Core Catalog Management Interest Group

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✉ Send an email to ALA-CoreCatalogManagement@ConnectedCommunity.org to start a discussion or share a file.

About this Group

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Purpose: Discusses the various issues involved in cataloging, classification, authority control and metadata application after the initial cataloging has been performed, including its impact on discovery. Provides a forum for exchanging information and discussing techniques, new developments, and problems with managing the data integrity of library catalogs and related discovery tools.

Related Groups:

This interest group is part of Core's Metadata and Collections Section.

Portraits of three Core members with caption Become a Member: Find Your Home: Core.

 

Slides and Recording Available Now for "Core Catalog Management Interest Group Session at the Core IG Week on Feb. 3, 2021"

  • 1.  Slides and Recording Available Now for "Core Catalog Management Interest Group Session at the Core IG Week on Feb. 3, 2021"

    Posted Feb 04, 2021 04:31 PM
    Thank you for attending the ALA Core Catalog Management Interest Group session at the Core IG Week on Feb. 3, 2021. Please find the recording link below:
    https://ala-events.zoom.us/rec/play/h1IhN7fP3Z8d_bCJANEuIvrYA4Xtgh-CD7Q6fJS3H30fhoFgxLvbu5-LJ_qOUaMB44VqRRS0ZoKHcw-C.kAmd12MYXjjT1Opc?startTime=1612375235000

    Presentations

    "Keep Calm and Migrate on: Getting Buy In for Consortial Changes During a Migration" presented by Jennifer M. Eustis, Metadata Librarian, UMass Amherst
    Library systems migrations are disruptive. Cleanup projects start sometimes years in advance. Workflows and processes are reviewed and often are changed. There might be staff who remember the last migration with not so fond memories of it. Other staff might be afraid of how their workflows are changing and if those changes will upend years of work. Others might push for more radical changes making those who don't want changes even more nervous. There are numerous working parts and gears. All too often communication becomes an issue. How, when, and what to communicate to which groups is not always evident. Imagine this at the consortial level. In this presentation, I will share how the Five College Consortium has adapted and built on a grassroots approach to communication and decision making called open houses for our migration project.

    "OCLC Data Sync Reports with Python" presented by Colin Bitter, Head of Cataloging and Metadata, R. Barbara Gitenstein Library, The College of New Jersey
    OCLC's data sync program within Collection Manager allows OCLC member libraries to synchronize their holdings in WorldCat. While the service is convenient and easy to use, the post processing reports delivered by OCLC need to be examined in order to consistently align data between a local ILS/LSP and WorldCat. What to do with each report can be confusing, particularly in light of OCLC's updates to the program in summer 2020; indeed, as many as eight reports can be generated for each file of records sent to OCLC. What should be done with upgraded OCLC numbers? Do newly created bibs in WorldCat need attention? Do all reports require attention? This presentation will show how to simplify the processing of data sync reports using Python and OCLC's Metadata API.

    "Public Notes to the Rescue! Connecting Resources, Services, and Practices in the Library Catalog" presented by Rebecca Hunnicutt, Collections Management Librarian, and Jeffrey M. Mortimore, Discovery Services Librarian, Georgia Southern University
    Communicating connections between library resources, services, and practices is challenging, especially via the catalog. How do we help researchers find special collection items, locate finding aids, and schedule viewings? How do we communicate that demand-driven ebooks are briefly available, but then must be requested for purchase? To use resources effectively, patrons need to be aware of related services and practices but relaying that information can be difficult. What if the catalog is the patron's only point of contact?
    During this presentation, we will share examples and simple techniques for leveraging public notes to make connections between resources, services, and practices. Specifically, we'll look at how HTML formatting enhances notes to engage patrons with these services and practices. In doing so, we will consider how technical and public service librarians can work together to develop effective notes.

    Learn more about the Catalog Management Interest Group.  Please contact

    CMIG Co-Chairs
    Elizabeth Miraglia
    emiraglia@ucsd.edu
    Jianying Shou
    jianying.shou@duke.edu

    CMIG Co-Vice Chairs 
    Lauren Geiger
    lgeiger@library.msstate.edu
    Peggy Griesinger
    mgriesi2@nd.edu

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    Jianying Shou
    Duke University Library
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