(Cross-posted to multiple lists.  Please accept our apologies for the 
duplication.)
Topic:  Coming to Terms with Genre/Form Access

 How can we make it easier for library users to find materials such as music, 
movies, video recordings, cartographic materials, and fiction? Resource 
discovery and access for library users is the primary objective of the 
"cataloging process". When new opportunities emerge for libraries to improve 
discovery and access for their patrons, libraries should respond and take 
advantage.

Northern Ohio Technical Services Librarians (NOTSL) is pleased to present a 
program on Library of Congress Genre/Form Terms. Traditionally, catalogers have 
assigned controlled vocabulary, such as Library of Congress subject headings to 
describe the content of works. Over the past few years, the Library of Congress 
has undertaken several projects to develop genre/form headings for library 
materials. Genre/form terms describe what an item is, not what it is about. 
Based on the initial success of its experimental moving image project, which 
created genre/form headings for films, television programs, and video 
recordings, the Library of Congress Acquisitions and Bibliographic Access (ABA) 
management team approved five new genre/form projects in July 2008 that would 
be undertaken by its Policy and Standards Division. The new areas to be covered 
were cartography, law, literature, music, and religion. These projects, now 
underway, include the identification of relevant thesauri, creation of the 
genre/form terms, changes to MARC coding, and the development of written 
documentation and training tools.

The implementation of genre/form terms has major implications for library 
cataloging processes. Library workflows and systems may need to be updated or 
changed to accommodate the use and control of the new terms. How will authority 
records for these terms work with local systems? What will happen to legacy 
data such as the GSAFD headings? Our speakers will address these issues, and 
more. They will speak from the perspective of the Library of Congress, from an 
established automated authority control vendor, and from a practicing library 
involved in the cartographic aspects of this project.

Presenters:

*         Janis L. Young, senior cataloging policy specialist and the 
genre/form coordinator for the Library of Congress' Policy and Standards 
Division (PSD).

*         Karen Anderson, Authority Control Librarian, Backstage Library Works, 
Provo, Utah.

*         Paige G. Andrew, Associate Librarian at the Pennsylvania State 
University Libraries, Maps Cataloging Librarian and a member of the Maps 
Cataloging Team, Cataloging and Metadata Services Department.



Date:

December 9, 2011



Location:
Kent State University
Kent Student Center, Room 306

Kent, OH 44242-0001



Registration fee: $50.00, students $25.00

Registration and light refreshments: 9:00 a.m. - 9:30 a.m.

Program time: 9:30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m.

Lunch and parking included with registration.
Registration forms and further information are available at: http://notsl.org


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