*** Please excuse cross-posting ***

The ALCTS CaMMS Cataloging Norms Interest Group is pleased to announce its 
program at the ALA Annual Conference to be held in Chicago, McCormick 
Convention Center S104, 10:30 AM - 11:30 AM, Saturday, June 24, 2017.

This year's theme is "The Changing Metadata Arena and Its Practitioners," 
featuring six speakers who will bring a variety of talks addressing authority 
control, identity management, vocabularies and linked data, and the changing 
role and practices of cataloging and metadata librarians. We'd like to present 
the following programs with a great deal of relevant information, and encourage 
follow-up with presenters as needed.

Featured Program (15 minutes)

Identity Management or Authority Control? (Jennifer Liss, Head of Monographic 
Image Cataloging, Indiana University)
With increasing frequency, the term Identity Management is being used in many 
settings, including libraries where the familiar term is Authority Control. Do 
you understand the conceptual differences between these two terms? Do you 
understand how a shift to Identity Management impacts the metadata 
practitioner's work and choices? The Program for Cooperative Cataloging (PCC) 
Task Group on Identity Management in NACO is charged to investigate and foster 
discussion on issues regarding the differences between Authority Control and 
Identity Management. Come hear about the work of the task group, from the 
group's analysis of the emerging use cases for Identity Management, to actual 
projects that facilitate globally shared identifier management work in 
libraries, to some of the problems to be solved as Identity Management 
activities integrate into Authority Control workflows.

Regular Talks (10 minutes each)


*         Authority Control for Finding Aids: Changing Roles for Cataloging 
Staff (Miloche Kottman, Head of Cataloging and Archival Processing, University 
of Kansas Libraries)



The University of Kansas Libraries has moved from an archival finding aid 
creation system that lacked authority control to ArchivesSpace, an open-source 
archives information management system, which has some limited authority 
control capabilities. This presentation will discuss the benefits and 
challenges associated with evaluating and updating the close to 5,000 subject 
headings generated from our legacy finding aid (i.e. EAD) records, including 
the use of an Authorities Unit staff member more familiar with MARC cataloging.



*         Better Together:  Cataloging and Metadata Librarians, Archivists, and 
New Understandings for Description and Discovery (Ivey Glendon, Manager for 
Metadata Analysis and Design, University of Virginia Library)


The Metadata Analysis & Design team at the University of Virginia Library is 
planning a migration for manuscripts metadata (MARC records, EAD XML documents, 
and finding aids) to a single destination: ArchivesSpace. This presentation, 
relevant to cataloging and metadata librarians and managers, will highlight: 
Overlapping skillsets among archivists, metadata librarians, and catalogers; 
Cross-pollination in metadata philosophy: arrangement and description, More 
Product Less Process (MPLP), EAD3, BIBFRAME; Achievements and setbacks 
(successful data transformations, data encoding errors); Technical and 
interpersonal skills (XML, XSLT, patience, diplomacy, persuasion). This 
migration requires expertise from archivists, metadata librarians, and 
catalogers.  We are eager to share our successes and challenges with this 
initiative and in working together to imagine the future of archival 
description and discovery.



Lightning Round (5 minutes each)



*         The Nitty Gritty of Adding Subfield 0 to MARC Records (Mary Aycock, 
Database and Metadata Management Librarian, Texas State University)

One of the concrete actions we can take now to prepare our MARC catalog records 
for the linked data environment is to add URIs in subfield 0 to our existing 
catalog records. This subfield is also popping up in vendor records and MeSH 
records from the National Library of Medicine. It sounds simple to add and 
incorporate these fields, but anyone who has worked with catalogs or other 
databases knows that seemingly straightforward changes often result in 
unintended consequences. This brief talk will present an overview of the 
process and point out specific issues that our institution encountered.



*         Imposing Authority: Using OpenRefine to Control Uncontrolled and 
Out-of-control Vocabulary Terms (Rachel Jaffe, Metadata Librarian, University 
of California, Santa Cruz)

The University Library at UC Santa Cruz is currently undertaking an effort to 
remediate our existing Dublin Core digital repository metadata in both 
anticipation of a possible DAMS migration and a transition to linked data.  
Part of our work had been to control our uncontrolled and local vocabulary 
terms, and to develop a standardized authority control workflow around our 
digital repository metadata.  In this lightning presentation, I will outline 
our wrangling efforts, introduce OpenRefine's reconciliation tool, and discuss 
issues encountered as well as future directions.



*         An Existential Crisis for Cataloging? (Brian Falato, Associate 
Librarian, University of South Florida)

Acquisition trends are changing, and cataloging practice is changing with it. 
The increasing reliance on patron-driven acquisition (PDA) and electronic books 
bought in packages typically means catalog records are batch loaded. 
Frequently, these records come from the vendor selling the e-books or 
sponsoring the PDA program, and the quality of the records supplied varies 
greatly.  Given this situation, catalogers may feel they are functioning as 
file managers instead of practicing the skills they originally learned through 
their schooling and training. Will cataloging of individual items become 
obsolete except for special circumstances and collections, or will the 
transition away from MARC to standards such as BIBFRAME provide renewed energy 
for catalogers?



Thank you and we look forward to seeing you in the session!


ALCTS CaMMS Cataloging Norms Interest Group
Sai Deng ([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>) and Jessalyn Zoom 
([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>), Co-Chairs
Elizabeth Bridges ([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>) and Debra 
Skinner ([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>), 
Co-Vice Chairs


-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"DSpace Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/dspace-community.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to