1 / 57

Background and Structure of RDA

Background and Structure of RDA. Acknowledgments for this workshop’s materials.

margot
Download Presentation

Background and Structure of RDA

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Background and Structure of RDA

  2. Acknowledgments for this workshop’s materials • Screen images and RDA instructions from the RDA Toolkit (www.rdatoolkit.org) used by permission of the Co-Publishers for RDA (American Library Association, Canadian Library Association, and CILIP: Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals) *

  3. What was wrong with AACR2? • Increasingly complex library resources • Lack of logical structure • Mixing content and carrier data • Hierarchical relationships missing • Anglo-American centric viewpoint • Written before FRBR • Not enough support for collocation • Before Internet and well-formed metadata * Ann Chapman, UKOLN

  4. 1997 International Conference on the Principles and Future Development of AACR, Toronto, Canada: topics • Principles • Content vs. carrier • Logical structure • Seriality • Internationalization *

  5. Joint Steering Committee for Development of RDA • American Library Association • Australian Committee on Cataloguing • British Library • Canadian Cataloguing Committee • CILIP: Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals • Library of Congress • and in 2012: Deutsche Nationalbibliothek • future: expand governance *

  6. Internet impact • Catalogs are no longer in isolation • Global access to data • Integrate bibliographic data with wider Internet environment • Share data beyond institutions *

  7. Internet “Cloud” Databases, Repositories Services VIAF LCSH Web front end Power of “Linked data” *

  8. Current Cataloging Environment • Web-based • Wide range of information carriers with complexity of content • Metadata (bibliographic information) • Created by a wider range of personnel in and outside libraries • Element-based metadata schemas • Dublin Core, ONIX, etc. * Ann Chapman, UKOLN

  9. AACR3 *

  10. JSC Collaborations with other Metadata Communities • IFLA - Principles, Conceptual models, ISBD/ISSN • ONIX (Publishers) – types of content, media, carriers • Dublin Core, IEEE/LOM, Semantic Web, W3C “Data Modeling Meeting” - London 2007 • RDA/MARC Working Group (MARBI) *

  11. Cataloging specialists: law, religion, music, etc. • Archives and museums *

  12. Goals: RDA will be … • A new standard for resource description and access • Designed for the digitalworld • Optimized for use as an online product • Description and access of all resources • All types of content and media • Resulting records usable in the digital environment (Internet, Web OPACs, etc.) *

  13. Goals of RDA • Rules should be easy to use and interpret • Be applicable to an online, networked environment • Provide effective bibliographic control for all types of media • Encourage use beyond the library community • Be compatible with other similar standards • Have a logical structure based on internationally- agreed principles • Separate content and carrier data • Examples – more of them, more appropriate *

  14. Based on IFLA’s international models and principles • Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records (FRBR; 1998) • Functional Requirements for Authority Data (FRAD; 2009) • Statement of International Cataloguing Principles (ICP; 2009) *

  15. ICP general principles • Consistency and Standardization • Integration • Defensible, not arbitrary • If contradict, take a defensible, practical solution. • Convenience of user • Representation • Common usage • Accuracy • Sufficiency and necessity • Significance • Economy *

  16. FRAD: Find Identify Contextualize Justify User tasks FRBR: • Find • Identify • Select • Obtain • ICP’s highest principle = “convenience of the user” *

  17. FRBR’s Entity-Relationship Model • Entities • Relationships • Attributes (data “elements” in RDA) • National level required elements relationship One Entity Another Entity *

  18. FRBR’s Entity-Relationship Model Person Work created was created by Shakespeare Hamlet *

  19. FRBR entities Group 1: Products of intellectual & artistic endeavor = bibliographic resources • Work • Expression • Manifestation • Item *

  20. “Inherent Group 1 relationships” Work is realized through Expression is embodied in - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Manifestation recursive is exemplified by one Item many *

  21. Relationships Work Expression • Inherent among the Group 1 entities • Content relationships among works/expressions • Structural relationships Manifestation Item Whole-Part Sequential Derivative Accompanying * James/Kuhagen for VLA- Feb. 5, 2013

  22. Family of Works Equivalent Descriptive Derivative Free Translation Review Edition Casebook Microform Reproduction Summary Abstract Dramatization Simultaneous “Publication” Abridged Edition Criticism Digest Novelization Screenplay Copy Libretto Evaluation Illustrated Edition Revision Change of Genre Exact Reproduction Parody Annotated Edition Translation Expurgated Edition Imitation Same Style or Thematic Content Variations or Versions Facsimile Arrangement Commentary Slight Modification Reprint Adaptation Original Work -Same Expression Same Work – New Expression New Work * Cataloging Rules Cut-Off Point

  23. Manifestation ID Title Statement of responsibility Edition Imprint (place, publisher, date) Form/extent of carrier Terms of availability Mode of access etc. Item ID Provenance Location etc. Elements to Describe Resources • Work • ID • Title • Date • etc. • Expression • ID • Form • Date • Language • etc. *

  24. FRBR and FRAD entities Group 2: Those responsible for Group 1 entities – or are the subject of works: • Persons • Families • Corporate bodies *

  25. Group 2 responsibility • Intellectual or artistic creation (for Work) • Realization of work (for Expression) • Production, publication, distribution, or manufacture (for Manifestation) • Custodian (for Item) *

  26. FRBR Entities Group 3:Subjects of works • Groups1&2plus • Concept • Object • Event • Place • Subject relationship *

  27. FRBR seems new … But the concepts of the three groups are in our catalogs The concepts have not been clear in past cataloging rules More clarity for catalogers, for designers of databases/catalogs, and for users *

  28. British Museum 1841(“full and accurate” book catalog) ACOSTA (CHRISTOVAL). Tractado de las drogas, y medicinas de las Indias Orientales, con sus plantas. Burgos, 1578. 4o Another copy. The same. Ital. Venetia, 1585. 4o Another copy. Tractado en loor de las mugeres. Venetia, 1592. 4o *

  29. *

  30. British Museum 1841(“full and accurate” book catalog) ACOSTA (CHRISTOVAL). Tractado de las drogas, y medicinas de las Indias Orientales, con sus plantas.Burgos, 1578. 4o Another copy. The same.Ital.Venetia, 1585. 4o Another copy. Tractado en loor de las mugeres.Venetia, 1592. 4o Person Work Expression Manifestation Item *

  31. Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616. Hamlet. French. LC Control No. : 47023612 LCCN Permalink : http://lccn.loc.gov/47023612 Type of Material : Book (Print, Microform, Electronic, etc.) Personal Name : Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616. Main Title : ... Hamlet, traduit par André Gide. Published/Created : [Paris] Gallimard [1946] Description : 2 p. l., 7-237, [2] p. 17 cm. CALL NUMBER : PR2779.H3 G5Copy 1 -- Request in : Jefferson or Adams Bldg General or Area Studies Reading Rms *

  32. Person Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616. Hamlet. French. LC Control No. : 47023612 LCCN Permalink : http://lccn.loc.gov/47023612 Type of Material : Book (Print, Microform, Electronic, etc.) Personal Name : Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616. Main Title : ... Hamlet, traduit par André Gide. Published/Created : [Paris] Gallimard [1946] Description : 2 p. l., 7-237, [2] p. 17 cm. CALL NUMBER : PR2779.H3 G5Copy 1 -- Request in : Jefferson or Adams Bldg General or Area Studies Reading Rms Work *

  33. Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616. Hamlet. French. Expression LC Control No. : 47023612 LCCN Permalink : http://lccn.loc.gov/47023612 Type of Material : Book (Print, Microform, Electronic, etc.) Personal Name : Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616. Main Title : ... Hamlet, traduit par André Gide. Published/Created : [Paris] Gallimard [1946] Description : 2 p. l., 7-237, [2] p. 17 cm. CALL NUMBER : PR2779.H3 G5Copy 1 -- Request in : Jefferson or Adams Bldg General or Area Studies Reading Rms *

  34. Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616. Hamlet. French. Manifestation LC Control No. : 47023612 LCCN Permalink : http://lccn.loc.gov/47023612 Type of Material : Book (Print, Microform, Electronic, etc.) Personal Name : Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616. Main Title : ... Hamlet, traduit par André Gide. Published/Created : [Paris] Gallimard [1946] Description : 2 p. l., 7-237, [2] p. 17 cm. CALL NUMBER : PR2779.H3 G5Copy 1 -- Request in : Jefferson or Adams Bldg General or Area Studies Reading Rms *

  35. Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616. Hamlet. French. LC Control No. : 47023612 LCCN Permalink : http://lccn.loc.gov/47023612 Type of Material : Book (Print, Microform, Electronic, etc.) Personal Name : Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616. Main Title : ... Hamlet, traduit par André Gide. Published/Created : [Paris] Gallimard [1946] Description : 2 p. l., 7-237, [2] p. 17 cm. CALL NUMBER : PR2779.H3 G5Copy 1 -- Request in : Jefferson or Adams Bldg General or Area Studies Reading Rms Item *

  36. Quiz on FRBR *

  37. Summary of differences • Based on principles • Based on conceptual models • Content, not encoding, standard • More international • Wider scope of resources • Includes authority data • Has controlled vocabularies • Changes in instruction vocabulary • Core elements *

  38. RDA is a content standard • Not a display standard (as is AACR2) • Does have appendix D for ISBD and appendix E for AACR2 style for access points • Not an encoding standard • Use whatever schema you prefer (MARC 21, Dublin Core, etc.) • Bibliographic Framework Transition Initiative *

  39. More international • Focus on local user needs • Choice of agency preparing the description: • Language of additions to access points • Language of supplied data • Script and transliteration • Calendar • Numeric system *

  40. For wider scope of resources • Response to what’s being acquired in libraries • More elements for non-printed text resources • More elements for non-text resources • More elements for unpublished resources *

  41. Includes authority data instructions • Based on attributes and relationships in FRAD • Authorized/variant access points and elements will for now continue to be documented in authority records *

  42. Has controlled vocabularies • Only a few closed: content, media, and carrier types; mode of issuance; etc. • Most are open: cataloger can supply term if needed term not in list • Vocabularies being registered on the Web (http://metadataregistry.org/rdabrowse.htm) -- goal of multiple languages and/or scripts *

  43. authorized access point creator preferred title + authorized access point for creator if appropriate (1) preferred title (+ other information to differentiate); (2) conventional collective title AACR2 to RDA vocabulary • heading • author, composer, etc. • main entry • uniform title *

  44. variant access point authorized access point for related entity carrier description AACR2 to RDA vocabulary • see reference • see also reference • physical description *

  45. media type + carrier type + content type preferred sources AACR2 to RDA vocabulary • GMD • chief source *

  46. RDA Structure • General introduction • Identifying characteristics (entities and their elements) • Ch. 1-7: work, expression, manifestation, item • Ch. 8-16: person, family, corporate body, place • Relationships: ch. 17-37 • Appendices • Glossary • Index *

  47. RDA structure • Not by class of materials: no separate chapters for books, printed music, etc. • Overarching principles applicable to all • Basic goals: identify and relate (from FRBR/FRAD user tasks and ICP) • Chapters: separate elements for goals • Assemble those elements when need authorized access points (instructions at end of chapters 6, 9-11) *

  48. RDA notto be read linearly in Toolkit • Using the online RDA Toolkit: • “Jumping in” via keyword searches • To elements from Table of Contents pane • Following links • Seeing some duplication of content (needed for context) • Can print chapters from Toolkit • Printed text version of RDA is available • Publishers considering Essential RDA *

  49. Core elements in RDA • Based on attributes mandatory for a national level record in FRBR and FRAD • Core elements listed as a group in RDA 0.6 and separately in appropriate chapters • Agency, consortium, etc., can add others *

  50. “Core-ness” identified at element level in RDA • If always a core element (if applicable and available), label CORE ELEMENT appears below element name • If useas a core element depends upon the situation, the label CORE ELEMENT is followed by an explanation of the situation *

More Related