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Preparing the Collection for Automation Dania Bilal IS 592 Spring 2005.

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Presentation on theme: "Preparing the Collection for Automation Dania Bilal IS 592 Spring 2005."— Presentation transcript:

1 Preparing the Collection for Automation Dania Bilal IS 592 Spring 2005

2 Things to Consider  Weeding  Inventory  Sheflist analysis  Recon decisions

3 Weeding  Weeding is essential before retrospective conversion (recon)  Weed the collection based on the library’s weeding criteria  Withdraw the shelflist cards for weeded items

4 Inventory  Inventory is performed to identify items for which no shelflist cards exist, and to identify shelflist cards for which materials are missing or lost.  Decide on the materials to be converted

5 Shelflist Analysis  Materials destined for recon must have shelflist cards  The more complete and accurate the information on the cards is, the higher the probability is for finding matches in MARC databases

6 Shelflist Analysis  Shelflist analysis ensures uniformity and consistency  Each shelflist card must contain this information:

7 Shelflist Analysis – ISBN and LCCN – no. of copies of an item – no. of volumes for an item – accurate bibliographic information (author, title, publication information, etc.) – a call number and a standard prefix (R for reference or Ref for reference, etc.)

8 Recon  Recon is the process of converting shelflist cards into a machine-readable format based on the MARC 21 standard.  Each shelflist card is matched against a vendor’s MARC database(s). Matches are done by ISBN, LCCN, then author, author/title, or title.

9 Recon  Enhancements may be made to matched MARC records, as specified by the library.  Matched MARC records are saved onto CD’s or other media, or transferred electronically over the Web.  Non-matches are either keyed-in by an operator or sent back to the library for in- house conversion.

10 Recon Specifications  Vendor profile specifications – The vendor should send you a library profile form to complete and return  Library specifications – Includes specifications not addressed in the vendor’s profile form

11 Recon Vendor Forms  Forms may include these options: – Fiction: FIC with first 3 letters of Main entry – Easy books: E with first 3 letters of Main entry – Reference: REF with Dewey with first 3 letters of Main entry – Barcodes: range of barcodes for items and range of barcodes for patrons

12 Who Does the Recon?  Vendor (outsourcing) – Advantages Students to describe – Disadvantages Students to describe

13 Who Does the Recon?  Library staff (in-house) – Fee-based options: CD-ROM Web services –http://www.itsmarc.com (TLC ITS.MARC)http://www.itsmarc.com –http://www.booksys.com (EZCat/Pro)http://www.booksys.com –http://www.oclc.org (OCLC)http://www.oclc.org

14 Who Does the Recon?  Library staff – Free Web-based MARC records http://www.loc.gov/z3950 Library of Congress Z39.50 Gatewayhttp://www.loc.gov/z3950 http://www.sunlink.ucf.edu Sunlinkhttp://www.sunlink.ucf.edu

15 Who Does the Recon?  Library staff – Advantages Students to describe – Disadvantages Students to describe

16 Who Does the Recon?  Combined conversion process – Vendor & library staff – Advantages Students to describe – Disadvantages Students to describe

17 What Recon Method to Use?  Decision depends on: – the type of library and its collection size – the qualifications of existing library staff – the timeline for completing the automation project – the cost analysis performed for various recon methods

18 Cost Analysis for Recon  Why do a cost analysis?  How to do a cost analysis? – See Text, pp. 100-101.  Does a large library need to perform a cost analysis?

19 Barcoding the Collection  Types of barcodes: – Smart barcodes – Dumb barcodes  Can dumb barcodes become smart?

20 Specifications for Barcodes  Recon specifications should include smart and dumb barcodes  Smart barcodes are generated during the conversion process

21 Specifications for Barcodes  Specifications for smart barcodes should include: – compatibility with the application software – compliance with barcode standard (symbology) – the type indicator (e.g., 1 for materials) – name of the library, item title, and item call number

22 Specifications for Barcodes – barcodes should be arranged by call number – one barcode is needed for copy of an item held in the library – one barcode is needed for each volume in a multi-volume set held in the library

23 Barcoding the Collection?  Pre-requisites – close the library – recall checked-out items – divide shelves into sections – use the smart barcodes first Match each call number on the barcode with that on the shelf before affixing the barcode

24 Barcoding the Collection?  Placement of barcodes – Print materials Considerations Placement – Non-print materials Considerations Placement

25 Bibliographic Standards  The format and content of the cataloging database must conform to bibliographic standards. The most important ones are: – MARC 21 – AACR2R – ISBD

26 MARC 21  Components: – leader – fixed field (tag 008) – variable fields (tags 001-900) – local field (tag 900) – tags

27 MARC 21  Components (cont’d.) – indicators – subfield codes – delimiters  MARC manual can be found on the Web at http://lcweb.loc.gov/marc/umb http://lcweb.loc.gov/marc/umb

28 Class Activity Situation: You have been appointed on a library automation team and was asked to decide whether to perform recon in-house or outsource it. The library has 8000 books and 2000 multimedia items.  What would be your decision?  What would you base your decision on? Rembmer that you need to provide convincing arguments about either decision.


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