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Dettagli Bibliografici
Autore principale: Irvine, Ruth
Natura: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lingua:en
Pubblicazione: 1972
Soggetti:
Accesso online:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED072785
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author Irvine, Ruth
author_facet Irvine, Ruth
Irvine, Ruth
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents MARC for Cataloguers: An Explanation of its Use. Irvine, Ruth Cataloging Computers Library Automation Library Instruction Library Technical Processes Seminars A seminar on practical MARC cataloging was held at Southampton University library in April 1972. MARC is an acronym for Machine Readable Cataloging, a system devised by the Library of Congress and developed with them by the British National Bibliography. MARC enables the catalog data for any given work to be read and manipulated by the computer, which means that each record is broken down into its component parts, and each is given a symbol (a tag) which the machine is programmed to recognize when action is required on it. In MARC, the breakdown of each record and the tagging structure is as detailed as is practical. This is to give the computer as much flexibility as possible in handling the data. This text was prepared for the use of the participants in the working seminar, and is being made available with the intent that it will aid catalogers and library school students in gaining a brief introduction to the MARC system. (Author/SJ)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED072785
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1972
record_format eric
spellingShingle MARC for Cataloguers: An Explanation of its Use.
Irvine, Ruth
Cataloging
Computers
Library Automation
Library Instruction
Library Technical Processes
Seminars
MARC for Cataloguers: An Explanation of its Use. Irvine, Ruth Cataloging Computers Library Automation Library Instruction Library Technical Processes Seminars A seminar on practical MARC cataloging was held at Southampton University library in April 1972. MARC is an acronym for Machine Readable Cataloging, a system devised by the Library of Congress and developed with them by the British National Bibliography. MARC enables the catalog data for any given work to be read and manipulated by the computer, which means that each record is broken down into its component parts, and each is given a symbol (a tag) which the machine is programmed to recognize when action is required on it. In MARC, the breakdown of each record and the tagging structure is as detailed as is practical. This is to give the computer as much flexibility as possible in handling the data. This text was prepared for the use of the participants in the working seminar, and is being made available with the intent that it will aid catalogers and library school students in gaining a brief introduction to the MARC system. (Author/SJ)
title MARC for Cataloguers: An Explanation of its Use.
topic Cataloging
Computers
Library Automation
Library Instruction
Library Technical Processes
Seminars
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED072785