Recently I was able to attend a workshop at the American Library Association Annual Meeting, sponsored by the RDA Steering Committee, providing an introduction to the beta revised RDA Toolkit. The RDA Steering Committee (RSC) initiated the RDA Toolkit Restructure and Redesign (3R) project in 2017, redesigning the toolkit to align with the IFLA Library Reference Model.
The beta Toolkit is available at https://beta.rdatoolkit.org/rda.web/ and users are encouraged to explore and provide feedback. Presentations from the workshop are available on the RSC's presentation site, http://www.rda-rsc.org/node/560.
What do I think the takeaways are? An understanding of the IFLA LRM is essential to navigating the revised toolkit as all instructions are organized in accordance with this model. The toolkit is very much a work in progress, so it is difficult to tell how it will be to work with, examples are incomplete and some navigational aids have yet to be developed. While the language used is very consistent, it is also somewhat opaque. The new version will be reliant on "application profiles" to provide guidance to catalogers for use of the recording options presented for each data element. It is anticipated that communities of practice, e.g. music catalogers, law catalogers, will develop best practices for catalogers working in these areas.
The RSC has not determined a date for transition to the revised toolkit; they must first agree that the 3R project is complete. The RDA Board must unanimously approve the determination. A transition date will then be announced; the original site will remain available for one year beyond that date so users can move to the new toolkit.
Monday, July 16, 2018
Monday, July 2, 2018
Stanford Libraries Awarded Grant to Implement LD Environment
The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation has awarded Stanford Libraries a $4
million grant to lead an effort to integrate library data into the greater Web
via linked data. Stanford will be partnering with Cornell, Harvard, and the
University of Iowa to implement a prototype environment and tools over the next
two years. A deliberate partnership with the Program for Cooperative Cataloging
(PCC) and the Library of Congress has been included in the project, allowing
for an expansion of the number of libraries that will be able to implement
linked data.
More details can be found in the press release on Library
Technology Guides at https://librarytechnology.org/pr/23584.
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