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Auteur principal: Webb, Mike
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Langue:en
Publié: 2005
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Accès en ligne:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ885625
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author Webb, Mike
author_facet Webb, Mike
Webb, Mike
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents EAD in the Department of Special Collections and Western Manuscripts at the Bodleian Library, United Kingdom Webb, Mike Foreign Countries Media Adaptation Electronic Publishing Western Civilization Financial Support Resource Allocation Context Effect Library Materials Research Libraries Archives Documentation Standards Access to Information Publications Medieval History The strategy for conversion to electronic cataloguing of western manuscripts in the Bodleian Library has been to a large extent determined by circumstances--the size and variety of the manuscript collections, the existence of detailed published catalogues for the earlier collections, the availability of funds for specific purposes, and, above all, by the increasing demand of scholars worldwide for online catalogues. From 1996, we began to investigate options for the conversion of our catalogues to electronic form. We were advised to look at EAD by the New Media Librarian in the Bodleian. It soon became apparent that EAD provided the flexibility needed to handle the great variety of manuscripts in the Library's collections. It also seemed to be sustainable and relatively cheap to implement, and excellent documentation was available from the United States. The adoption of EAD as the cataloguing system in Western Manuscripts was largely driven by the funds made available for retrospective conversion through the Research Libraries Group. This diverted our main efforts away from current cataloguing initially. However, the need to analyze our existing catalogues to provide instructions for data converters has had an enormous impact on current cataloguing practice in our department. Our choice of EAD for our electronic catalogues has been vindicated by its increasing use worldwide, and the numerous opportunities that have arisen for cooperative ventures founded on the use of EAD. Contributing to the Archives Hub in the United Kingdom has enabled us to create the first ever overview of the Bodleian's western manuscript collections. We are now also contributing our first detailed EAD catalogue to the Access to Archives (A2A) database. The adoption of EAD for cataloguing medieval manuscripts was unusual, but has created the essential building block for the extension of these descriptions using other XML schema now being adopted by cataloguers of medieval manuscripts. (Contains 6 figures and 13 notes.)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ885625
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2005
record_format eric
spellingShingle EAD in the Department of Special Collections and Western Manuscripts at the Bodleian Library, United Kingdom
Webb, Mike
Foreign Countries
Media Adaptation
Electronic Publishing
Western Civilization
Financial Support
Resource Allocation
Context Effect
Library Materials
Research Libraries
Archives
Documentation
Standards
Access to Information
Publications
Medieval History
EAD in the Department of Special Collections and Western Manuscripts at the Bodleian Library, United Kingdom Webb, Mike Foreign Countries Media Adaptation Electronic Publishing Western Civilization Financial Support Resource Allocation Context Effect Library Materials Research Libraries Archives Documentation Standards Access to Information Publications Medieval History The strategy for conversion to electronic cataloguing of western manuscripts in the Bodleian Library has been to a large extent determined by circumstances--the size and variety of the manuscript collections, the existence of detailed published catalogues for the earlier collections, the availability of funds for specific purposes, and, above all, by the increasing demand of scholars worldwide for online catalogues. From 1996, we began to investigate options for the conversion of our catalogues to electronic form. We were advised to look at EAD by the New Media Librarian in the Bodleian. It soon became apparent that EAD provided the flexibility needed to handle the great variety of manuscripts in the Library's collections. It also seemed to be sustainable and relatively cheap to implement, and excellent documentation was available from the United States. The adoption of EAD as the cataloguing system in Western Manuscripts was largely driven by the funds made available for retrospective conversion through the Research Libraries Group. This diverted our main efforts away from current cataloguing initially. However, the need to analyze our existing catalogues to provide instructions for data converters has had an enormous impact on current cataloguing practice in our department. Our choice of EAD for our electronic catalogues has been vindicated by its increasing use worldwide, and the numerous opportunities that have arisen for cooperative ventures founded on the use of EAD. Contributing to the Archives Hub in the United Kingdom has enabled us to create the first ever overview of the Bodleian's western manuscript collections. We are now also contributing our first detailed EAD catalogue to the Access to Archives (A2A) database. The adoption of EAD for cataloguing medieval manuscripts was unusual, but has created the essential building block for the extension of these descriptions using other XML schema now being adopted by cataloguers of medieval manuscripts. (Contains 6 figures and 13 notes.)
title EAD in the Department of Special Collections and Western Manuscripts at the Bodleian Library, United Kingdom
topic Foreign Countries
Media Adaptation
Electronic Publishing
Western Civilization
Financial Support
Resource Allocation
Context Effect
Library Materials
Research Libraries
Archives
Documentation
Standards
Access to Information
Publications
Medieval History
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ885625