Glenn E.
Patton
Director, WorldCat Quality Management
OCLC
6565 Kilgour Place
Dublin OH
43017-3395
Phone: +1.800.848.5878, ext. 6371 or
+1.614.764.6371
Fax: +1.614.718.7187
Email: mailto:[log in to unmask]
If the BIBCO record has its headings controlled in OCLC when the record is created (or later), I assume that means that if the authority record is later changed the matching heading in the bib record IS changed, is it not? I realize controlling headings isn’t one of the requirements for BIBCO, but I always control the headings and think it is good practice. Controlling the headings is an excellent way to make sure the BIBCO records are “kept in synch with the authority records.” It’s also a convenient way to ensure that all the needed authority work has (or has not) been done.
I don’t agree that “the BIBCO process never worked.” I think it does work well. There used to be the problem of two separate databases (RLIN and OCLC) containing different (and sometimes duplicate but different) BIBCO records, but that problem has been solved with the merger of RLIN and OCLC.
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
From: Program for
Cooperative Cataloging [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Lasater,
Mary Charles
Sent: Monday, May 12, 2008 1:13 PM
To:
[log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Horrible record [going off on the
tangent of Enc lvl]
Amy,
A comment I heard a few years ago has made me feel that coding a record 'PCC' is counter-productive. One cataloger of A-V material indicated that she always contributes at the K level because then others can add to her records.
My problem with BIBCO records is that I may create that 'perfect' record today with matching authority records and tomorrow someone will change one of those authority records and that BIBCO coding won't mean anything since the matching heading did not get changed. BFM only went one way... to LC, never to other contributing libraries so in my humble opinion the BIBCO process never worked.
I support Authority control in many ways and hope we can encourage more participation but until our BIBCO records are kept in synch with the authority records, the only use for the PCC coding is to send these through copy cataloging.
Enhance should be relaxed and it should be made 'easy' to correct errors without having to evaluate the entire record.
My very personal 2 cents,
Mary Charles
From: Program for
Cooperative Cataloging on behalf of Amy H Turner
Sent: Mon 5/12/2008
9:50 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: [PCCLIST]
Horrible record [going off on the tangent of Enc lvl]
I agree that there
should not be a stigma attached to K records, and that there are advantages to
inputting a record that can be upgraded by any library. It is clear that
the various Enc lvls are inconsistently applied, with some libraries and
catalogers taking pride in inputting only the higher levels, and others having a
philosophical attachment to K or 4, even when the requirements for I or blank
are met. At Duke, we no longer use Enc lvl as a criteria for sorting
records, because it is not a reliable indicator of completeness or authority.
At the BIBCO OpCo
meeting, Cynthia Whitacre from OCLC led a discussion of making the Enhance
program less restrictive. I threw out a wild idea of also making the
requirements for inputting records a bit more restrictive, so there would be
fewer messy records to clean up. On reflection, here is a refinement of
that idea. What if libraries with full level authorization could input
only K, 4 and lower, and could replace those levels (as they can now)?
Enhance libraries could input and replace I and lower; national level enhance
libraries all levels (as now). Enhance and PCC libraries could take a
special responsibility for the database as a whole, with the elimination of the
restriction on editing records not held. OCLC could work to expand the
enhance program, PCC to expand our membership. WorldCat could become truly
a world catalog, with membership taking more responsibility for ongoing
maintenance.
Amy
Amy H.
Turner
Monographic Cataloger & Authority Control Coordinator
Duke
University Libraries
Durham, NC
27708-0190
[log in to unmask]
Wayne Richter
<[log in to unmask]>
05/12/2008 09:16 AM
|
|
Ted Gemberling wrote:
<<I think
another way to approach this matter would be to say that
more
records should be K level. And maybe that's one of the
problems
associated with the PCC program, that it puts a subtle
pressure on
catalogers to claim more competency than they really
have. In
retrospect, I realize I should have made that modern Greek
record a K,
so that a more knowledgeable person could revise it
easily, though I did
try to be careful and
thorough.=20
I think there's a sort of stigma attached to a
K-level record: you're
not a "real cataloger" if you enter records
like that. But we need to
create K-level records if we're working in
an area where we don't have
knowledge.=20>>
I
think Ted has hit the nail on the head. I have entered "K"
level
records when I can't complete all of the authority work
(requires
extensive research, time constraints, vital information
missing--there
are many reasons).
I know other
libraries do this. I have found many Harvard "K" records
far better
than many "I"s and "blanks". The descriptive cataloging is
usually
superb and the only thing missing is that not all authority work
has
been completed.
There shouldn't be any stigma attached to
saying "I don't have enough
information to do this right at
this time." It seems to me that pcc
should allow "K" equivalent
records. I think it would speed up workflow
as well as allowing
someone who did have the information at hand to
upgrade the
record.
Wayne Richter
Asian Materials Specialist/PCC
Liaison
The Libraries
Western Washington
University
Bellingham WA
98225-9103