Synopses & Reviews
Summary: This book is an introduction, 'handy' and authoritative guide to the principles of cataloguing for librarians, information scientists and information managers. It is intended to be used in conjunction with an internationally recognised standard to show how, firstly, cataloguing underpins all the other activities of an information service and, secondly, how to apply best practice in a variety of different situations. Key Features: It relates theory to practice It includes guidance on subject cataloguing as well as descriptive cataloguing Is written in an easy-to-read style Covers the use of ISBD and Dublin Core in descriptive cataloguing, rather than being tied exclusively to using AACR The book also covers the principles of subject cataloguing, a topic which most non-librarians believe to be an integral part of cataloguing Contents: Why bother to catalogue What to catalogue - writing a cataloguing policy, what a catalogue record contains, the politics of cataloguing, Who should catalogue - how long does it take to catalogue a book, skill sets needed, appropriate levels of staffing, organising time How to catalogue and not reinvent the wheel - choosing a records management system, international standards (AACR/MARC, ISBD, Dublin Core), subject cataloguing, and authority control Is it a book, is it a journal - distinguishing between formats, the 'awkward squad', loose-leaf files, websites and skeletons What's a strange attractor? Cataloguing subjects you know nothing about - finding the right subject headings, verifying your information Ici on ne lit pas le francais: unknown languages and how to deal with them - what language is it, transcribing non-Roman alphabets, understanding the subject Special cases - rare books and archival collections, children's books, electronic media Resources for cataloguers - reference books, online discussion lists, conferences, bibliography
Review
"I would recommend this book to any library school student, future cataloger or not, who wishes to be well-rounded."
-TechKnow
Synopsis
The book is aimed at librarians and informational professionals responsible for cataloguing materials (of any format) for their information service. Knowledge managers will also find the book of interest.
Synopsis
This book is an introduction and authoritative guide to the principles of cataloging for librarians, information scientists and information managers. It shows how cataloging underpins all the other activities of an information service and how to apply best practice in a variety of different situations.
About the Author
Jane Read is cataloging officer at The Higher Education Academy, UK.
Table of Contents
PART 1 THE BIG PICTURE: Why bother to catalogue?; What to catalogue?; Who should catalogue?; How to catalogue … and not reinvent the wheel
PART 2 THE NITTY-GRITTY: Is it a book, is it a journal …?; Whats a strange attractor? Cataloguing subjects you know nothing about; Ici on ne lit pas le français: unknown languages and how to deal with them; Special cases