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COVID-19 at Oregon State University Collection, 2020-2023

By Chris Petersen

Collection Overview

Title: COVID-19 at Oregon State University Collection, 2020-2023

Predominant Dates: 2020-2021

ID: MSS COVID

Primary Creator: Dvorak, Anna Elizabeth

Extent: 5.39 gigabytes. More info below.

Arrangement: The collection is organized into six series: 1. University Communications, 2020-2022; 2. SCARC COVID-19 Collecting Initiative, 2020-2022; 3. OSU Libraries and Press COVID-19 Outreach, 2020-2021; 4. The Bright Side Project, 2022; 5. The Benton County Quaranzine, 2020; and 6. Archive-It Collection: "COVID-19 at OSU and in Corvallis, Oregon," 2020-2023.

Date Acquired: 00/00/2020

Languages of Materials: English [eng]

Abstract

The COVID-19 at Oregon State University Collection consists of materials submitted to or collected by multiple projects whose aim was to document university and community life during the COVID-19 pandemic. The collection includes submissions to a collecting initiative led by the Special Collections and Archives Research Center (SCARC); two outreach activities sponsored by the OSU Libraries; and an additional collecting project led by OSU Psychology professor Regan Gurung. The collection also includes compilations of university- and library-wide broadcast emails communicating operations adjustments necessitated by the pandemic, as well as university social media posts reflecting the culture of remote work at OSU. The collection is rounded out by a print zine published by the Corvallis-Benton County Public Library, and an assortment of pandemic-related websites that have been preserved by SCARC staff within the Internet Archive. The collection is largely born digital, supplemented by a smaller paper component.

Scope and Content Notes

The COVID-19 at Oregon State University Collection contains the product of several collecting and outreach initiatives led by the Special Collections and Archives Research Center (SCARC), the Oregon State University Libraries and Press, and other campus and community members.

Series 1 consists, in part, of COVID-related university and library broadcast emails, as collected by Anna Dvorak, Public Services Assistant in SCARC. The university emails were typically released by the OSU President's Office or the Office of the Provost, and authored by Presidents Ed Ray, F. King Alexander or Becky Johnson, as well as Provost Ed Feser and Vice-Provost Dan Larson, who served at the university's Coronavirus Response Coordinator. The library emails were generally written by administrators Faye Chadwell, Anne-Marie Deitering or members of the Library Employee Association. The emails have been compiled into chronologically organized PDF files. Series 1 also includes screenshots of the OSU Today Instagram feed, which focused on employees' experience of remote work. These screenshots have also been compiled into PDFs and arranged chronologically.

Series 2 contains submissions received by SCARC to its Covid Collecting Project, which was also led by Anna Dvorak. Launched in May 2020, the project offered members of the OSU community the opportunity to deposit materials documenting their experience of the pandemic into a dedicated archival collection. Participants contributed born digital materials, as well as accompanying permissions and contextual information, through a web form or direct communication with SCARC staff. The resulting series includes multiple pandemic journals as well as photographs and art works. These materials are available to researchers in the SCARC reading room or upon request; participant permissions and context forms have been moved to the SCARC central files.

Series 3 documents pandemic-era signage and outreach generated by the OSU Libraries and Press. In addition to born digital signage templates created at various points from 2020-2021, the series also holds a PDF virtual tour of the Valley Library building that was developed for patron use during the period of limited reopening in Fall 2020. Likewise included in the series are the products of two outreach activities initiated by the OSU Libraries. The first, Postcards to Campus, offered participants an opportunity for artistic expression while also maintaining a connection to the Corvallis campus during a period of remote work and learning. The series holds born digital creations from this project as well as physical postcards that were mailed to the library and subsequently displayed in the windows of the building's east rotunda. A second outreach activity, Postcards to Public Health Workers, was the result of a collaboration between the OSU Libraries and Press, the OSU Center for Health Innovation, and the OSU Student Public Health Association. It invited participants to express gratitude for public health workers through postcards of encouragement that would be distributed to hospitals and care facilities around Oregon.

Series 4 consists of submissions to The Bright Side Project, which was initiated by Regan Gurung, director of the General Psychology Program at OSU and also Associate Vice Provost and Executive Director of OSU's Center for Teaching and Learning. The Bright Side Project sought out participant reflections on resilience, strength and coping during the pandemic. The series is entirely born digital and includes essays, poems and photographic illustrations.

Series 5 consists of a single print item, The Benton County Quaranzine, which was published by the Corvallis-Benton County Public Library. The 47-page zine consists of poems, essays, drawings, cartoons and other artistic expressions submitted by 21 community members from June 1 to November 2, 2020.

Series 6 documents an external resource, the Covid-19 at OSU and in Corvallis, Oregon Archive-It collection, that was curated by SCARC staff from April 2020 to March 2023. The Archive-It tool is used to preserve websites, which are available for patron use from within the Internet Archive digital library. The collection described in Series 6 includes numerous crawls of OSU's official coronavirus information page as well as the TRACE-OSU website. Also included are crawls related to safety at the Corvallis Farmers' Market, project web pages for activities described elsewhere in this collection, an ArcGIS StoryMaps exhibit curated by an OSU graduate student, and five pandemic-related YouTube videos released by Oregon State University.

Biographical / Historical Notes

The global pandemic caused by the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus began making a direct impact on Oregon State University in mid-March 2020, when university leaders implemented a social distancing protocol and placed limits on non-essential travel in an attempt to slow the spread of the virus. The following week, many OSU professors chose to deliver their final exams remotely or to cancel them altogether. On March 23 - the first day of OSU's Spring Break - Oregon Governor Kate Brown issued a statewide stay-at-home order that resulted in a formal, mandated transition to remote learning for all OSU students as well as remote work for all OSU employees, save a small number deemed essential to the continuation of on-site campus operations. All spring sports were cancelled and the university implemented a hiring freeze in anticipation of sharply reduced revenues.

In summer 2020, the university announced that about 90% of it courses would be offered remotely, and that limited on-site residential options and campus services would be offered to incoming students, with interactions governed by strict masking, testing and social distancing protocols. Throughout much of this time period, as well as the months that followed, OSU's decisions were informed by its innovative TRACE testing program, which collected data from a randomly selected sample of campus and community members to help determine positivity rates in Corvallis initially, and later Bend, Newport and other communities across Oregon.

OSU continued to lean heavily on remote work and learning for the remainder of the 2020-21 academic year. In the meantime, multiple COVID-19 vaccines became available in the early months of 2021, with wider access emerging in the spring of that year. With limited exemptions, OSU required all students and employees to be vaccinated prior to September 15, 2021, in support of a plan to increase on-site teaching and research activities that would be guided by Oregon Health Authority protocols and county risk assessments. Beginning that fall, hybrid classes became common, with some students attending in person and others - including those needing to quarantine after having tested positive - participating via Zoom. On December 28, 2021, the university announced that all non-exempt students and employees would also be required to receive COVID-19 vaccine boosters by February 15, 2022.

Throughout the first half of 2022, on-site activities increased in number and, at the end of the 2021-22 academic year, OSU hosted an in-person commencement for the first time in three years. Though voluntary masking, remote work and hybrid class options remained a component of university culture, by fall 2022 activities on the OSU campus had largely come to resemble those that preceded the global pandemic.



Author: Chris Petersen

Administrative Information

More Extent Information: 636 files born digital; 0.3 cubic feet

Statement on Access: Collection is open for research.

Acquisition Note: Collection materials were transferred to SCARC from numerous donors between 2020-2023.

Related Materials:

Four group oral history interviews with OSU undergraduate students reflecting on their experience of the COVID-19 pandemic are held in the Voices of Oregon State University Oral History Collection (OH 009). An interviewing project with members of the OSU athletics community that was prompted by the pandemic has been described as the Josh Worden Interviews on Oregon State University Athletics (MSS Worden).

Reflections on the broad impact of the pandemic on community college education across the state can be found in the Oregon Higher Education Oral Histories Collection (OH 046). Finally, additional documentation of university life in 2020 and 2021 can be found in the Historical Publications of Oregon State University digital collection.

Preferred Citation: COVID-19 at Oregon State University Collection (MSS COVID), Oregon State University Special Collections and Archives Research Center, Corvallis, Oregon.

Creators

Dvorak, Anna Elizabeth
Corvallis-Benton County Public Library
Gurung, Regan A. R.
Oregon State University. Libraries
Oregon State University. Libraries. Special Collections & Archives Research Center

People, Places, and Topics

Academic libraries--Administration.
Academic libraries--Oregon.
COVID-19 (Disease)
COVID-19 Pandemic, 2020-
Epidemics--Social aspects.
Oregon State University--Administration.
Public health.
Quarantine.
Universities and colleges--Oregon--Corvallis--Administration.
University History

Forms of Material

Born digital.
electronic mail
personal narratives
Postcards.
social media
Web sites
Zines


Box and Folder Listing

Series 1: University Communications, 2020-2022

Series 1 consists in part of emails broadcast either university- or library-wide, and providing updates and guidance on operations during the COVID-19 pandemic. The university communications were usually authored by the President's Office or the Office of the Provost, with numerous messages written by Dan Larson, OSU's Vice-Provost for Student Affairs and designated Coronavirus Response Coordinator. Library operations messaging was typically authored by University Librarian Faye Chadwell or Associate University Librarian (later Dean of Libraries) Anne-Marie Deitering. Messages circulated by the Library Employee Association that highlighted the remote working environments for individual faculty or staff are also included.

The remainder of the series is comprised of compiled screenshots of the OSU Today Instagram feed, which also featured the remote working environments for employees across the university.

Extent: 16 PDF files

Digital File 1.1: University and Library Communications, March 2020
Extent: 59 pages

Digital File 1.2: University and Library Communications, April 2020
Extent: 87 pages

Digital File 1.3: University and Library Communications, May 2020
Extent: 106 pages

Digital File 1.4: University and Library Communications, June 2020
Extent: 46 pages

Digital File 1.5: University and Library Communications, July 2020
Extent: 24 pages

Digital File 1.6: University and Library Communications, August 2020
Extent: 29 pages

Digital File 1.7: University and Library Communications, September 2020
Extent: 95 pages

Digital File 1.8: University and Library Communications, October 2020
Extent: 17 pages

Digital File 1.9: University and Library Communications, November 2020
Extent: 27 pages

Digital File 1.10: University and Library Communications, December 2020
Extent: 10 pages

Digital File 1.11: University and Library Communications, January-March 2021
Extent: 43 pages

Digital File 1.12: University and Library Communications, April-June 2021
Extent: 52 pages

Digital File 1.13: University and Library Communications, July-October 2021
Extent: 53 pages

Digital File 1.14: University and Library Communications, November 2021-January 2022
Extent: 26 pages

Digital File 1.15: OSU Today Instagram releases, March-December 2020
Extent: 234 pages

Digital File 1.16: OSU Today Instagram releases, January-February 2021
Extent: 21 pages

Series 2: SCARC COVID-19 Collecting Initiative, 2020-2022
Series 2 consists of materials collected primarily by SCARC Public Services Assistant Anna Dvorak that document individual and collective reflections on university and community life during the COVID-19 pandemic. The series includes several pandemic journals kept by students and community members, particularly during spring term 2020. Also included are photographs, art works, interview transcripts, and documentation of a community art event held in early January 2021. The entire series is born digital and its contents are available in the SCARC reading room or upon patron request.
Extent: 114 JPG; 63 PDF, 23 TIF, 3 PNG, 2 MP4, 1 MOV, 1 PSB

Digital Folder 2.1: 4-H Students, 2021
Reflections on their 4-H experiences in 2020 and 2021 written by students statewide and submitted as a component of their larger 4-H Record Books. The students ranged in age from 11-18. Reflections were written by: Finnley Barnett, Daniel Carlson, Ruth Carlson, Russell Classen, Morgan Copeland, Jasmine Fairchild, Hayden Freschweiler, Jackie Gehred, Evelyn Grzemkowski, Grace Hooley, Seth Hooley, Olivia Howell, Audrie Klawuhn, Gabriella Lambert, Taylor Nichols, Cassie Roberts, Elsie Rodolph, Carly Shanklin, Sydney Smith and Micah Widner.
Extent: 21 PDF

Digital Folder 2.2: Anonymous, 2020
Three submissions authored by individuals who wished to remain anonymous. Submission 1 is a pandemic diary written by an OSU undergraduate student from April 1 to June 5, 2020, initially as a component of coursework assigned for PHL 203 and later as an outlet for personal expression. Submission 2 is an essay on Planned Parenthood written in December 2020 following the appointment of Amy Coney Barrett to the United States Supreme Court. Submission 3 is a post originally written in Canvas in April 2020 as a component of coursework assigned for PHL 203 and reflecting on the author's state of mind.
Extent: 3 PDF

Digital Folder 2.3: ANTH/FCJS 486 Students, June 2020
A collective journal authored by undergraduate students enrolled in ANTH/FCJS 486. The project used auto-ethnographic and narrative techniques to document "Foodways during the time of COVID-19." Student authors were: Langley Black, Luke Brockman, Emma Callaway, James Chan, Paris DeMers, Makenna Elias, Sandra Hunt, Yujing Jia, Kirstin Lovely, Sierra McCutchen, Ai Nishida, Gisell Santana, Kelsey Talbot and Trey Webb.
Extent: 1 PDF

Digital Folder 2.4: ANTH/FCJS 586 Students, June 2020
A collective journal authored by graduate students enrolled in ANTH/FCJS 486. The project used auto-ethnographic and narrative techniques to document "Foodways during the time of COVID-19." Student authors were: A, Mariana Ribeiro Porto Araujo, Zhuo Chen, Emily Herrera, Adam Lauderdale, Argenis Hurtado Moreno, Jena Thoma and Andie Thompson.
Extent: 1 PDF

Digital Folder 2.5: Bayles, David - Orange Pipes Project, January 2021
Documentation of a community event led by artist David Bayles that was inspired by the installation of fiber optic cable in rural Philomath, Oregon. The centerpiece of the event was a single 24-foot-long roll of art paper on which Bayles had printed 15 photographs that he had taken of fiber optic cable being laid. In the border areas of this print, participants were invited to write stories, thoughts and ideas on connection and communication in the year 2020. The event was held on January 3, 2021 at the Independent Community Center.
Extent: 23 TIF, 3 PDF, 1 MOV and 1 PSB

Digital Folder 2.6: Brownfield, Brandyn, June 2020
Weekly pandemic journal written from March 30 - June 3, 2020 as a class assignment. Brownfield was living with his parents in Clatskanie, Oregon during this time.
Extent: 1 PDF

Digital Folder 2.7: Bryant, Dakota, June 2020
Weekly pandemic journal written from March 31 - June 3, 2020 as a component of coursework assigned for PHL 203.
Extent: 1 PDF

Digital Folder 2.8: Carlson, Kip, June-July 2020
Interviews conducted by Carlson, the sports editor of the Oregon Stater alumni magazine, with OSU coaches and student athletes reflecting on the cancellation of spring sports seasons. Interviews are with Laura Berg (softball head coach), Mitch Canham (baseball head coach), Troy Claunch (baseball player), Kate Maxim (women's rowing head coach), Mariah Mazon (softball player), Zach Niedermeyer (men's rowing athlete) and Jon Reehoorn (men's golf head coach).
Extent: 7 PDF

Digital Folder 2.9: Golubchik, Inna, June 2020
Two journal entries written as a component of coursework assigned for an undergraduate Philosophy class. Golubchik was living in California during this time.
Extent: 2 PDF

Digital Folder 2.10: Green, Robert S., 2021
A daily diary written from March 16, 2020 - March 15, 2021, and set primarily in Truckee, California with occasional trips to Mill Valley, California. Entries cover many aspects of life during the pandemic, with special focus on issues affecting a restaurant business and a small law firm. Green was a 1981 graduate of OSU in Political Science.
Extent: 1 PDF

Digital Folder 2.11: Hay, Ashley, May 2020
Pandemic journal written from March 12 - April 30, 2020. Hay was a graduating senior at OSU.
Extent: 1 PDF

Digital Folder 2.12: Hunyh, Alex, June 2020
Weekly pandemic journal written from April 5 - June 7, 2020 as a component of coursework assigned for PHL 203. Hunyh was a first year student at OSU.
Extent: 1 PDF

Digital Folder 2.13: Johnson, Dawn, November 2020
Reflections on sewing hospital masks for health care workers during the summer of 2020. Folder also includes a photo of a car decal reading, "I helped sew 6 million masks." Johnson was an OSU alumna.
Extent: 1 PDF; 1 JPG

Digital Folder 2.14: Lawson, Hannah, June 2020
Photograph of a gouache on paper painting of the Special Collections and Archives Research Center (SCARC) reading room. Lawson was a student assistant in SCARC and created the painting from memory.
Extent: 1 JPG

Digital Folder 2.15: McOmber, Karl, June 2020
Weekly pandemic journal written from April 5 - June 7, 2020 as a component of assigned coursework. McOmber was an undergraduate senior at OSU.
Extent: 1 PDF

Digital Folder 2.16: Moule, Jean, May 2020
Pre-print of an article authored by Moule and titled, "Nana Jean Experiences Covid-19 Infection and Consequences," Skipping Stones, July-September 2020. Moule was a professor emerita in the OSU College of Education.
Extent: 1 PDF

Digital Folder 2.17: Nyce, Trevor, June 2020
Weekly pandemic journal written during Spring term, 2020. A first year undergraduate, Nyce was living in Corvallis and Junction City, Oregon during this time.
Extent: 1 PDF

Digital Folder 2.18: Ocean 11 Student Club, April-June 2020

Submissions to weekly "Quarantine Challenges" issued to members of the Ocean 11 marine club at OSU, as led by Cynthia Leonard, academic advisor for the OSU Marine Studies Initiative. The challenges were designed to get club members out of their homes and into nature, with submissions consisting of photographs, videos or drawings documenting individuals' outings. The themes were as follows: 1. Bunches of Birds; 2. Pet Paparazzi; 3. Focus on Flora; 4. The Sky's the Limit; 5. Fun Fungi; 6. Feeding Frenzy; 7. Growing Gardens; 8. Go Wild.

Student participants included: Laurel Brinson-Larrabee, Landon Bunting, Russell Campbell, Jensen Davis, Ian Hofbeck, Nadia Leal, Delaney McGee, Hayleigh Middleton, Kelleigh Petersdorf, Seth Staten, Elizabeth Wirsching and Daisy Youmans.

Extent: 52 JPG; 9 PDF; 3 PNG; 2 MP4; 1 MOV

Digital Folder 2.19: Paresa, Dana, April 2020
Diary comic drawn during COVID-19 self isolation and reflecting on Paresa's experience of taking a Master Gardener class from OSU Extension and reading about chef Samin Nosrat, author of Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat.
Extent: 1 JPG

Digital Folder 2.20: Perry, Carla, April 2020
Photo collage of the Nye Beach neighborhood in Newport, Oregon as collected by Perry on a walk through the area taken on April 4, 2020. Images include signage posted by area businesses and neighborhood residents. Perry was a Newport resident and the mother of an OSU graduate.
Extent: 1 PDF

Digital Folder 2.21: Perry, Jackson, June 2020
Weekly pandemic journal written from March 31 - June 2, 2020 as a component of coursework assigned for PHL 203. An undergraduate Computer Science major, Perry was living with his parents, who had recently moved from California to a new community in Arizona.
Extent: 1 PDF

Digital Folder 2.22: Petersen, Chris, 2020-2021
Photographs of Corvallis and the OSU campus during the pandemic. Images include signage posted by businesses and residents; scenes of stockpiling food, social distancing, and remote working and learning; masks placed on iconic outdoor art pieces; TRACE testing, food delivery robots, and desolation on the OSU campus. Images also include a sculpted flower arrangement expressing support for the Black Lives Matter movement, and scenes of smoky skies taken during the 2020 Labor Day fires. Petersen was a Corvallis resident and faculty member in the Special Collections and Archives Research Center.
Extent: 59 JPG

Digital Folder 2.23: Quiring, Thomas, June 2020
Weekly pandemic diary written during Spring term, 2020. Quiring was a first year student at OSU.
Extent: 1 PDF

Digital Folder 2.24: Seltmann, Haven, June 2020
Weekly pandemic journal written as a component of coursework assigned for an undergraduate Philosophy class.
Extent: 1 PDF

Digital Folder 2.25: Shafer, Karen, March 2022
Daily diary kept from March 2, 2020 to March 31, 2022. Shafer was an emeritus professor from Southern Oregon University living in Lincoln City, Oregon.
Extent: 1 PDF

Digital Folder 2.26: Signs, Shelly, June 2020
A compilation of kudos messages that highlighted good work done by staff in the OSU University Relations and Marketing division, as circulated during spring 2020. These messages were originally shared during meetings of the division's directors, and later were emailed division-wide. Signs was director of University Events.
Extent: 1 PDF

Digital Folder 2.27: Trinidad, David, June 2020
Weekly pandemic journal written as a component of coursework assigned for an undergraduate Philosophy class.
Extent: 1 PDF

Series 3: OSU Libraries and Press COVID-19 Outreach, 2020-2021

Series 3 documents various forms of outreach extended by the OSU Libraries and Press during the COVID-19 pandemic. Included are digital surrogates of COVID-related signage that was posted throughout the Valley Library, as well as a virtual tour of library spaces that was created to guide use of the building during the period of limited reopening in Fall 2020.

The series also holds submissions to two initiatives centering on postcards. The Postcards to Campus project offered participants an opportunity to submit either physical or digital postcards in the spirit of artistic expression and maintaining a connection to the OSU campus during the period of remote learning. The Postcards to Public Health Workers served as a mechanism for participants to express gratitude to public health employees statewide.

Extent: 262 paper postcards, 31 JPG, 19 PNG, 12 PDF

Digital Folder 3.1: Library Signage, 2020-2021
Extent: 18 JPG, 12 PDF, 3 PNG

Digital Folder 3.2: Postcards to Campus, 2021
Digital postcards
Extent: 16 PNG, 13 JPG

Folder 1.1: Postcards to Campus, 2021
Paper postcards
Extent: 62 items

Folder 1.2: Postcards to Public Health Workers [1 of 2], 2021
Paper postcards
Extent: 120 items

Folder 1.3: Postcards to Public Health Workers [2 of 2], 2021
Paper postcards
Extent: 80 items

Series 4: The Bright Side Project, 2022
Led by OSU faculty member and social psychologist Regan Gurung, The Bright Side Project sought to document the ways in which individuals coped with the pandemic. Series 4 consists of participant-submitted reflections on resilience during this period, and includes narrative essays, poems and photographic illustrations. The entire series is born digital and its contents are available in the SCARC reading room or upon patron request.
Extent: 12 PDF files

Digital File 4.1: Quarantine Greens, by Olivia Eiler, 2022
poem
Digital File 4.2: "What the Pandemic Taught Me: More Communication and Flexibility Goes a Long Way with Students," by John Hansen, 2022
Digital File 4.3: "NOW (Now, nOw, noW, Now?!)," by Michael Maser, March 2022
Digital File 4.4: "COPIUM: The Rare Pepe Style Frog Meme That Kept People Grounded During the Pandemic," by Mathew Peterkort, 2022
Digital File 4.5: "Creature Comforts," by Syd Pruitt, 2022
Digital File 4.6: The Pivot: Walking on Eggshells, by Syd Pruitt, 2022
poem
Digital File 4.7: To the dreams in paradise, by Pavel Sengupta, 2022
poem
Digital File 4.8: "Going Remote," by Catalina Slangan, March 31, 2022
Digital File 4.9: "The Pivot: An Unexpected Retirement from Higher Education," by Nancy L. Wayne, 2022
Digital File 4.10: "Getting Through the Pandemic," by Marvin Masao Yonamine, 2022
Digital File 4.11: "Going Remote," by Marvin Masao Yonamine, 2022
Digital File 4.12: "The Pandemic," by Marvin Masao Yonamine, 2022
Series 5: The Benton County Quaranzine, 2020

The Benton County Quaranzine was compiled by the staff of the Corvallis-Benton County Public Library and consists of submissions from area residents collected from June 1 to November 2, 2020, focusing on life during the pandemic and the era's political unrest. The resulting print publication includes drawings, cartoons, collages, photographs and other artistic renderings, as well as essays and poems.

Contributors to the project were: Quinn Andreas, Ellen Beier, Jack Compere, Molly Curry, Tru Denton, Sarah Finkle, David Grube, Mari Beth Hackett, Forrest Johnson, Charlie Kelso, Colleen Kitchen, Erin MacAdams, Nancy Chestnut Matsumoto, Orion Olson, John Otto, Vic Russell, Linda Varsell Smith, Karen Stephenson, Kim Thackray, Marvel Vigil and Marion J. Whitney.

Folder 1.4: The Benton County Quaranzine, 2020
Extent: 1 print zine; 47 pages

Series 6: Archive-It Collection: "COVID-19 at OSU and in Corvallis, Oregon ", 2020-2023

From April 2020 to March 2023, SCARC staff used the Archive-It web archiving tool to collect websites of interest as they evolved throughout the pandemic. This collection of preserved websites is available through the "Covid-19 at Oregon State University and in Corvallis, Oregon" Archive-It landing page, which is a product of the Internet Archive.

The most frequently crawled websites were OSU's official Covid-19 Information page (387 crawls) and the OSU TRACE voluntary testing program website (279 crawls).

Other collected websites included OSU Today; the OSU Libraries Virtual Reading Room; the OSU Libraries Postcards to Campus project; and "Nurturing Connection(s) amidst Covid-19 Closures," an ArcGIS StoryMaps project created by OSU graduate student Robin Fifita. The collection also includes crawls of a webpage outlining safety precautions for patrons of the Corvallis Farmers' Market; a website titled "Small Farms, Local Food and Covid-19" produced by the OSU College of Agricultural Sciences; and The Bright Side Project homepage.

Likewise included are crawls of five YouTube videos released by Oregon State University: "A quick word from the Oregon State University faculty" (March 28, 2020); "Social Support in a Time of Physical Distancing" (April 1, 2020); "We're Here for You" (April 8, 2020); "A Message from Academic Advisors at Oregon State" (April 15, 2020); and "Thanks to Our Staff" (April 28, 2020).


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