Please join the ALCTS Technical Services Workflow Efficiency Interest Group
(TSWEIG) at the 2016 ALA Midwinter Meeting in Boston, MA.

Time: Monday, January 11, 2016, 1:00 p.m. - 2:30 p.m.
Place: Boston Convention and Exhibition Center, Room 103

Streamlining ETD Processing at the University of Iowa Libraries using Trello
Board Amanda Z. Xu, Metadata Analyst Librarian, University of Iowa Libraries

The ETD processing at University of Iowa Libraries is a complex workflow
requiring project management, collaboration with project stakeholders within
the Cataloging and Metadata department and other departments in Digital
Publishing and Preservation. The digital scholarship librarian receives XML
and PDF files from ProQuest and the Preservation Metadata Librarian copies
these files into an archive for digital preservation. Another copy of the
files are generated for the Cataloging and Metadata department to process
the ETDs for the Iowa Research Online (IRO) institutional repository and
OCLC Connexion. This presentation will describe the workflows and
collaboration of ETD processing at the University of Iowa Libraries, and the
implementation of Trello Board for tracking the ETD workflow.

>From Excel ETD Metadata to MARC Bib and NACO Records in 12 easy steps!
Steven W. Holloway, Metadata Librarian, James Madison University

At JMU the library receives ETD metadata from our institutional repository
as bulk Excel files.  A combination of open source and home-grown XSLTs
permit us to generate complete MARCXML RDA bibliographic records that we
export to OCLC after minor editing, to which subject headings are assigned
at a later point.  We also create NACO records for the dissertants, based on
our asking the right questions in the ETD submission form, and use XSLT
transformations for this as well. The XML files are stored and edited in an
eXist-db (native XML database) instance set up as a web service.  There are
several steps in the workflow but the system is scaled to accommodate many
hundreds of ETD submissions at a time, and can be adapted for any
spreadsheet-based metadata amenable to transformation into MARC or BIBFRAME
formats.

Catalog ALL THE THINGS: Leveraging Automation to Catalog a Massive
Audio-Visual Collection Lucas Mak, Metadata and Catalog Librarian; Autumn
Faulkner, Head of Copy Cataloging; and Joshua Barton, Head of Cataloging and
Metadata Services & Assistant Head of Technical Services, Michigan State
University Libraries

Michigan State University Libraries (MSUL) recently received a gift of more
than 800,000 titles of sound and video recordings. Even though a minimal set
of metadata was provided by the donor, the sheer quantity still posed an
unprecedented challenge for cataloging. However, with the help of scripting
and APIs for various online metadata sources, MSUL was able to catalog and
make the collection available for circulation six months after the receipt
of this gift. This presentation will discuss the design and execution of
this automated workflow, limitations, unintentional consequences, responses
to resulting problems, and follow-up record enrichment plans, as well as
what we might do differently if we had the chance.

>From MODS to OCLC through the WorldCat Metadata API Shaun Akhtar, Metadata
Librarian, Dartmouth College Library

The Dartmouth College Library's MODS repository is its primary metadata
source for local digital collections and items. The library wants to
incorporate the original cataloging done in MODS for both legacy and new
digital projects into WorldCat, in order to expose the metadata for the
library's unique resources on a global platform and establish OCLC record
identifiers for local and external use. OCLC's WorldCat Metadata API
presented a new opportunity to effectively meet this need. The library has
developed a command-line batch processing tool that uses the Metadata API to
create and update records using MODS-derived MARCXML. This presentation will
explore the details of our workflow, how the tool has been developed to
support our use cases, and what we've learned about the API so far. The tool
is currently being piloted at Dartmouth to create master records in WorldCat
for digital dissertations and archival posters. Its use may be expanded to a
variety of other WorldCat-connected cataloging workflows for local
collections. Written in Ruby, it provides detailed logging and reporting
capabilities, and builds on code previously released by the OCLC Developer
Network and Terry Reese.

Annie and Hayley
Co-chairs TSWEIG

Margaret "Annie" Glerum
Head of Complex Cataloging
Department of Cataloging & Description
Division of Special Collections & Archives Florida State University
Libraries
850-644-4839
[email protected]

Heylicken (Hayley) Moreno
Resource Description Coordinator
University of Houston Libraries
114 University Libraries
Houston, TX 77204
713-743-8580|[email protected]


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