For TEI Website
Culled from SIG/index.xml page on old website.
The function of a SIG is to provide a forum for people working in a particular area, or with a specific set of concerns, to exchange opinions and build consensus. That might lead to any number of outputs, including specific training courses or documentation, proposals for extension or modification to the Guidelines, etc. A SIG is not a TEI workgroup but could lead to one being set up, or greatly contribute to its work, by providing consultation, field-trials, outreach etc.
The TEI is a community-driven initiative: it is really up to convenors and members of the SIG to decide how best to accomplish its goals, and indeed to determine what those goals may be. The TEI Consortium offers a communications channel (via our web site and discussion lists) and a route into the technical procedure by which the Guidelines are developed and promoted (via the TEI Council), but how SIGs choose to use those facilities is really up to them. The Consortium's health depends on a well-informed and enthusiastic membership, of which SIGs are a major new manifestation.
In order to at least keep on top of what is going on, if
not actually help keep things moving, a single
SIGs may be proposed by any TEI member. To propose a SIG, the proposer should send a brief description to the SIG Coordinator, who will forward it to TEI Council for approval. The description needs to include some statement of the SIG's mission and must name a contact person responsible for the SIG. If a SIG is proposed which overlaps significantly with an existing SIG, the Council may propose that the two be merged or work together.
Each SIG must have a designated contact person, so that the editors, Council, and others concerned can ascertain whether a SIG is still active or not and what it is doing.
In general, there is no reason to limit the lifespan of a
SIG artificially, unless they become so numerous that they
pose an administrative burden. However, any SIG may be
dissolved by the TEI Board if:
SIGs operate more or less without restriction, as long as
their activities are relevant to the TEI's goals and are
not harmful to the TEI or others. However, any requests
for external funding (e.g. from foundations or public
funding bodies) must be approved by the TEI Board, to
prevent inadvertent competition with other TEI funding
efforts. The TEI provides some basic services to SIGs to
assist them in their activities:
SIGs are open to those who are not TEI members. However, anyone attending a SIG meeting that is held in conjunction with a TEI Members' Meeting is expected to be either a TEI member or an attendee of the public portion of the Members' Meeting. SIGs are free to meet at other times and places.
SIGs that wish to create documents that will eventually become TEI papers or working material should author these documents in TEI, preferably either TEI Lite (P4 XML), or a P5 authoring schema.