[DCRM-L] ESTC and the revision of SCF
Randal Brandt
rbrandt at library.berkeley.edu
Thu Sep 11 12:27:34 MDT 2008
A lot of great ideas are starting to fly around but I think we're
getting a little ahead of ourselves in terms of what we think/hope that
ILSs can do. (UC Berkeley is only now implementing its first ever ILS
and I can tell you that our present system would *never* be able to link
the 510 in one record to the 524 in another.) I think petitioning MARBI
for inclusion of a subfield for a URL in the 510 is a good idea; I also
think routinely adding a 524 field to the bib records for the resources
themselves is also a good idea (along with getting a $2 code defined for
SCF). Postponing the revision of SCF until we can get the 510 and 524 to
link to each other is, I think, not a good idea. Everyone agrees that
fuller citations are better than brief ones.
I have proposed that the SCF revision team (which is still in the
process of being formed) begin the task of verifying the existing SCF
citations in terms of AACR2.
For ALA Midwinter, I would like to see a proposal to MARBI for a
subfield code for a URL in the 510. If anyone has experience making
MARBI proposals and would like to volunteer, please let me know.
I will work with the SCF revision team on getting a $2 code established
for the 524.
Randal Brandt
Chair, RBMS Bibliographic Standards Committee
Elizabeth Robinson wrote:
> It's not a bad idea at all, Nina and Bob, but the issue of the hour about it is how does a 524 index in our various databases and how would a 524 interact with a 510?
>
> I think ideally we would want (this is pie-in-the-sky thinking probably) the "ignorant" patron to be able to click on the 510 of Title X and some how be directed to (or have a second window open with) the bib record of the resource, based on some sort of automatic link between the 510 in Title X's bib record and the 524 in the bibliography's bib record.
>
> The clicking on the 510 in Title X's bib probably would have to generate a command keyword search (or Expert search as ExLibris/Voyager is calling it now) on 524s. Similar in other ILS systems.
>
> We can ask our various institutional ILS/systems offices and vendors what is doable.
>
> Do we want to do that? I can certainly start with LC's ILS office. We are an ExLibris/Voyager shop, as most/all of you probably know. What are the other systems? Innovative, Dynix, ??, ?? I know they've been gobbling each other up, and I have not been paying the best attention to who remains. Anyway, perhaps we can do some representative research with all the current ILS systems to see what is viable.
>
> How do others feel about this approach that Nina and Bob have offered? Basically (if it can work technologically) we would be retaining our current citation forms as they are but routinely adding 524s to the resources' bib records.
>
> Also, if this is how we proceed, would we want to continue to create new forms with the current working principles or with the new proposal of fuller citations? In other words, grandfather the current list and make 524s to assist the patron with those but (for the future) create new citations that are fuller?
>
> Elizabeth A. Robinson
> Team Leader
> Rare Book Cataloging Team
> Special Materials Cataloging Division
> Library of Congress
> 101 Independence Avenue SE, mailstop 4376
> Washington, DC 20540-4376
> (202)707-3408 (work)
> (202)707-2453 (fax)
> erob at loc.gov (email)
>
> Disclaimer: The opinions expressed are strictly my own
> and not necessarily those of the Library of Congress.
>
>
>
>
> --- On Wed, 9/10/08, Robert Maxwell <robert_maxwell at byu.edu> wrote:
>
>
>> From: Robert Maxwell <robert_maxwell at byu.edu>
>> Subject: Re: [DCRM-L] ESTC and the revision of SCF
>> To: "DCRM Revision Group List" <dcrm-l at lib.byu.edu>
>> Date: Wednesday, September 10, 2008, 7:41 PM
>> Good idea! It would be great if the OCLC master record for
>> as many of these as possible had the citation form embedded
>> in it. And as new ones came up if the first person to use it
>> in a 510 added a 524 to the master record for the
>> bibliography the rest of us who come along later could use
>> the same form in our records. I think it would greatly
>> enhance standardization of these forms.
>>
>> In case people want to do this, I urge the authors of the
>> new Standard Citations to get a code for Standard Citations
>> listed for subfield 2 of 524 ("source of schema
>> used") (see
>> http://www.loc.gov/marc/relators/relaothr.html#rela524b). Is
>> the group working on this thinking of doing that? I hope you
>> will. The field would look something like
>>
>> 524 Cioranescu, A. 18. s. $2 scf [or whatever the code
>> winds up being]
>>
>> That way if there were some other citation form wanted for
>> the bibliography in addition to Standard Citations (maybe
>> this is some sort of medical bibliography and the NLM
>> recommended format for bibliographic citation is also
>> wanted) the field could be repeated with whatever citations
>> styles are wanted.
>>
>> By the way, I notice none of the codes listed at
>> http://www.loc.gov/marc/relators/relaothr.html#rela524b are
>> for archival citation styles, so the field is clearly being
>> used beyond the archival community.
>>
>> Bob
>>
>> Robert L. Maxwell
>> Head, Special Collections and Metadata Catalog Dept.
>> 6728 Harold B. Lee Library
>> Brigham Young University
>> Provo, UT 84602
>> (801)422-5568
>>
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: dcrm-l-bounces at lib.byu.edu
>> [mailto:dcrm-l-bounces at lib.byu.edu] On Behalf Of Schneider,
>> Nina
>> Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2008 5:12 PM
>> To: ElizRob at alum.emory.edu; DCRM Revision Group List
>> Subject: Re: [DCRM-L] ESTC and the revision of SCF
>>
>>
>> This also reminds me that Erin Blake of the Folger Library
>> suggested (or maybe it was a question ... this was a few
>> years ago at an ALA meeting) including a 524 note (Preferred
>> Citation of Described Materials) in the bib record of
>> standard reference sources, especially titles in Standard
>> Citation Forms. For example: Alexandre Cioranescu's
>> Bibiographie de la litterature francaise du dix-hititeme
>> siecle would look like this:
>>
>> 100 1_ Cioranescu, Alexandre
>> 245 10 Bibliographie de la littérature française du
>> dix-huitième siècle ...
>> 524 Cioranescu, A. 18. s.
>>
>>
>> I know that the 524 is meant for manuscript
>> materials/archival collections, but it seems to me that this
>> is an elegant solution, especially if the 524 is
>> searchable.
>>
>>
>> +-------
>> Nina Schneider
>> Head Cataloger
>> William Andrews Clark Memorial Library
>> 2520 Cimarron Street
>> Los Angeles, CA 90018
>>
>> 323-731-8529
>> nschneider at humnet.ucla.edu
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: dcrm-l-bounces at lib.byu.edu
>> [mailto:dcrm-l-bounces at lib.byu.edu] On Behalf Of Elizabeth
>> Robinson
>> Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2008 2:57 PM
>> To: DCRM Revision Group List
>> Subject: Re: [DCRM-L] ESTC and the revision of SCF
>>
>> I meant to also respond to Nina's suggestion for a
>> 510$u for URL links. It is actually MARBI that would approve
>> such, although LC always has an opinion on all MARBI
>> proposals (so would definitely chime in).
>>
>> Nina's suggestion of a subfield for URL info leads me
>> to wonder if we might also want to consider a subfield for
>> these acronyms we still want to keep and input along with
>> the full title. Richard's last examples could be (making
>> up a subfield):
>>
>> 510 4_ $z ESTC $a (English short title catalogue) 510 4_ $z
>> ISTC $a (Incunabula short-title catalogue)
>>
>> Or maybe repeat the subfield $a (not possible now):
>>
>> 510 4_ $a ESTC $a (English short title catalogue) 510 4_ $a
>> ISTC $a (Incunabula short-title catalogue)
>>
>> That might be exceedingly valuable from an indexing and/or
>> maintenance POV.
>>
>> We can consider various punctuation too (doesn't have
>> to be parentheses). E.g.:
>>
>> 510 4_ $a ESTC: $a English short title catalogue 510 4_ $a
>> ISTC: $a Incunabula short-title catalogue
>>
>> Whatever we think will display to the public in an
>> intelligible manner.
>>
>> Elizabeth A. Robinson
>> Team Leader
>> Rare Book Cataloging Team
>> Special Materials Cataloging Division
>> Library of Congress
>> 101 Independence Avenue SE, mailstop 4376 Washington, DC
>> 20540-4376
>> (202)707-3408 (work)
>> (202)707-2453 (fax)
>> erob at loc.gov (email)
>>
>> Disclaimer: The opinions expressed are strictly my own and
>> not necessarily those of the Library
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> --- On Wed, 9/10/08, Schneider, Nina
>> <nschneider at humnet.ucla.edu> wrote:
>>
>>
>>> From: Schneider, Nina
>>>
>> <nschneider at humnet.ucla.edu>
>>
>>> Subject: Re: [DCRM-L] ESTC and the revision of SCF
>>> To: "DCRM Revision Group List"
>>>
>> <dcrm-l at lib.byu.edu>
>>
>>> Date: Wednesday, September 10, 2008, 11:27 AM
>>> Richard just gave me an idea:
>>>
>>> Why couldn't we include a URL to those citations
>>>
>> that
>>
>>> are online? I'm
>>> sure we could petition LC to include subfield u (or
>>>
>> another
>>
>>> appropriate
>>> subfield) in a 510, so that folks who don't know
>>>
>> what
>>
>>> ESTC, Wing, etc.
>>> could just hit the link to take them to the resource.
>>>
>>> Of course, the problem is that many of these
>>>
>> reference
>>
>>> sources are not
>>> online, but we could take advantage of the ones that
>>>
>> are.
>>
>>> Nina
>>>
>>> +-------
>>> Nina Schneider
>>> Head Cataloger
>>> William Andrews Clark Memorial Library
>>> 2520 Cimarron Street
>>> Los Angeles, CA 90018
>>>
>>> 323-731-8529
>>> nschneider at humnet.ucla.edu
>>>
>>>
>>> -----Original Message-----
>>> From: dcrm-l-bounces at lib.byu.edu
>>> [mailto:dcrm-l-bounces at lib.byu.edu] On
>>> Behalf Of Noble, Richard
>>> Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2008 7:10 AM
>>> To: rbrandt at library.berkeley.edu; DCRM Revision Group
>>>
>> List
>>
>>> Subject: Re: [DCRM-L] ESTC and the revision of SCF
>>>
>>> In an ideal world, the 510 field would function as in
>>>
>> ISTC,
>>
>>> with its
>>> choice of expanded or condensed references to
>>>
>> accommodate
>>
>>> those in the
>>> know and those not--and those who need a reminder.
>>>
>> SCF
>>
>>> would be the
>>> underlying public and technical reference database,
>>>
>> not
>>
>>> just another
>>> proprietary professional grimoire.
>>>
>>> The market we address necessarily includes (as Donald
>>> Farren rather ...
>>> sternly reminded us) users who may have reason to
>>>
>> consult
>>
>>> resources
>>> outside fields in which they are expert at the
>>>
>> acronymic
>>
>>> level. In most
>>> cases it is possible to provide an author keyword or
>>>
>> two
>>
>>> and enough of
>>> the title (without abbreviations and over-concern
>>>
>> about
>>
>>> length) to
>>> indicate the nature of the reference and to serve as
>>>
>> the
>>
>>> basis for a
>>> reasonably precise catalog/database search.
>>> "Adams" and "Evans" and
>>> "Sabin" really must give way to something a
>>>
>> bit
>>
>>> more self-explanatory
>>> and less likely to produce about 112,000,000 Google
>>>
>> hits
>>
>>> (result from
>>> search on "evans"). These traditional
>>>
>> citations
>>
>>> may unite the
>>> cognoscenti who receive the posher sale catalogs, but
>>>
>> they
>>
>>> separate us
>>> even from our colleagues the next desk over.
>>>
>>> In such cases as ESTC or ISTC, surely we can extend
>>>
>> this
>>
>>> principle to
>>> formulate the reference as, e.g. "English short
>>>
>> title
>>
>>> catalogue (ESTC)"
>>> or "Incunabula short-title catalogue
>>>
>> (ISTC)",
>>
>>> both of which phrases I
>>> just cut, pasted, and lower-cased from those websites.
>>>
>> (And
>>
>>> since it's
>>> possible in some such cases, we might encourage the
>>>
>> use of
>>
>>> the 856 field
>>> or other linking device(s) to take users to the
>>>
>> database,
>>
>>> or even the
>>> particular entry.)
>>>
>>> There will be work involved in revising catalog
>>>
>> records,
>>
>>> though I
>>> suspect that many (most?) institutions that make use
>>>
>> of
>>
>>> such references
>>> can globally update phrases in specific fields (MARC
>>>
>> hath
>>
>>> yet its uses).
>>> I do believe that it would be worth the effort, if
>>>
>> only to
>>
>>> preserve a
>>> little longer our ability to provide this information
>>>
>> at
>>
>>> all, in the
>>> face of those who urge us to "get over
>>>
>> ourselves"
>>
>>> and, I guess, throw
>>> over our more educated users.
>>>
>>> RICHARD NOBLE : RARE BOOKS CATALOGER : JOHN HAY
>>>
>> LIBRARY :
>>
>>> BROWN
>>> UNIVERSITY PROVIDENCE, RI 02912 : 401-863-1187/FAX
>>>
>> 863-2093
>>
>>> :
>>> RICHARD_NOBLE at BROWN.EDU
>>>
>
>
>
>
>
>
--
__________________________
Randal Brandt
Principal Cataloger
The Bancroft Library
(510) 643-2275
rbrandt at library.berkeley.edu
http://bancroft.berkeley.edu
"It's hard enough to remember my opinions without
remembering my reasons for them"--The Streets.
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