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European RDA Interest Group (EURIG)

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The Registry! :: home. The Registry! :: RDA. Cataloger's Desktop. Www.rdatoolkit.org. MarcEdit RDA Helper. Dragging old data forward: finding yourself an RDA Helper. RDA for the Non-Cataloger: What’s in It for You? | Assn. for Library Collections and Technical Services (ALCTS) RDA Ask-the-Experts Webinar | Assn. for Library Collections and Technical Services (ALCTS) RDA Name Authorities—What's New and Different from AACR2 | Assn. for Library Collections and Technical Services (ALCTS) Recording RDA Elements in MARC 21 Fields in Name Authority Records | Assn. for Library Collections and Technical Services (ALCTS) RDA in 10 Easy Steps | Assn. for Library Collections and Technical Services (ALCTS) Joint Steering Committee for Development of RDA: RDA Presentations. Below is a listing of recent and future presentations on RDA given by members of the JSC, the RDA Outreach Group, and other people connected to the development of RDA: Occasion: Georgia Public Library Service's "Georgia Cataloging Summit" Location: Unicoi Lodge & Conference Center, Helen, GA USA Date: August 9-10, 2011 Presenters: Barbara B.

Tillett and Judith A. Occasion: Special Libraries Association "RDA Overview" session Location: Philadelphia, PA, USA Date: June 14, 2011 Presenters: Judith A. Kuhagen Link: "The Content Standard, US RDA Test, Your preparations" [PPT] Occasion: Deutsche Bibliothekartag "United States RDA Test" session Location: Berlin, Germany Date: June 8, 2011 Presenters: Barbara B. Tillett Link: "United States RDA Test" [PPT] Occasion: North American Serials Interest Group preconference: "Serials and RDA: An Ongoing Relationship" Location: St Louis, MO, USA Date: June 1, 2011 Presenters: Judith A. Diane Hillmann: RDA Vocabularies in the Semantic Web. Crisis or Opportunity? Cataloging, Catalogers, RDA, and Change. Resource Description and Access (RDA): Information and Resources in Preparation for RDA (Aquisitions and Bibliographic Control, Library of Congress) Skip navigation Suggestions enabled.

The Library of Congress > Cataloging, Acquisitions > General, Descriptive Cataloging > RDA Resource Description and Access (RDA) Information and Resources in Preparation for RDA News Documentos disponibles en español (ACTUALIZADO Mayo de 2013) Documentation Training Community U.S. Last Updated: 08/08/2017 Stay Connected with the Library All ways to connect » Find us on. Workshop Course Materials (Catalogers Learning Workshop, Program for Cooperative Cataloging, Library of Congress) Adam L. Schiff's Home Page. Changes from AACR2 - LACONIPresentation-Part1-WithNotes.pdf. Changes from AACR2 to RDA - LACONIPresentation-Part2-WithNotes.pdf. A brief overview of some of the changes from AACR2 to RDA.

LC RDA Core Elements - core_elements.pdf. Resource Description & Access (RDA) RDA Basics | An Introduction to Resource Description and Access. RDA in MARC - October 2012: MARC Standards (Network Development and MARC Standards Office, Library of Congress) MARC 21 Updates 9-18 include all changes to MARC for use with RDA approved through June 2014. Content, Media and Carrier Types and Characteristics RDA Content Types MARC already indicates content type in LDR/06. RDA contains a list of English language content types for which a new field 336 was provided in MARC Bibliographic and in MARC Authority. Field 336 may contain the RDA term ($a) or a code ($b); codes were established in MARC Update 10. For a table that relates the MARC LDR/06 to the corresponding RDA content terms and MARC codes for RDA content terms see: Term and Code List for RDA Content Types.

RDA Media Types MARC already indicates media type in field 007/00. RDA Carrier Types MARC already indicates carrier type in field 007/01. RDA Carrier Characterisitcs MARC provides for recording carrier characteristics in textual form in Bibliographic fields 300, 340, and 5XX and in coded form in Bibliographic and Holdings field 007. Attributes of Names and Resources Relationships. RDA in the OPAC – some examples | the cloudy librarian. March 31st has come and gone. RDA records are flooding into our OPACS. What difference do these records make to our users? Back in 2011 I worked on a project comparing AACR2 and RDA music records . My goal was to determine how RDA would fulfill the FRBR user tasks (to find, identify, select, and obtain) in a traditional OPAC environment.

My conclusion was that without “FRBR-ized” systems these records would have little impact on discovery. Now that RDA has arrived, I was curious to see how music records (scores and sound recordings) are being displayed in OPACs. Here are some RDA records I looked at: 1) Mozart vocal score – OCLC #835097509 Texas State San Marcos – Millennium ILS 2) Mozart aria fragments (score) – OCLC #823230461 This is what I noticed: Some systems index creator names with their RDA relator codes (composer, performer, transcriber, arranger, etc.). UAL Library Catalogue Holdings Information. UAL Library Catalogue Holdings Information. Joint Steering Committee for Development of RDA: RDA.

Background RDA: Resource Description and Access was developed by JSC as part of its strategic plan (2005-2009) to replace the Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules, 2nd Edition Revised, which were first published in 1978. RDA provides a set of guidelines and instructions on formulating data to support resource discovery. RDA provides a comprehensive set of guidelines and instructions covering all types of content and media. Details of how to subscribe to the RDA Toolkit can be found on the publisher’s website. For a brief summary of RDA see the RDA Brochure (PDF format). Work on the new standard began in 2004, and in the same year the Committee of Principals for AACR (CoP) appointed Tom Delsey as the Editor.

RDA: Resource Description and Access is developed in a collaborative process led by the Joint Steering Committee for Development of RDA. JSC Aggregates Working Group (2015– ) Chair [not yet named] See terms of reference of the JSC Aggregates Working Group. Editor of RDA (2004–2009) Tom Delsey. RDA and OCLC. RDA (Resource Description and Access) is the new cataloging standard that will replace AACR2. Developed by the Joint Steering Committee for the Development of RDA, this online, web-based tool was released in July 2010. Publishers are the American Library Association, the Canadian Library Association and the Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals (CILIP). OCLC has participated actively in the process to produce RDA through our ex-officio membership in the ALA Committee on Cataloging: Description and Access and through our representation on the MARC Advisory Committee.

We also have staff participating in the Joint Steering Committee's two RDA Examples Groups and the RDA/MARC Working Group, which is preparing proposals for MARC 21 format change in support of RDA. In addition, OCLC is represented in the ALA RDA Implementation Task Force, which is planning for implementation activities in the U.S. In addition, Connexion now includes links to the RDA Toolkit. About RDA. Incorporating RDA practices into WorldCat. Assumptions This discussion paper assumes that the library community moves forward with the implementation of RDA: Resource Description and Access, an implementation that is currently envisioned to take place no earlier than January 1, 2013. It proposes a number of policies that may be put in place and actions that may be undertaken as part of incorporating RDA practices more fully into WorldCat.

It also attempts to balance the dual roles of WorldCat as a catalog and as a repository of bibliographic data. Initially, these proposed policies and actions are primarily focused on English-language-of-cataloging records that are created and maintained online by OCLC member libraries. As translations of RDA become available and as national libraries beyond the Anglo-American community make their policy decisions public, OCLC will expand these policy statements and action plans. The paper is being made available for OCLC member libraries to comment on these potential policies and actions.

RDA new cataloguing rules. Why new rules, and what has it got to do with me? Resource Description and Access (RDA) is the cataloguing standard being introduced to replace Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules, second edition (AACR2). National Library of Australia has announced that it will implement RDA in early 2013 (Australian Committee on Cataloguing n.d.). RDA will initially impact on cataloguers, and in the longer term will shape how end users of catalogues and discovery systems find the information they require. Therefore it is important for all people working in the library and information industry to have some understanding of the purpose of RDA and its implications for the library catalogue.

Cataloguing standards Catalogues have been a core part of a library’s activity for centuries, assisting individuals to locate information to suit their needs. Over this time, catalogues have been developed, updated, revised and recreated to meet customer needs. Need for change Putting the user first What now? References. AACR2. AACR2 is published under the auspices of the AACR Fund as outlined in the Governance section of this Web site. As noted in its General Introduction, the Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules (AACR) are designed for use in the construction of catalogues and other lists in general libraries of all sizes. The rules cover the description of, and the provision of access points for, all library materials commonly collected at the present time.

The second edition of the rules is based on a reconciliation of the British and North American texts of the 1967 edition. This extends to style, which is generally in accordance with the Chicago Manual of Style, and to spellings, which are those of Webster’s New International Dictionary. In addition to the Rules, The AACR Fund authorizes other publications. AACR is published in English and has been translated into other languages, which are listed under Translations section of this site. RDA: THE COMING CATALOGUING DEBACLE - rda1007.pdf.