Thanks to everyone for their responses.  You all have confirmed what I thought 
but couldn't properly verbalize.  Hopefully my argument for EAD will be taken 
into consideration by TPTB.

KYLE:  Our finding aids have never been described using EAD.  I don't actually 
work in the special collections department so I can't explain how we ended up 
here.

A lot of things are happening at once:  transitioning to a new CMS, becoming a 
hosted instance of CONTENTdm, upgrading from CONTENTdm 5.4 to 6.x.  

Cheers-
RAS

Rachel Shaevel
Electronic Resources Cataloger
Technical Services/Catalog Department
Chicago Public Library
Harold Washington Library Center
400 S. State St.
Chicago, IL 60605
P: (312) 747-4660
[email protected]


-----Original Message-----
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Kyle 
Banerjee
Sent: Sunday, May 12, 2013 12:24 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] EAD vs. HTML for finding aids

On Sat, May 11, 2013 at 1:01 PM, Wilhelmina Randtke <[email protected]>wrote:

> EAD is the appropriate metadata schema for a finding aid. HTML is not 
> a metadata schema.
>
> HTML in no way implies that a computer can read and process your 
> finding aids.  It has nothing to do with metadata.  HTML is about 
> visual display for people.
>

This.

However, EAD is no silver bullet as there are multiple ways you can 
legitimately code the same finding aids. This means that stylesheets and 
translation tools that work for one institution or set of finding aids won't 
necessarily work for another. But it is still clearly the best way to go.

Although MARC has been used to describe archival collections, it is not an 
appropriate tool. For starters, MARC is designed to describe individual items 
where EAD is designed to describe collections of materials. MARC lacks a good 
way to express important archival elements, has technical limitations that 
makes it impossible to encode some things, and it's hopeless for expressing 
complex hierarchical relationships. MARC cannot achieve equivalent 
functionality to EAD (even if it can be used for some
purposes) which is why EAD to MARC crosswalks typically have the MARC tags 
buried right in the EAD -- i.e. the transform is hand coded on a record by 
record basis.

RACHEL: are you positive this stuff really is in HTML and that what you've seen 
isn't simply translated from EAD (i.e. did your archivist say they were just 
doing finding aids in HTML)? I was under the impression that manually HTMLizing 
finding aids fell into disfavor long ago as maintenance is far more difficult 
and incompatibility with the rest of the world is guaranteed.

kyle

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