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*I know that the early morning session I attended at ALA Annual in June, on
The Year of Cataloging Research, was filled to capacity with people sitting
on the floor and standing for a space to listen in, at the back of the large
meeting room.*
*For those who continue to say there is no interest in LIS, I think they are
hugely mistaken and need to take their heads out of the sand and start
offering more courses in cataloging, classification, metadata and more--
 sharing for those interested --Karen W*
*
*
*NEXT SPACE  : the OCLC Newsletter*
*No.15*
*ISSN: 1559-0011*
*April 2010*


*"The catalog is out of the box"*
*
*
*By Andy Havens and Tom Storey*


http://www.oclc.org/us/en/nextspace/015/1.htm

"For hundreds of years, metadata was kept in a box. Literally. A wooden box,
filled with paper cards. Libraries cataloged for one reason: to be able to
find resources on a shelf. Today, though, we're seeing a growing importance
placed on metadata management activities. In an increasingly
information-driven world, good metadata is the key to more than finding the
right item."

"Data-about-data is now used to track materials, assess needs, compare
collections, inform research, manage workflows, plan budgets and even make
friends. Catalogers have been joined by publishers, retail outlets, shipping
companies, researchers, faculty, Web programmers, search engine optimizers
and end users in the flow of metadata creation and modification. This puts
libraries, and catalogers, right in the middle of a revolution in how we
think about representing and describing information. And the more partners
we can involve in these processes, the more chances libraries have to add
value up and down a variety of data supply chains."

EXCERPTS below:

*The value of metadata in medicine*

"Preventing blindness is Dr. John Michon's passion. As a practicing
ophthalmologist and a medical researcher, he has studied and seen firsthand
the devastating effects of eye disease."

"And he knows that to eradicate vision loss, the clinical record of patient
care must be linked online with the huge datasets emerging from gene-mapping
projects and other research activities in order to create new associations
and new knowledge that doctors can act upon."

"That's where librarians come in, he says."

"The role of library and other information scientists is crucial to the
success of this effort," Dr. Michon says. "Physicians, allied health workers
and researchers are generally naïve when it comes to classification and
categorization issues. We're too busy with our primary duties. Creating,
implementing and testing knowledge models for the large and diverse number
of biomedical domains will be a cooperative process between librarians and
domain experts."

"Dr. Michon's thoughts highlight a trend sweeping across the information
community as people and communities are deluged with digital data: the
growing importance of metadata and the critical role librarians are playing
in making information systems better. Of course, the importance of knowledge
organization models and standardized description are nothing new to our
profession. Librarians have long been leaders in designing classification
systems, dating back to 1876, when Melvil Dewey first published the Dewey
Decimal Classification system." ...


Another EXCERPT below:

*
*
*A metadata renaissance for libraries*

"In her paper *Time Horizon 2020: Library Renaissance, Susan Gibbons, Vice
Provost and Dean, River Campus Libraries, University of Rochester, talks
about how the coming decade will mark the renaissance of technical services
and a complete transformation of collection development*.

Among the changes she sees:

"The emphasis of technical services will change from the acquisition of
content to the user's discovery of content. A library's success will be
defined by whether its users are finding the best materials easily and
quickly, rather than by collection metrics. A myriad of services, customized
to the library's local needs, will emerge that will sit on top of a
library's broad print and electronic collections. The success of these
services will be dependent upon the availability and quality of metadata."

"The need for all content to have some online manifestation, whether a
full-text scan or a metadata record, will force all of a library's hidden
collections into the light, including manuscripts, images and other special
collections."

"Dissertations, articles, books, working papers, technical reports and other
such content will flood into the campus libraries for curation, description
and distribution. Technical service staff will find an increasing percentage
of their work shifted away from the procurement of external content to the
care and distribution of locally created content."

"The Google Book Project will cause a resurgence in the use of the print
collections. As books are rediscovered, there will be a shift of resources
toward identifying, preserving and republishing books held uniquely by each
library."

"The year 2020 will still find libraries creating, collecting, organizing,
delivering and preserving information resources; the fundamental "what" of
technical services and library collections will not change," Susan says.
"However, we must be ready for a radical transformation in the `how' and
`why' of these activities. I believe the focus will shift from external to
internal content, from just-in-case to just-in-time collection development,
and from disparate silos of information resources to a mandated expectation
that those silos can communicate and interact in ways that meet the
expectations of library users."...


and another EXCERPT:


*Using metadata to drive scientific data integration and analysis*

*"Jane Greenberg, Professor and Director, Metadata Research Center, School
of Information and Library Science, University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill, says it's a very exciting time to be involved with cataloging and
metadata."*

"*People are getting wind of the fact that librarians are the experts,*" she
says. "There are a lot of partnerships being formed and people are looking
to librarians for information standards and how to manage data. Never in our
time has there been a more universal interest in producing structured,
standardized information."

"Jane was approached by researchers from evolutionary biology who were
building a digital repository called Dryad to archive data and publish
findings in evolutionary biology, ecology and related fields. The repository
allows scientists to access and build on each other's findings."

"They asked me if I knew anything about the MARC format and Dublin Core,"
she says. "In fact, they said they needed bibliographic control. These
biologists actually used the words bibliographic control. It was pretty
amazing!" ...         EXCERPTS
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Karen Weaver, MLS
Electronic Resources Statistician
Duquesne University, Gumberg Library
Pittsburgh PA email: [log in to unmask]
/Adjunct Faculty, Cataloging & Classification
The iSchool at Drexel University, Philadelphia PA
email: [log in to unmask]

*"The truth is incontrovertible.  Panic may resent it, ignorance may deride
it,*
* malice may distort it, but there it is."*
*---Winston Churchill, Speech to the House of Commons May 17, 1916*