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Please join us at the ALA session MODS and MADS: Current implementations and 
future directions, sponsored by LITA.

10:30-12:00, Sunday June 27
Washington Convention Center, Room 143 B/C

Over the last few years, the use of MODS has increased rapidly. In 2008 the 
MODS Editorial Committee was established to work with the community to maintain 
the MODS and MADS standards and to update these so that they work in 
increasingly complex and linked metadata environments. This program will 
include examples of current implementations of MODS/MADS, future directions 
(including how a 4.0 version might work better at the network level), and its 
relation to other metadata standards. This program is intended to elicit 
feedback and discussion with the community.

Speakers:

Jenn Riley, Indiana University: MODS 3.4 is to be released in June 2010, the 
first Schema release guided by an editorial committee. MODS 3.4 makes two 
primary types of changes: those intended to help the Schema be more flexible 
and usable by other communities, and those intended to support RDA-compliant 
metadata. These changes will be discussed, as well as possible new directions 
that MODS 4.0 might take.

Bill Leonard, Library and Archives Canada: Use of MODS and MADS at Library and 
Archives Canada. This presentation will describe the use of MODS within LAC's 
Trusted Digital Repository.  Local extensions were necessary to carry 
descriptive metadata for electronic government records.  It will also touch on 
a separate MARCXML-based system launched earlier this year searches Canadiana 
authorities offering MADS as an export format.

Sally McCallum and Rebecca Guenther, Library of Congress: Using MODS for 
discovery of LC's rich collections: This presentation will describe the use of 
MODS as a common format to provide seamless and integrated access to LC's 
collections from disparate systems and cataloging formats. It will also discuss 
the Metadata for Digital Content Working Group, which is establishing a master 
data element set and format specific profiles for bibliographic descriptions 
based on MODS.

Amanda Harlan, Baylor University: This presentation will focus on Texas Digital 
Library's ETD MODS Guidelines & their ETD submission system, Vireo.  It will 
give an overview on why MODS was chosen to describe ETDS, who was in charge of 
writing the guidelines, why it was a priority for TDL to develop Vireo, and how 
much of MODS was incorporated into the Vireo System.  Next the presentation 
will be covering where TDL is right now in relation to the guidelines and 
Vireo.  It will give an overview of how many institutions are implementing it 
currently, how those institutions are dealing with exporting the metadata to 
their local systems, and who is continuing the development of Vireo and 
troubleshooting of it.  Lastly it will give an overview of future projections 
for TDL's Vireo and guidelines.  The presentation will give an overview of why 
the Vireo's Users Group was formed and its charge, the push to review the ETD 
MODS Guidelines to see if there is a need for any editing, an!
 d how institutions are working with developers of Vireo for enhancement 
recommendations for all parties involved: graduate school, library, and 
students.

Karen Miller, Northwestern University: Northwestern University Library's 
digital repository stores digital resources and metadata in a variety of 
formats. Metadata schemas are chosen based on their suitability to the type of 
materials being described, with MARCXML being used for monographs and serials, 
EAD for archival materials, VRA Core for visual images, and so on. In order to 
facilitate cross-collection searching, each of these metadata schemas has been 
crosswalked to MODS, which functions as a "lingua franca" for indexing and is 
particularly well suited for web display.  In the case of EAD, crosswalking to 
MODS is straightforward at the archival description level, but once subordinate 
components become involved, translating a hierarchical structure into a flat 
one presents challenges. This presentation describes the obstacles encountered 
and solutions implemented at NUL.

Jenn Riley
Chair, MODS/MADS Editorial Committee

========================
Jenn Riley
Metadata Librarian
Digital Library Program
Indiana University - Bloomington
Wells Library W501
(812) 856-5759
www.dlib.indiana.edu

Inquiring Librarian blog: www.inquiringlibrarian.blogspot.com

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