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UKOLN is supported by:

RDA: cataloguing for the twenty-first century Ann Chapman Policy & Advice Team. UKOLN is supported by:. RDA = Resource Description & Access. A new standard for creating bibliographic metadata drawing on: Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules

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  1. RDA: cataloguing for the twenty-first century Ann Chapman Policy & Advice Team UKOLN is supported by:

  2. RDA = Resource Description & Access • A new standard for creating bibliographic metadata drawing on: • Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules • In development since 1841 (Panizzi’s rules for the British Museum) • Functional Requirements of Bibliographic Records (FRBR) entity-relationship model • Resources = works, expressions, manifestations, items • Tasks = find, identify, select, obtain • Not AACR3 – but much re-use of AACR2

  3. What is wrong with AACR? • Increasingly complex and lack of logical structure • Mixing content and carrier data • Problems with seriality and hierarchical relationships • Anglo-American centric viewpoint • Written before FRBR • Not enough support for collocation and relationships • Unclear relationship with MARC format

  4. RDA – The Aims • 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 • Improve examples – more of them, more appropriate

  5. How is RDA being developed? • Joint Steering Committee on RDA (JSC) is made up of representatives of ACOC, ALA, BL, CCC, CILIP, LC • UK has 1 representative nominated by BL and 1 nominated by CILIP, who draw on the expertise and knowledge of: • CILIP-BL Committee on RDA • 3 x BL, 4 x CILIP plus several specialist members (e.g. art, digital resources, LIS education, record suppliers) • Consultation with further specialist areas (rare books, law, music) • Editor: Tom Delsey • Task focused working groups • GMD/SMD, Examples, MARC • Draft – responses – revised drafts – responses – acceptance • Final product – the publishers (ALA, CILIP)

  6. An increasingly open process • Initial work replicated closed AACR process • Drafts and proposals by partner committees • Each committee responsible for assessing and reporting their community’s response • No public view until publication • 2006 onwards - more open process • Later drafts and documents openly available from JSC web site • Increasing contact and consultation with other communities also using metadata • Setting up of RDA-L email discussion list

  7. What will RDA look like? 10 sections divided into 2 groups • Recording attribute information • Sections 1 to 4 (status – near final text) • Recording relationship information • Sections 5 to 10 (status – early draft of some parts only) In all, there will be 37 chapters of varying lengths • Appendices A to M (work in progress) • Glossary (work in progress) • Online product expected to hyperlink from text to glossary entry • Index

  8. RDA terminology • FRBR • Work, expression, manifestation, item • Entities: person, family, corporate body and place • Attributes and relationships • User tasks • Find, identify, clarify, understand, select • Preferred / Variant • Used with ‘access point’, ‘title’ and ‘name’ • Preferred access point = preferred name, etc • Variant access point (AACR2 added entry or reference) • Preferred title (includes AACR2 uniform title)

  9. FRBR model Work Symphony no. 1 Is realised through LSO recording Expression 1 Expression 2 Is embodied in Manifestation 1.1 Manifestation 2.1 Manifestation 2.2 DVD-A Is exemplified by Copy on shelf Item 1.1.1 Item 2.1.1 Item 2.2.1 Item 2.2.2

  10. RDA structure and language • Rule references • Chiefly uses numerals (e.g. 9.2.1.4.1) • Occasional use of letters (e.g. Appendices) • Removal of Anglo-American bias • Use the language and script preferred by the agency creating the data • Abbreviations • Spell out (‘place not recorded’ or ‘place not known’ instead of s.l.)

  11. Some changes from AACR • Authorship – no longer requires use of rule of three • More emphasis on information from first item received • Compilations: supports more frequent entry under compiler • The Bible • individual books are direct sub-headings of Bible (Bible. Genesis not Bible. OT. Genesis) • Treaties: entry under first named party

  12. CONTENT TYPE EXAMPLES Text Still images Moving images Cartographic … Notated movement, notated music Sounds, performed music, spoken word Tactile text, images … 3D form ... and more CARRIER EXAMPLES Sheet, card, volume Audiocassette Videocassette Computer disc Online resource Objects (made objects) quilt, toy (found objects) mineral samples … and more Content and carrier

  13. User-centred features • Enables FRBRization of catalogues • Clearly distinguishes content from carrier • E.g. moving pictures on DVD, text on CD-ROM • Restrict searches by format (e.g. only non-visual resources) • Multinational • Independent of technical metadata formats • Can be used with MARC, Dublin Core (DC), and others • Designed for the digital environment

  14. Cataloguer-centred features (1) • Online product designed to interface and integrate with cataloguing modules • Work-flow integration will give step-by-step and contextual access to content rules • Possibility of adding local examples • Possibility of ‘MyRDA’, removing unwanted rules and unused options • LMS vendors being kept informed

  15. Cataloguer-centred features (2) • More emphasis on cataloguer’s judgement • Guidelines rather than ‘rules’ • Rules grouped by bibliographic element rather than format • Bibliographic elements related to FRBR entities (related to user tasks) • “Why am I including this information?” • Authority control included • Generally compatible with AACR

  16. Access points • Distinguishing access points • Field of activity of a person • Identification of prominent member of a family • History of a corporate body • Status of access point • Authorised by [e.g. LoC] • Provisional / preliminary [e.g. local or pre-authorisation] • Some incompatibility of access points created using RDA and AACR2 • British Library, Library and Archives Canada, Library of Congress and National Library of Australia have agreed to co-ordinate implementation of RDA. • Co-ordination to cover training, production of related documents and national decisions on implementation

  17. RDA and other standards • RDA/ONIX framework for resource categorisation • Better interoperability for library and publisher metadata • RDA and Dublin Core Metadata Initiative • RDA controlled vocabularies as namespaces • RDA metadata element set to be a namespace vocabulary • DC Application Profile for RDA • RDA and MARC • RDA/MARC Working Group • Initial RDA/MARC mapping report November 2006

  18. RDA – What will it be? • Complete text as an online resource • Other possible electronic versions: • Concise text • Tailored texts (e.g. law, rare books, art works) • Training resource • Incorporated into LMS cataloguing modules • Loose-leaf print version(s) • Survey of potential requirement in 2007 • No decision yet on complete versus concise version or publication date

  19. RDA – when will we see it? • Online resource (complete text) • Demonstration at IFLA in August 2008 • Public release in early 2009 • First release may not include section 10 • Other electronic version(s) • To be developed over time • Some development by LMS vendors • Print version(s) – under discussion • No dates yet available

  20. Find out more … Ann Chapman a.d.chapman@ukoln.ac.uk http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/bib-man/ Joint Steering Committee for RDA http://www.collectionscanada.ca/jsc/ CILIP-BL Committee on AACR/RDA http://www.slainte.org.uk/aacr/index.html

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