270 likes | 439 Views
Cataloguing formats. Objectives Review ISBD Introduce levels of cataloguing Introduce cataloguing agencies and roles Introduce MARC format for sharing information. CATALOGUE. List of materials in a collection with the items representing the entries arranged systematically
E N D
Cataloguing formats Objectives • Review ISBD • Introduce levels of cataloguing • Introduce cataloguing agencies and roles • Introduce MARC format for sharing information
CATALOGUE • List of materials in a collection with the items representing the entries arranged systematically • Surrogates which represent reference information for the complete items being described • Controlled by metainformation such as authority files, subject heading lists, classification codes and MARC tags
FRAMEWORK FOR DESCRIPTION • A general framework has been developed jointly by IFLA & JSCR of AACR &International MARC program resulting in: ISBD(M) 1974 Monographs; rev 1987; 2002 ISBD(CR) 2002 Continuing resources (formerly S: serials 1974 rev 1988) ISBD(G) 1977 Annotated text; rev 1992 ISBD(CM) 1977 Cartographic materials; rev 1987 ISBD(NBM) 1977 Non-book materials; rev 1987 ISBD(PM) 1980 Printed Music; rev 1991 ISBD(A) 1980 Antiquarian; rev 1991 ISBD(ER) 1997 Electronic Resources (formerly CF: computer files 1990)
More than description There is more to description than identifying data elements and separating them by punctuation delimiters. • Collocation • Authorship • Individuals • Corporates • Place and jurisdiction • Form headings • Filing • Main entry • References All have been issues since before IT; how many remain important with IT, now that there is software support?
CATALOGUING LEVELS • Component or Analytical • Information entity that is part of a larger work • Monographic • A self-contained information entity • Collection • At least 2 individually titled entities. The number of constituent parts is predetermined and finite. • Serial (continuing resource) • An entity issued in successive parts, intended to be continued indefinitely, usually having numerical or chronological designation.
Component definitions • Component part • A part of a publication (a chapter of a book, an article in a serial, a band on a sound recording etc.) that for purposes of bibliographic identification or access is dependent upon the identification of the publication in which it is contained. • Host item • The publication (book, serial, sound recording, etc.) in which a component part is contained. • Linking element • A formal element of description relating the description of the component part to the identification of the host item. • Multi-part component • A component part consisting of two or more sub-components (e.g. a multipart article in a serial). • Sub-component • Part of a multi-part component.
Elements of component description • Description of the component itself • Linking element • Host identification • Location in host
Description areas of component As per ISBD(G) except for publication/distribution • Title and statement of responsibility area • Edition area • Material (or type of publication) specific area • Publication, distribution, etc. area – (excluded because they are in the host item) • Physical description area • Series area • Note area • Standard number (or alternative) and terms of availability area
Component item Visiting [Sound recording] / [composed by Will Ackerman ; Will Ackerman, guitar ; Chuck Greenberg, lyricon ; Michael Manning, bass]. In: An evening with Windham Hill live. – [Stanford, Calif.] : Windham Hill Records, c1983. – Windham Hill Records: WH-01026. – Side 2, band 2.
CATALOGUING AGENCIES • National agencies such as LC, BL, NLA • Utilities OCLC RLG Libraries Australia (was Kinetica, was ABN) UNILINC (was CLANN now gone)
Libraries Australia • Australian MARC Record Service, 1974 • Australian Card Service; BIBDATA proposal 1976 • Development of consortia, Technilib, CLANN, CAVAL • Draft Proposal, National Library of Australia, 1981 • WLN implementation (Washington Library Network) • Australian Bibliographic Network, November 1981 • Kinetica (not World One) 1999 • Libraries Australia 2006
Cataloguing management • Departmental workflows • Precataloguing • Cataloguing • Postcataloguing • Cat.Maintenance • Interlibrary cooperation • Costs of copy cataloguing, hit rates • Standards vs control over own records • Governance vs management • Linked systems, OSI • Staffing
Cataloguing workflow • How order records are obtained or created • The impact of the Kinetica minimum level record • Obtaining copy records through Kinetica gateways services versus local arrangements • The best time to add holdings to Kinetica • Batch loading impacts on local system requirements • Batch loading impacts on the timeliness of the Kinetica database.
NATIONAL BIBLIOGRAPHIC DATABASE • 1100+ Australian libraries contributing • Proportions of collections (Choate survey, 1999) • Bibliographic file ~13,000,000+ Books ~10,000,000 Serials ~1,000,000 Sound recordings ~300,000 • Holdings ~40,000,000+ • Authority file ~1,500,000+ • CJK ~1,500,000 • Original Cataloguing ~ 2,000,000+
Libraries Australia includes • NBD (effectively the national bibliography and holdings) Included local cataloguing plus other sources: • LC 1968- • BNB, 1971- • NZNB 1982- • Singapore NB 1967- • Vietnam NB 1986-1995 • However now you can switch to other sources via Libraries Australia
Other union catalogues • SCIS: Schools Catalogue Information Service • ~850,000 bibliographic records for educational resources in school libraries. • extensive coverage of school learning resources. • ~8,500 schools have access. • Unilinc Webcat • CAVAL COOLCat • CSIRO
MARC • LCMARC, 1967 • MARC II, 1968 • AUSMARC, 1973 One of several national formats • UNIMARC • ISO2709 • Exchanging bibliographic information on magnetic tape • LC MARC rules!!! (MARC21) • http://lcweb.loc.gov/marc/marcdocz.html
Bibliographic Interchange format • Record label • Directory • Data
Bibliographic record division Area Tags Control information 0XX Main entry 1XX Titles, imprints, editions 2XX Physical description 3XX Series statements 4XX Notes 5XX Subject access 6XX Added entries 70X-5X Linking 76X-8X Series added entries 80X-40 Holdings, locations, alternates 841-88X Local use 9XX
MARC leader • 24 characters set aside for identification and control information such as total length of record
MARC Directory • Tag Length Relative position • 100 0035 00234
MARC control fields • Example for projected media 001 Record control number 002 Sub-record directory 008 Information codes (filed is defined to be 41 characters) Element Character position Date entered 0-5 Type of release date code 6 Date 1 7-10 Date 2 11-14 Place of production code 15-17 Intellectual level code 22 Type of producer code 28 Cataloguing source code 39
MARC data fields • 24514 #aThe vivisector / #cPatrick White^ • 300bb#a502 p. : #b ill. ; #c 20 cm.^
Post-MARC • MODS • LC’s Metadata Object Description Schema • XML-basis • to represent metadata for harvesting (OAI)
Transition • Music record (MARC) • Music record (MARCXML) • Music record (MODS)
Summary MARC • Heavily used by libraries since the 1960s • Shared cataloguing • Leads to national bibliographic databases • Many metadata elements • Not designed with Web in mind