Diaries and personal correspondence were destroyed
- Records from early career donated to another institution
- Electronic records lost due to a computer crash
Step 11
The Staff Archivist will decide whether the records fall within our acquisition mandate. If SFU Archives decides to acquire your records, you can help us by making arrangements for their delivery. Unfortunately, we do not have the resources to pick up large donations.
Step 12
The donation process concludes with the signing of a Donation Agreement. The Agreement legally transfers ownership of your records to Simon Fraser University. The particulars of the Agreement are negotiated between you and SFU Archives. Some things for you to consider:
- Do you want to place time-limited, public access restrictions on some of the records because they contain sensitive personal information? If yes, please flag those records before sending them to SFU Archives.
- Do you want to retain copyright in the records you authored or would you like to assign copyright ownership to SFU Archives?
- Do you want to gift the records to SFU Archives (i.e. donate them without receiving any financial consideration) or do you want a tax receipt in return for your donation? SFU Archives does not purchase records.
- Do you want any material we decide not to preserve permanently returned to you or confidentially destroyed? If the former, we ask that you make arrangements to pick up the material we decide not to keep.
- Do you want to make additional donations over time? If yes, how frequently (e.g. once every 5 years)?