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A Study of Catalogers’ Perception of Cataloging Quality, Past & Present. Karen Snow Ph.D. Candidate University of North Texas Cataloging Norms Interest Group – ALA Midwinter January 16, 2010.
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A Study of Catalogers’ Perception of Cataloging Quality, Past & Present Karen Snow Ph.D. Candidate University of North Texas Cataloging Norms Interest Group – ALA Midwinter January 16, 2010
“Clearly the quality of catalogue records being added to bibliographic utilities and individual library catalogues is declining” -- J. McRee (Mac) Elrod
“As with a person who cannot define art but knows it when he sees it, I cannot completely define a good cataloguing record, but I know it when I retrieve it” -Levon Avdoyan
“Quality is not immutable but is rather a standard of excellence that reflects the values of the individuals proclaiming it” --Sarah Thomas
Charles A. Cutter (late 19th century) • Boston Athenaeum Catalog – inherited editorship in 1870 • Problems: • Inconsistent cataloging practices • Lack of trained personnel • Speed • Solutions: • Standardize cataloging practice • Push for cooperative cataloging
Library of Congress Card Distribution Program (1901) • Established under Librarian of Congress Herbert Putnam • Print extra copies of LC cards and sell them at cost plus 10% (to cover printing costs) • Lead to establishment of LC as the leader in cataloging practice and rules • LC cataloging perceived to be highest in quality
Osborn’s Crisis in Cataloging (1941) • A “crisis has been reached in cataloging history” • “Dignity of cataloging as an art” lost to obsession with rules • Distance between administrators and catalogers • Less rules, more cataloger’s judgment = better cataloging • Four dominant cataloging theories: Legalistic, Perfectionistic, Bibliographic, and Pragmatic
The Rise of Networks (1970s & 1980s) • OCLC founded in 1967 & grew quickly during the 1970s • Luquire (1976) – quality must be sacrificed if OCLC copy accepted w/o changes – quality = local needs not met? • Sheila Intner (1989) – quality difference between OCLC and RLIN is overstated • Carol C. Davis (1989) – perception of low quality in OCLC database does not stand on solid evidence
Ruth Hafter – Academic Librarians & Cataloging Networks (1986) • Rise in interest in quality control parallels greater participation in cataloging networks • Greater dependence upon cataloging networks lead to more copy cataloging • More copy cataloging less original cataloging & professional catalogers needed; more paraprofessionals hired • Deprofessionalization & marginalization of cataloging has lead to decrease in quality cataloging
Library of Congress (1990s) • Renewed efforts to tackle arrearages • Whole Book Cataloging Project – combined subject and descriptive cataloging divisions at LC • Cataloging Forum introduced in February 1990 • “Cataloging Quality is… • accurate bibliographic information that meets the users’ needs and provides appropriate access in a timely fashion”
Dimensions of Information Quality • Southern California Online Users Group (SCOUG) (1990, via Tenopir): Consistency, coverage & scope, timeliness, accuracy/error rate, accessibility/ease of use, integration, output, documentation, customer support & training, and value-to-cost ratio ("11 main components that will help a professional searcher judge quality") • Fox, Levitin, & Redman (1994): accuracy, completeness, consistency, and currentness ("the most important dimensions of data quality") • Statistics Canada's Quality Assurance Framework (2002): Relevance, accuracy, timeliness, accessibility, interpretability, and coherence ("dimensions of information quality") • Bruce & Hillmann (2004): Completeness, accuracy, provenance, conformance to expectations, logical consistency & coherence, timeliness, and accessibility ("general characteristics of metadata quality")
Online Catalogs: What Users & Librarians Want (OCLC, 2009) • Disconnect between users & librarians in regards to quality • Quality for users = more direct access to online content • Quality for librarians = less duplication of records • Users’ ideas of quality driven by their information needs & experiences using the WWW; librarians’ ideas of quality driven by work assignments
How Have Perceptions Changed? • Desired characteristics of quality not drastically different from 19th to 21st century • Difference in technology and user expectations • Challenges: • Gain a better understanding of cataloger perception of quality cataloging – how does it influence their work? • How realistic is this perception in the face of increased reliance upon copy cataloging & technology, budget cuts, and decreasing emphasis on cataloging education in library schools?
Thank you! Karen.Snow@unt.edu
Works Cited • Boston Athenaeum & Cutter, C.A. (1880). Catalogue of the Library of the Boston Athenaeum. 1807-1871. Part IV. Boston. • Bruce, T.R. & Hillmann, D.I. (2004). The continuum of metadata quality: Defining, expressing, exploiting. In D.I. Hillmann & E.L. Westbrooks (Eds.), Metadata in Practice (pp.238-256). Chicago: American Library Association. • Davis, C.C. (1989). Results of a survey on record quality in the OCLC database. Technical Services Quarterly 7(2), 43-53. • Elrod, J. M. (2008). The case for cataloguing education. The Serials Librarian 55(1/2), 1-10. • Fox, C., Levitin, A., & Redman, T. (1994). The notion of data and its quality dimensions. Information Processing & Management 30(1), pp.9-19. • Hafter, R. (1986). Academic librarians and cataloging networks: Visibility, quality control, and professional status. New York: Greenwood Press. • Hider, P. & Tan, K. (2008). Constructing record quality measures based on catalog use. Cataloging & Classification Quarterly 46(4), pp. 338-360. • Intner, S.S. (1989, Feb. 1). Much ado about nothing: OCLC and RLIN cataloging quality. Library Journal 114(2), 38-40.
Works Cited • Library of Congress Cataloging Forum. (1993). Cataloging quality is…five perspectives. Opinion Papers, No. 4, Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress. • Library of Congress Cataloging Forum.(1995). Cataloging quality: A Library of Congress Symposium. Opinion Papers, No. 6. Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress. • Luquire, W. (1976, Aug.). Selected factors affecting library staff perceptions of an innovative system: A study of ARL libraries in OCLC. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, Indiana University. • OCLC. (2009). Online catalogs: What users and librarians want: An OCLC report. Dublin, OH. • Osborn, A.D. (1941). The crisis in cataloging. In M. Carpenter & E. Svenonius (Eds.), Foundations of cataloging: A sourcebook (pp.92-103). Littleton, CO: Libraries Unlimited. • Statistics Canada. (2002). Statistics Canada’s Quality Assurance Framework. Retrieved January 10, 2010 from http://www.statcan.gc.ca/pub/12-586-x/12-586-x2002001-eng.pdf • Tenopir, C. (1990). Database quality revisited. Library Journal 115(16), pp.64-67. • Thomas, S.E. (1996, Winter). Quality in bibliographic control. Library Trends 44(3), 491-506.