1 / 11

Retrospective cataloguing, or, The ‘forgotten’ projects

Retrospective cataloguing, or, The ‘forgotten’ projects. The need for a national strategy. Retro challenges. Perceptions Reluctance and disinterest Missed opportunities How much work had been done and why had it stopped?. The past. 1. Early 1990s, unknown mass 1994-1995 FIGIT study

adamma
Download Presentation

Retrospective cataloguing, or, The ‘forgotten’ projects

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Retrospective cataloguing, or, The ‘forgotten’ projects The need for a national strategy

  2. Retro challenges • Perceptions • Reluctance and disinterest • Missed opportunities • How much work had been done and why had it stopped?

  3. The past. 1 • Early 1990s, unknown mass • 1994-1995 FIGIT study • 1996-1997 BLRIC study • 1997 Making the most of our libraries • 548 libraries responded • 50 million records awaiting retroconversion • calls for a national programme • 5 year target • Nominates the LIC

  4. The past. 2 • 1998 BL convenes a Pathfinding Group and funds a study. • 1999 Full Disclosure • Supports national programme • 10 years to complete 80% of the work • Nominates the new MLA • 1999-2002 RSLP • £30 million for projects including retro • 48 HEIs, 68% of these used the funds for retro work • 2000-2012? MLA • 2003-2007 Britain in Print • Pre 1700s British printed books

  5. The past. 3 • 2004 CURL survey following end of RSLP • Participants used RSLP funds • 14 million items • “prepare the ground for future funding bids” • 2006-2009 Copac Challenge Fund • Free or low cost access to CURL database • 2007 RIN study • 95 libraries responded (23% from HE) • 200 researchers responded • 50% of research collections still ‘hidden’ • Repeats call for a national strategy

  6. The present. 1 • New Year’s resolution • Merged discussion list retro@jiscmail.ac.uk • Proposed a new survey • Joining forces with RLUK • Survey launch July with help from MIMAS http://www.surveygizmo.com/s3/322159/RLUK-Retrospective-Cataloguing-Survey-in-association-with-the-London-Library

  7. The present. 2 • 75 libraries responded (39% from HE) • 15% not visible online at all • 10.6 million items outstanding – 14% • 1.2 million items requiring record enhancement • Most items from 16th to 20th century • Much of the backlog can be termed special collections • Non-book formats less likely to be catalogued at all

  8. The present. 3 • 55% have ongoing projects – of these 7 libraries plan to end in 2020 • 16% plan to start in the next 2 years • 12% have no immediate plans • 10% have completed projects • 7% have halted because of lack of funds • 46% of these have no immediate plans to resume work

  9. The future. 1 • Now what? • MLA? • Desired outcomes of respondents • Funding, awareness, visibility, collaborative working, national strategy • Other comments • Funding, security, practical help, digitisation, value of historical colls., visibility, etc.

  10. The future. 2 • Online National Register • 90% survey respondents in favour • Full Disclosure prioritisation matrix • RIN good practice guide

  11. Dunia García-OntiverosHead of Retrospective CataloguingThe London Librarydunia.garcia-ontiveros@londonlibrary.co.uk

More Related