Archives for: June 2008
06/30/08
[See Program Description for a brief summary of the topic covered and for the names and titles of the speakers, moderator and program chair.]
The future can’t be that bad with a session that opens with quotes from Tom Russell and Buffalo Springfield:
“You ain’t got no future Hank, I believe your future’s all used up.” (Tom Russell, Borderland)
“There’s something happening here, what it is ain’t exactly clear.” (Buffalo Springfield)
Thus was the discussion on the future of the catalog and cataloging introduced by the moderator, Robert Wolven, Associate University Librarian for Bibliographic Services and Collection Development, Columbia University. The point is knowing less about catalogs and cataloging and understanding more about what the future might be. “To create the future,” he says, “we have to have some ideas about it.” “Nobody’s right if everybody’s wrong.”
Now, this 4-hr, 5-big-name-speaker program with a snappy moderator attracted an audience that overflowed into the aisles (est. 400+) which in turn attracted some utility men who had to interrupt the program to remind them librarians about building safety codes. I must confess, I don’t know how to organize my notes so what follows might be the longest blog post you’ll ever read or won’t read.
“Library Catalogs at the Network Level” - Roy Tennant, Senior Program Officer, RLG Programs, OCLC.
“This is me,” says Roy Tennant, pointing to a picture of him and then pointing to a picture of Sylvester Stallone, says “and this is Rambo.” He had to first point out the difference in case there was any undue expectations generated by Tim Spalding’s comment on Thingology about not “attacking OCLC as much as I otherwise might. Roy could disarm Rambo.”
Sorry, there was no fistfight or fireworks to report here. Instead, Tennant, as did all the other panel speakers, gave us mental exercises in looking to the past and looking to the future.
Then: users built workflows around libraries.
Now: libraries must build services around user workflows.
The Way It Was: Card distribution service by LC – bib records to local card catalog where catalogers (represented in Superman image) added value.
The Way It Became: Bib Utility – OCLC – bib records to local catalog – catalogers are still adding value to the local systems
The way it can be: Union catalog locally tailored and skinned – WorldCat – catalogers add bib records and value to this aggregated store.
And then he took us to where this user-centric workflows will be built: the network ecology, where two processes, concentration and diffusion, work together to help us mine data better and bring services to where people are found.
Concentration – scale matters – webscale presence – mobilize data
Diffusion – spread matters – syndication – disclosure of links
“eXtensible Cataloging: Opportunities Presented by the eXtensible Catalog (XC) Project” - Jennifer Bowen, Head of Cataloging, River Campus Libraries, University of Rochester
Jennifer Bowen first shared her journey from starting as a specialist cataloger (music) to cataloging manager to RDA developer and now software development project leader with the eXtensible Catalog (XC) Project. Bowen’s slides are available online so I will not repeat it here. Pay attention to the diagram of the XC network in which metadata is taken out from closed environments and into the web. Metadata moves all over the place from diverse data sources to diverse interfaces but the comings and goings are controlled by a metadata hub. The XC is a set of tools that can empower catalogers and libraries to design local applications tailored to their needs but which can be shared at the network level.
After Bowen’s presentation, Wolven assumed his moderator role and asked the remaining speakers what can they say about the topics covered so far. This started a discussion about open data and what do we mean by “local.”
[Note: DH=Diane Hillmann, JB=Jennifer Bowen, MY=Martha Yee, RT=Roy Tennant, RW=Robert Wolven, TS=Tim Spalding.]
DH: data has be allowed to move freely
RT: OCLC a collective asset built in decades and by thousands of people – how to make that into the best advantage for member libraries.
MY: when mining data in OCLC you’re not mining just data – the intellectual aspect of data in OCLC came from catalogers.
RW: not all people want data to move around freely – what it means for data to move around freely.
RW: Notes on “local” – when users search, they find “about” an item, not the item itself. How much do I need to do to have my hands on what I’m trying to find? Movable framework.
RT: last mile – key issue – where the flow breaks down – what people go through to get something – how to get your hands on something – concentric circles – what’s in their region – different ways of presenting their options – Amazon option as well as ILL option – what’s the most effective way from the user’s perspective.
JB: need a specific facet – the “I only need what I want now” facet.
RW: still on “local user” – no local user – everybody’s on the web – designing for the local user.
JB: local user may not be the right word – particular discipline maybe – niches of information – e.g. opera
DH: local in a funky way – small historical societies – how about those who moved out of the local geographic location – who would be interested in the photographs and who can say something about them? Being able to focus people’s attention on specific niches of information – local in the sense of interest in the resources that you have – people who have interest in a niche of info can be all over the place.
TS: centralization has squashed localization - what the local cataloger can put to the catalog record that won’t hurt everybody else.
RW: product placement – the idea of institutional aggregation – is it a sensible way to aggregate data – is there something between the network and the local catalog.
RT: local catalog – inventory mgmt – where it breaks down is where we conflate inventory mgmt with access – institutional aggregation doesn’t provide all that’s available – can’t stop at the boundaries of an institution.
DH: piece of commonality that we are trying to handle and that we are trying to pass on to the user – most are in the wings – haven’t integrated a lot of stuff in our discovery systems yet – underestimated the problem of access to the diversity of resources – where is the access being managed from?
MY: elephant in the room – every library or museum has a backlog – not bec. catalogers are slow but bec. admin is acquiring more than can be processed – tying acquisition with processing resources. [applause]
DH: true, if you haven’t started changing your processing workflows – can’t all be done by humans – integrate machine processing – changing processing to deal with backlog.
RW: What’s in the World – found it on Google or Internet Archive – not in an institutional catalog or repository.
“What I Have Found Out from an Attempt to Build an RDF Model of FRBRized Cataloging Rules” - Martha Yee, Cataloging Supervisor, UCLA Film & Television Archive.
Starts by saying she is dead wood as the younger generation calls them. But what she wants to do is scale up what's good about the intellectual work of catalogers within the structures of the semantic web. Acknowledges that much of what catalogers currently do is at the clerical level.
Yee's presentation is organized into definitions (RDF; XML; RDFS; OWL; SKOS), the vision (instead of records, URIs for entities.), and the experiment (see her site). Yee's presentation is also available on her site.
Wolven to panel members: Any reaction to Martha's presentation?
DH: praise to MY for delving into this stuff. Diane’s problem: MY’s issues are strawmen issues. Are we going to do things as transcribed or as linked? Both. It’s a transition – jump into the pool. Who says what about what – instead of thinking in terms of records.
JB: credit to MY. Address one thing: distinction bet. granularity and complexity. What we need is interoperable granularity – granularity is not a problem, the problem is the confusion about what is granular from the user’s point of view.
The Future of Cataloging (as seen from LT) - Tim Spalding, Creator of LibraryThing
What is LT? (450K registered users, 25 million books...I couldn't copy as fast, I believe they will soon post their presentations on the ALA Wiki - but check LibraryThing for yourself )
The ladder of use (from personal cataloging comes social networking comes social cataloging which could either be implicit or explicit). Gives several examples of metadata creation in LT (novel by TS wife – Lisa Carey – LC record – cataloging not by someone who knew the book as compared to the LT record, Huckleberry Finn – how are the editions combined – by regular users – combining works everyday. Tag: e.g. cooking, cookery. Paranormal romance. Tagmash: france,wwii – some of the power of hierarchy.
Declaration: the tag war is over. Time to come out of the jungle…Finding things, not asserting ontological reality. The end of intellectual structures.
The physical basis of classification (A book has 3-6 subjects. Subjects are equally true. Subjects never change. Only librarians get to add subjects. There is only one answer. Someone wins. You don’t get a say in how books are classified.)
Cataloging can’t be done in underpants. Wookieguy72 can’t help you. But most librarians can’t help you, each other, themselves.
2 Futures
- the world ends – you are paid less, the programmers still get paid.
- you move up the stack – an IT-industry analogy – demand increasing – you move higher, get paid more.
Concluding tangent: a new shelf order
- replaces Dewey (free, modern, humble). Decided socially. Level by level. Tested against the world. Assignment is distributed. I write the code. You be Jimmy Wales.
“A Has-been Cataloger Looks at What Cataloging Will Be” - Diane Hillman, Director of Metadata Initiatives, Information Institute of Syracuse
[Copied from Diane's slides which should be available on the ALA wiki soon.]
Converging Trends
- more catalogers work at the support staff level than as professional librarians
- more cataloging records are selected by machines
- more catalog records are being captured from publisher data or other sources
- more updating of catalog records is done via batch processes
- libraries continue to de-emphasize processing of secondary research products in favor of unique primary materials.
What are our choices?
- behind door #1 – the extinction model
- behind door #2 - the retooling model
How It’s Done
- extinction
o keep cranking about how nobody appreciates us
o assert over and over that we’re already doing everything right – why should we change
o adopt a “chicken little” approach to envisioning the future
- retooling
o considers what catalogers already do
o look for support
o find a new job
[Image of Diane Hillmann's New York license plate - METADATA]
What catalogers do
-operate within the boundaries of detaileD standards
- items described one-at-a-time
- items intended to fit carefully within a specific application – the catalog
- ignore the rest of the world of information
What Metadata Librarians Do
- think about descriPtive data without prEconceptions around descriptive level, granulaRITY or descriptive vocabs
- consider the entirety of the discovery and access issues around a set or collection of materials
- consider users and uses beyond an individual service when making design decisions – not necessarily predetermined
- leap tall buildings in a single bound
The New Metadata Librarian
- aware of changing user needs
- understand the evolving info environment
- works collaboratively with technical staff
- familiar with all metadata formats and encoding metadata
- seeks out tall buildings – otherwise jumping skills will atrophy
The cataloger skill set
-AACR2, LC, ETC.
The metadata librarian skill set
- views data as collections, sets, streams
- approaches the task as designing data to “play well with others” – no matter
Characteristics of our new world
- no more ILS
- bib utilities are unlikely to be the central node for all data
- creation of metadata will become far more decentralized
- nobody knows how this will all shake out
- but: metadata librarians will be critical in forging solutions
More: Disintegrated Library Systems, Role of Bibliographic Utilities, New Models of Creation, New Models of Distribution, More on Open Data
Panel Reaction to DH's Presentation
RT: [to DH] so glad to hear your call to TS to give away his LT tags and metadata
TS: some paid; some free
MY: back in the 50s. free TV bec. of ads – things that are free are not really free.
JB: to TS and to DH – LT basically user-generated metadata – dealing with odd-ball things – with OAI-PMH – you know exactly where the metadata is coming from – not the end of the free world – we need to start thinking in a new context – if you know where it’s coming from then you can evaluate it.
TS: frbrized but binary model can’t handle everything acc to frbr model
DH: recognizing and characterizing point of view;
RW: point of view and identity – multiple identities
MY: people out there who know more than we do who can help in differentiating edtiiton from manifestation
RW: Kelly Freas – looked up in LT and Wikipedia – specific tag – Kelly Freas-related tag. Also in WC. The world is not as monolithic as we think.
TS: open data; what scares him about RDF – overengineered solutions. Importance of opening up data to the availability of programmers out there.
DH: semantic religionists
RW: a role or a niche environment – where catalogers fit into this
DH: is that a long-tail question – not spending our time on secondary products – more on primary sources
MY: economic aspects – good metadata is never going to be free – paying for the common good – not likely to be paid by a corporate – for profit.
TS: covers – becoming a non-economic good – publishers have an economic interest in it.
DH: different ways of paying for things – you don’t get paid directly for it. Exchange of values
RW: how we place value; inverse relationships bet cost and use. User-generated metadata brings cost and value together.
MY: archives community – serving the elite – important elites. Implications for democratic based funding – how to measure benefits.
DH: making decisions on incomplete info
Questions from Audience and Answers from Panelists
[Ok, I'll stop the stream here. I promise, I'll get this post summarized and organized soon. In the meantime, the rawness might serve those who want a post on this session now.]
06/29/08
Getting Ready for RDA and FRBR: What You Need to Know
Barbara Tillett, Chief of the Cataloging Policy and Support Office, Library of Congress
Glenn Patton, Director of WorldCat Quality Management OCLC
Barbara Bushman, National Library of Medicine, PCC Liaison to RDA Implementation Task Force
Slides will be on conference wiki by early next week in this section: http://presentations.ala.org/index.php?title=Saturday%2C_June_28#Saturday_4pm_Start_Time
Synopsis: There were three portions to this presentation. Barbara Tillett gave background on the Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records (FRBR) model and how the draft of Resource Description and Access (RDA) puts this into practice. Glenn Patton introduced the Functional Requirements for Authority Data (FRAD) model and how it relates to current cataloging practice. Barbara Bushman, filling in for Shawne D. Miksa, gave some background to the RDA Implementation Task Force.
Barbara Tillett, Chief of the Cataloging Policy and Support Office, Library of Congress
Barbara Tillett is the Chief of the Cataloging Policy and Support Office at the Library of Congress. Although there are many different influences to RDA, from the Paris Principles to born-digital objects, she focused on the influence of FRBR on RDA. She also mentioned she is giving a much more in-depth presentation on RDA on Sunday. RDA will debut in 2009. The point of this presentation was to shed light on what is to come and assuage some fears, but because any and all changes are so far ahead, there can be no real talk on implementation yet.
Although FRBR was published in 1998, it is not a new set of rules for bibliographic standards. Instead, it is a new perspective for what libraries, catalogers and users have always been doing. FRBR is just a new perspective for this. FRBR is not a data model, but a conceptual model. Tillett went into the explanation of work, expression, manifestation and item, the group one entities. She went on to discuss the group two and three entities and how they translate into RDA.
FRBR views this universe differently, but everything was contained before. Tillett showed a record from 1841 in the British museum that has all this information in (item, manifestation, and expression). The point of FRBR is to make these concepts clear, not to bring in new concepts. Before, these were concepts that we learned through experience and apprenticeship. RDA should make these concepts explicit.
Joint Steering Committee for Development of RDA
http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/jsc/rda.html
For more on FRBR, see What is FRBR? A Conceptual Model for the Bibliographic Universe (2004) by Barbara Tillett, available as a download from LC here. 8 pages. http://www.loc.gov/cds/downloads/FRBR.PDF
Glenn Patton, Director of WorldCat Quality Management, OCLC
Glenn Patton introduced Functional Requirements for Authority Data (FRAD). Mainly, this is applying the underlying theories in FRBR to authority data. There are two objectives of this working group, namely, to gain a clear understanding of how authority data functions correctly, and to clarify the underlying concepts and improve the use of authority data in the future. Patton talked about the uses of the authority file by the catalogers and the users and brought up the model to show us what the group has come up with (see pages 4 and 7 of the report for the figures).
Patton stressed that the group was not introducing new concepts, but was interested in finding a new way to describe what the authority file is already being used for. Final draft of report is almost ready for approval. Very pleased that this is being considered in RDA.
Working Group on Functional Requirements and Numbering of Authority Records (FRANAR)
http://www.ifla.org/VII/d4/wg-franar.htm
Functional Requirements for Authority Data: a Conceptual Model
http://www.ifla.org/VII/d4/FRANAR-ConceptualModel-2ndReview.pdf
Barbara Bushman, National Library of Medicine, PCC Liaison to RDA Implementation Task Force [on behalf of
Shawne D. Miksa, Chair, RDA Implementation Committee (on the schedule but couldn’t attend)]
Barbara Bushman discussed the nature and purpose of the RDA task force. The group is made up of a balanced group of players, including smaller stakes players. The main focus should be on preparing for RDA, not on implementation of RDA.
There has been a statement written by the Library of Congress, the National Library of Medicine, and the National Agricultural Library stating that they will not implement RDA before the end of 2009.
RDA Implementation Task Force
http://www.ala.org/ala/alctscontent/CCS/groups/rda.cfm
Joint Statement of the Library of Congress, the National Library of Medicine, and the National Agricultural Library on Resource Description and Access (May 1, 2008)
http://www.loc.gov/bibliographic-future/news/RDA_Letter_050108.pdf
06/28/08
This session contained a number of important nuggets of information that catalogers & managers will want to know:
- The release date of the final full draft of RDA is now October 2008 (not August).
- There will be 3 months for comments on this full draft, but comments will be limited to internal consistency problems and any new content (eg. the appendices).
- RDA will be first published only as an online product (no print version for now).
- The expected release date of the online RDA is March 2009.
- LC, in collaboration with a cross-section of US libraries, OCLC, and ILS vendors, will test RDA for 6 months after release in March.
- Therefore, the expected date of implementation for RDA is now early 2010.
06/07/08
Below is a list of digital library-friendly sessions for Annual 2008. Planning to attend a session or already reporting on a session? Think about blogging it here! If you would like to blog any of the sessions, please contact Kristin Martin at kmarti@email.unc.edu with your name, e-mail address, and preferred session. Fuller descriptions, when available, are listed below for sessions without fuller descriptions elsewhere on the Web. See a section not on here that you think would be of interest? Suggest it!
FRBR Interest Group
Friday, June 27: 10:30 AM - 12:00 PM; Anaheim Convention Center, Room: 203 B American
ALCTS
Electronic Resources Management Interest Group
Friday, June 27: 6:30 PM - 8:00 PM; Anaheim Convention Center in 203 A
LITA/ALCTS
Cataloging and Classification Research Discussion Group
Saturday, June 28: 10:30 AM - 12:00 PM; Doubletree/Anaheim Convention Center in Tuscany C
ALCTS/CCS
Electronic Resources Interest Group
Saturday June 28: 10:30 AM - 12:00 PM; Disneyland Hotel in Adventure Room
ALCTS (Description below)
RDA Update Forum
Saturday, June 28: 10:30 AM - 12:00 PM; Anaheim Marriott in Salon E
ALCTS/CCS
Blogger: Lisa Robinson
Catalog Management Discussion Group
Saturday, June 28: 1:30 PM - 3:30 PM; Hyatt Regency Orange County in Grand B
ALCTS/CCS
Blogger: Mary Aycock
Cataloging Norm Discussion Group
Saturday, June 28: 1:30 PM - 3:30 PM; Hilton Anaheim in Malibu
ALCTS/CCS (Description below)
Metadata Mashup: Creating and Publishing Application Profiles
Saturday, June 28: 1:30 pm - 3:30 pm; Anaheim Convention Center in 204 B
ALCTS
Blogger: Sai Deng
There's No Catalog Like No Catalog: The Ultimate Debate on the future of the Library Catalog
Saturday, June 28: 1:30 pm - 3:30 pm; Hyatt Regency Orange County in Grand A
LITA
MARC Formats Interest Group
Saturday, June 28: 1:30 PM - 3:30 PM: Doubletree/Anaheim Convention Center in Tuscany F
LITA/ALCTS
Getting Ready for RDA and FRBR: What You Need to Know
Saturday, June 28: 4:00 pm - 5:30 pm; Anaheim Convention Center in 204 B
ALCTS CCS
Blogger: Amy McNeely
Creating the Future of the Catalog and Cataloging
Sunday, June 29: 8:00 am - 12:00 pm; Anaheim Convention Center in 204 B
ALCTS CCS
Blogger: Glenda B. Claborne
Networked Resources and Metadata Interest Group
Sunday, June 29: 8:00 AM - 10:00 AM; Disneyland Hotel in No. Exhibit Hall Mtg. Rm. B
ALCTS
Blogger: Kristin Martin
You Know FRBR But Have You Ever Met FRAD?
Sunday, June 29: 1:30 pm - 5:30 pm; Anaheim Convention Center in 210 A-C
LITA
Blogger: Amy McNeely
Heads of Cataloging Discussion Group
Monday, June 30: 8:00 AM - 10:00 AM; Anaheim Convention Center in 207 D
ALCTS CCS
Emerging Technology Interest Group
Monday, June 30: 10:30 AM - 12:00 PM; Anaheim Convention Center in 207 D
LITA
Next Generation Catalog Interest Group
Monday June 30: 10:30 AM - 12:00 PM; Anaheim Convention Center in 213 C
LITA
Continuing Resources Cataloging Committee Annual Update Forum
Monday June 30: 1:30 PM - 3:30 PM; Anaheim Convention Center in 304 A/B
ALCTS CRS
Institutional Repositories: New Roles for Acquisitions
Monday June 30: 1:30 PM - 3:30 PM; Hyatt Regency Orange County in Grand A
ALCTS AS
Map Cataloging/GIS Metadata Cross Walk
Monday, June 30: 1:30 pm - 3:30 pm
ALA MAGERT
Collaborative Digital Initiatives: Show and Tell and Lessons Learned
Monday, June 30: 1:30 PM - 5:30 PM; Hyatt Regency Orange County in Grand B-D
LITA/ALCTS PARS
Descriptions:
Electronic Resources Management Interest Group
ERMing for a Consortium: Are We There Yet?
Are there successful Electronic Resources Management systems (ERMs) implementation models for consortia? What are vendors doing to improve their systems to be deployed at the consortium level? What works? What doesn'twork? What needs to be done for libraries to explore this option to integrate and implement an ERM at the consortium level? What is the needed functionality? The program provides three perspectives on the topic: the vendor, the consortium, and the librarian.
Speakers:
Jeff Aipperspach, Product Manager, Serials Solutions
Ted Fons, Director of Customer Services, Innovative Interfaces Inc.
Rick Burke, Executive Director, Statewide California Electronic Library
Consortium
Tommy Keswick, Membership Services Coordinator, Statewide California
Electronic Library Consortium
Angela Riggio, Head of Digital Collection Management, Digital Collections
Services, UCLA
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Cataloging Norms Discussion Group
The meeting will begin with Jina Choi Wakimoto?s (Faculty Director, Cataloging and Metadata Services Dept. University of Colorado at Boulder) "Scope of the Library Catalog in Time of Transition."
There has been a flurry of healthy discussions and debates about the future
of cataloging and the catalog, from FRBR and RDA on cataloging rules (focus on content) to next-generation discovery interfaces on the catalog (focus on carrier). A segment that is not receiving as much attention in the midst is the scope of the library catalog. Library catalog can be viewed as the Web in the local context. This presentation offers an opinion on the scope of the catalog in a research library, the role of the catalogers in this time of transition and some practical approaches catalogers can take to reposition the catalog.
Next, Elaine L. Westbrooks (Head of Metadata Services, Cornell University Libraries) will present "Access, Fear, and Change: Bringing Catalogers along in the Non-MARC Metadata Arena."
According to On the Record: Report of The Library of Congress Working Group on the Future of Bibliographic Control, the future of cataloging will be shaped by the way in which we redefine bibliographic control and the bibliographic universe. Redefining these critical concepts would require library administrators and catalogers to abandon the prevailing system of cataloging. For administrators, the use of fear to instigate change (while ignoring the shortcomings of MARC encoding and the poorly constructed integrated library system) within technical services has been a widely implemented yet largely ineffective- hence a paradigm shift away from fear to use of positive incentives for change is necessary. For the cataloger, the shift from perfecting the MARC record has taken place in many institutions however, the sense of accomplishment that could be gained from creating access and facilitating discovery require a paradigm shift that would highlight the connection between the cataloger and the end-user. The purpose of this talk is to discuss methods by which this paradigm shift can be cultivated within research libraries to begin thinking about a new
system of cataloging which can be less resource intensive and one that focuses on the user.
The final presentation will be "A California Adventure: WorldCat Local and Next-Generation Cataloging," presented by John Riemer (Head, UCLA Library Cataloging & Metadata Center) and Linda Barnhart (Head, Metadata Services Department, UCSD Libraries).
WorldCat Local implementation could bring major technological and sociological changes to cataloging work. The University of California libraries released their union catalog on the WorldCat Local platform on May 27, 2008. John and Linda will present some of the key lessons learned from the implementation process as well as their thoughts about how this new product moves the profession toward next-generation cataloging.
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