Date: Tue, 05 Jul 2005 09:44:19
-0500
From: Shelby Harken <shelby_harken@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [LITA-L:2109] LITA Liaison to CC:DA report
To: Library and Information Technology Association List
<lita-l@xxxxxxx>
GROUP: LITA Liaison to CC:DA
REPORT SUBMITTED BY: Shelby E. Harken
(
shelby_harken@xxxxxxxxxxxxx)
To: LITA President and LITA members
Dates covered: Jan.-June 2005
I continued to monitor the CC:DA discussion list following ALA Midwinter
2005 and attended the CC:DA meetings at ALA Annual 2005
Much of the work since Annual has focused on rule revisions that don't
appear to have direct interest for LITA at this time, but probably will
in the future. However, I have summarized the work below with a few notes
for LITA.
CC:DA sponsored two programs at ALA, one on RDA and one on Cataloging
Cultural Objects.
LITA: The trend is multiple standard descriptive and/or content
standards. Display standards may be associated or separate. For example,
RDA is likely to refer to ISBD for its display standard. It will also
refer to some of the other descriptive/content standards. For LITA this
means a need to communicate with vendors and systems people the needs for
accommodating multiple sources and formats of data that may need to be
displayed differently in OPACs. Nearly anything that is in XML can be
crosswalked, however there is a question whether everything needs to be
crosswalked to MARC21 for an OPAC to work. Federated searching will
probably become a necessity. This would seem to be an area LITA could
address.
Notes
The work of CC:DA was strongly focused on reviewing the JSC draft of
AACR3. Four task forces had been set up to address a number of issues,
particularly those related to the draft of Part 1 of AACR3: Consistency,
FRBR, SMDs, and Early printed monographs. Reports of these committees
were submitted in February.
Report of Task Force on draft of part 1, AACR3 by Task Force on
SMDs [CC:DA/TF/SMDs/4] Feb. 1, 2005
The Task Force found that the direction Part 1 takes for SMDs is not
helpful either to general users or to catalogers. If either content or
carrier must be primary in area 5, then content should be primary. The
SMD should immediately and unambiguously define the nature of the item in
terms that the catalog user understands.
Comments on draft of part 1, AACR3 by Task Force on Consistency across
Part 1 of AACR [CC:DA/TF/Consistency/4] (Feb. 3, 2005)
The generalization of rules in chapter A1 and the inclusion of only the
specific rules in the other chapters seems to have been generally
successful. Some general comments: a) supplementary rules - it is not
always clear that the term "supplementary" is appropriate; b)
use of multiple supplementary chapters - CC:DA decided to recommend that
the scope of chapter C include all digital media, therefore catalogers
must use more than one chapter; c) captions and rule numbering; d)
references - these need to be more consistent; e) A1.0A5 prescribed
sources - seems overly restrictive; f) A1.0J treatment of reproductions -
there is lack of clarity in the rules and there needs to be a discussion
in the Introduction; g) generality of A2 and A3 - - wonderif these
should be merged in A1
FRBR terminology in the draft of Part 1 of AACR3
(5JSC/AACR3/I) [CC:DA/TF/FRBR Terminology/9] (Feb. 3,
2005)
The committee has worked for several years on this issue. This report
updates prior recommendations with respect to the draft of AACR3. A major
goal of the Strategic Plan for AACR is to incorporate terminology from
FRBR. The TF believes that while progress has been made, the goal could
be more fully realized and still has several areas of concern. The term
"resource" is discussed at length and glossary terms are
individually addressed.
Report of the ALCTS/ACRL Task Force on Cataloging Rules for Early
Printed Monographs on the rules for early printed resources in the draft
of AACR3 Part 1 [CC:DA/TF/Early Printed Monographs/5] (Feb. 1,
2005)
The TF sees a need for supplemental rules in AACR for dealing with early
printed resources. JSC agreed with this recommendation. The major
supplemental-rule issues concern transcription and technical description.
Cataloging practive fore early printed resources call for fuller and more
precise transcription and technical description than does practice for
more current materials. The reason for this is that early printed
resources usually exhibit a fair degree of variation between individual
items within a given manifestation. The report itemizes the most
important points between DCRM(B) and the draft of AACR3 to ensure they do
not conflict.
Comments:
During ALA and in subsequent discussions, it was apparent that reviewers
would benefit from knowing what is planned for the Introduction to Part 1
of AACR3. Very often people thought something not proposed for the rules
should be in the Introduction. In addition, it was proposed there be a
section with topics one needs to know about before working with Part 1,
e.g. Finite vs. Continuing Resources, Language (vernacular vs.
transliteration), reproductions, multiple versions, etc.
(Feb. 2005)
Discussion on whether AACR3 should be a display standard was conducted.
Generally, the rules should prescribe a structure in as much as art of
the impetus for writing AACR3 was to achieve better compatibility with
ISBD. A proposal was made to remove punctuation directions in the
chapters and put them in the Introduction or an appendix. There could
then be reference to ISBD as the display standard. There needs to be
clearer instructions for punctuation within
areas.
Automated transcription vs. AACR rules discussion (Feb.
2005)
Reactions ranged between the need for briefer records for electronic
records where automated transcription could save time and the needs of
specialist cataloging, e.g. rare book description and the importance of
providing necessary identification for the user.
LITA: Support for automated transcription could be a LITA
issue.
CC:DA was asked to comment on the NISO Digital Object Identifier
(DOI), Z39.84
Arrangement of Part 1. (March 2005)
A motion was made to propose and single sequence of rules organized in
chapters based on ISBD areas with proposed chapters A2 and A3 being
merged together. An outline was given. In general, the arrangement as
proposed was controversial and had little agreement among many members.
Some rules for specific communities were missing. Print vs. online
presentation was affecting opinions.
Single-record technique. (Feb. 2005)
The question was: Should AACR include instructions for using the
"single-record technique" for cataloging multiple versions?
ISBD(G) in Section 0.1.3 (Scope, Purpose, and Use) basicly says in order
to share bibliographic records, there should be separate records for each
output medium. Other agencies may describe as single or multiple.
Discussion suggested the cataloging rules should say how to describe
materials and separate rules should say how to display - separate,
merged, multiple.
LITA: How this plays out could affect how vendors choose to create
OPAC displays.
Order of notes. (March 2005)
Generally the response was to make notes in an order that meets the needs
of users. In describing a reproduction, those notes would be given before
those about the original.
LITA: OPAC displays for note order varies among vendors. This
bears watching.
Abbreviations. (March 2005)
CC:DA voted to generally agree with CILIP's document on
abbreviations.
ALA's response to the draft of Part 1. (5JSC/AACR3/1)
(Mar. 28, 2005)
CC:DA voted to support the ALA representative's summary report to JSC.
The response was based on responses from members and task force reports.
Summary of major recommendations: 1) ALA finds the new arrangement of
Part 1 to be very difficult to use, 2) ALA recommends the rules for
resources issued in successive parts and integrating resources be merged
into the general rules for description, 3) artificial restrictions on the
scope of digital media in C5-7 should be removed, 4) numbering area
should be restricted to serials only, 5) ALA considers the generalization
of rules for sources of information including chief source unscessful, 6)
ALA supports the inclusion of GMDs in AACR3, that they be repeatable and
include content and carrier terms, 7) there is a need to distinguish
between published and unpublished, 8) technical description is
unsatisfactory, 9) it is difficult to evaluate Part 1 without seeing the
rest, 10) the review process needs to be less restrictive, 11) review
periods need to be longer
ISBD(CM) (March 2005)
A task force set up to review ISBD(CM). The report addressed the
relationship of ISBD(CM) with AACR, issues and problems in the text of
ISBD(CM), and typographical and formatting errors.
AACR3/RDA (May 2005)
Outcomes from the JSC meeting were posted on the JSC public website:
http://www.collectionscanada.ca/jsc/0504out.html
The JSC and CoP together decided on a new approach, on renaming the new
code RDA: Resources Description and Access. It was clear from the overall
responses to the draft of Part 1 that it was not going the direction that
most constituencies agreed with. The arrangement did not work. Tom Delsey
put together an alternative structure based more closely on FRBR and FRAR
with more emphasis on user tasks. The new approach met goals in the
strategic plan and may better address issues of content and carrier.
Microform sets. (April 2005)
A task force was set up for Revision of the ALCTS Online Publication
"Guidelines for Catalogoing Microform Sets"
CC:DA Representation (Feb. 2005)
CC:DA should have membership from appropriate metadata groups and library
groups that have an existing cataloging committee.
Guidelines for Standardized Cataloging for Children (April
2005)
A summary of comments was submitted per CCS request.
Notes from ALA meetings, June 2005.
ALA representative, Jennifer Bowen. Resources Description and
Access (RDA) should take a more progressive approach. We need to involve
other communities/stake holders.
Timeline:
May-July 2005: Development of prospectus
Oct 2005-April 2006: Completion of draft of part I, and constitutency
review
May-Sept. 2006: Completion of draft of part II, and constitutency
review
Oct 2006-April 2007: Complete of draft of part III, and constituency
review
May-Sept 2007: Completion of general introduction, appendix, and
glossary
2008: publication
See:
http://www.collectionscanada.ca/jsc/0410out.html
- Feedback on part I included comments on both past AACR2 and future
"AACR3". The new outline is not what CC:DA had discussed so
CC:DA commented at ALA and was generally favorable: purpose and scope at
the beginning, relation to the resources descriptions, and chapter 1 with
terminology and where to start when cataloging.
- PCC in its stratetic planning is thinking the catalog will be
discovered from various sources and the ILS client will be more for
library staff managing data and making sure a larger federated searching
model will easily harvest data we have in traditional OPAC records.
- RDA is intended to focus on content - not how our OPAC displays data,
i.e. not a display standard.
- FRBR has been worked into the new outline
- RDA should allow a cataloger to catalog something htat will be
compatible with ISBD, although arrangement is not exactly in ISBD order,
e.g. all rules about the "title" might be together, but the
resulting elements be show up in different places with ISBC.
- IFLA is reviewing both FRBR and ISBD so they are in flux
- Prefered source of information is an important issue - chief source
and/or prescribed source - LC's response was discussed
NISO report. 5 standards, 1 ISO, and 1 registration were all acted
upon since the last meeting.
- ISSN is being revised - they have reached a concensus (TISSN): there
will be medium version (e.g. online, microfilm, print) while retaining
ability to keep the original/super ISSN
- Functional Requirements of Authority Records (FRAR) is in final draft
and will be reviewed in the next few months.
Don Chatham talked about publishing RDA. A project manager will be
hired for the publishing of RDA with the ability to promote communication
among interested parties. Need to address how RDA will related to the
Cataloger's Desktop. Map cataloging is moving to the Desktop. Jennifer
Bowen said the goal is to create a web product first. JSC is looking for
input on how we want it to work. We'd like to be able to find e.g. all
rules needed to catalog a globe - will need complex XML attributes. The
information is really very hierarchical in print, but may not need to be
so deeply with XML where it can be linked in multiple ways. A number of
design suggestions were given.
ALA representative, Jennifer Bowen continued her report. At
Big Heads she described her role as one of trying to be helpful and
improve communications as ALA representative rather than just CC:DA's rep
to JSC. People seem to be really caring about RDA. CC:DA site will have
presentations. The RDA product will need Alpha and Beta testing. A
document on how to test will be devised. For LITA this could take the
form of usability, viewability, navigation - if you ask for a task force
to review, they must comments or not be on the task force and must reply
by deadlines.
CC:DA discussed LC's response. Again, the issue of rules together came
up. If we have rules together about the title, it should give all -
descripton, source, notes, etc. The principle would be put the
information where the elements are. Another: stuff about the source for
title be spsecific and evertying else can be from anywhere, e.g.
determining the source of the title can be difficult for multiparts and
then you need a priority list to follow. Following a priority may be
different for some communities that have had different priorities. Most
attendees liked LC's response on this issue. You almost always need a
source of title note.
Another issue of concern is whether an item is published or not. In
the proposed revision A1.4C it says "optionally identify the place
of publication ? " - why not instead address this in levels of
description, e.g. minimal, standard, all. This area needs to be flexible
for a broader group of works, e.g. place of creation for artistics works,
because theoretically since they aren't published, they can use the rule
for place. In the proposed revision, A1.4E. Date is sounds like one can
only do publication date (i.e. only for published works) but the
intention was all dates as we have done in the past. Discussion is on
Confluence.
Discussion of 5JSC/chair/5. The general feeling was the rules in 21 need
to stay. There is an expectation that other communities will have to
write up instruction manuals and libraries will need to buy them, despite
the fact the original goal of JSC was to create rules that could be
applied by anyone for anything without additional manuals. JSC intends to
refer out to these other manuals.
What about LCRI's? LC will no longer produce a document tied to
AACR/RDA. It will continue to provide guidance. LC is continuing to
review chap. 21. "Primary access point" idea will replace
"main entry". Current OPAC performance should not drive our
decisions.
5JSC/chair/6. A task force has been formed to address the GMD/SMD
issues.
CC:DA's response to Part 1 draft will need to say "blah"
is okay and "blah-blah" is definitely not. JSC will compare
responses.
A task force has been set up to review Rules for Technical Description of
Digital Media, with a focus on data elements.
There will be a pre-conference on Cataloging Cultural Objects (CCO)
at 2006 Annual.
The task force on "Differences between, changes within"
document for serials is working on updating it.
MARBI report. See MARBI minutes.
DCRMB is asking CC:DA for comment. A task force has been
formed.
Shelby
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Shelby E. Harken
Box 9000, Room 244B
Chester Fritz Library
University of North Dakota
Grand Forks, ND 58202
voice: (701) 777-4634 fax: (701)777-3319
shelby_harken@xxxxxxxxxxxxx --OR--
shelby_harken@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
http://www.und.nodak.edu/dept/library/Departments/abc/mission.htm
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