Thursday, April 9, 2009
Mod 11: Website
Using Google, I searched for the terms "technical services cataloging" and found this Library Technical Services page. It contains links to resources for all aspects of technical services, from general to acquisitions to cataloging to subject indexing. While this specific page is most interesting from a tech services perspective, the site of which this is a component has similar pages for other library roles and departments, as well as librarianship in general, available by clicking the "Books and Libraries" link at the top of the page.
Sunday, April 5, 2009
Mod 10: Multimedia
This chart illustrates the relationship between various entities according to FRBR (Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Information). FRBR is an cataloging model seperate from AACR2 which focuses on the relationships between entities and groups of entitities, and as an alternate cataloging model is of interest to a well-rounded view of technical services and cataloging.
Denton, William. "Entity Relationships." The FRBR Blog. 2009. Retrieved 25 Apr 2009 from
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
Mod 9: Image
I found this image on Flickr after a lengthy search. I initially used Google Image with combinations of the terms "library", "librarian", "technical services", and "cataloging" but was unable to retrieve any usable results; the majority of the images I found were pictures of technical services employees at libraries across the country. Finally I turned to Flickr and began browsing through a variety of terms, and was able to find this image. The image's page describes it as a reminder of when to create item records versus bib records as a reserves manager, which is my current position, so I found it interesting and useful.
Saturday, February 28, 2009
Mod 6: Building Block Search


For my building block search, I was looking for information about early cataloging systems used in libraries. Using LibLit, I built my search with the terms (history OR origin) AND (cataloging OR classification) AND (library OR libraries OR technical services). While this search returned 457 results, there were multiple relevant items in the first page, including the article I chose as my primary result.
Friday, February 27, 2009
Mod 6: Specific Facet Search


To search for information on recent advances in cataloging in academic libraries, I began with the most specific information facet, cataloging advances. I searched in LexisNexis for the term "cataloging advances" in the Major US & World Publications, Blogs, and Web Publications categories, with a time limit of the most recent two years. I received 59 results, and searched within those results for the next most specific facet, "academic library". This narrowed the results to two items, the first of which was the most relevant.
Thursday, February 26, 2009
Mod 6: Browsing Search
Wednesday, February 25, 2009
Mod 6: Successive Fraction Search
Friday, February 20, 2009
Mod 5: Tagging
The book I chose is Introduction to Technical Services, seventh edition, by G. Edward Evans. I searched for books tagged with "cataloging" and "technical services", and initially selected this one based on the title. Judging from the tags, this is actually a book used later in the MLS program, so it seems like I made a good choice.
Monday, February 16, 2009
Week 4: RSS feed
For my RSS, I chose the Library of Congress news feed; since the LoC is such a major American library, a feed of its news headlines provides a daily update about its events and the issues it's involved it.
Sunday, February 8, 2009
Mod 3: Podcast
http://media.libsyn.com/media/sciencefriday/scifri-2007051112.mp3 (Podcast in .mp3 format)
I used Podscope, and searched for the term "library". After sorting the results by relevance rather than date, I found this episode of Science Friday in which the host and guests discuss an effort to digitize all library content to be made available online. Among the topics discussed are the challenges of cataloging such a vast amount of information in a new format, as well as indexing such a massive collection.
Monday, February 2, 2009
Mod 2: Related Blog
Assume for the sake of argument that there is some copyright inherent in a cataloging record (a not at all clear thing).
If any or all of a cataloging record does possess copyright, then it is of course held by the institution doing the cataloging, unless they assign it elsewhere.
In the case of LC, as part of the federal government nothing they do has copyright in the US.
In the case of large libraries doing original cataloging, I think it is in all of their collective interests to release this putatively copyrighted data into the public domain, in an exersize in mutual reciprocity.
Why do we share cataloging in the first place?
Isn’t that kind of mutual reciprocity exactly why libraries do cooperative cataloging in the first place, the very endeavor that gave rise to the regional ‘bibliographic utility’ of which OCLC is the only one left standing (in the US anyway)?
Libraries aren’t submitting their original cataloging to OCLC for the paltry sums OCLC ‘pays’ (ie credits) them for it; and they aren’t submitting it to OCLC in an attempt to help OCLC gain a monopoly on this information for their own business purposes. They’re submitting it, as they always have been, in order to freely share with other libraries in a collective endeavor of mutual reciprocity.
Monday, January 26, 2009
Mod 1: Blog
My primary area of interest is technical services. I'm currently working in the circulation department of a university library, but it's more about customer service and less about dealing with the library materials themselves. I would be most interested in exploring technical services in a public library, in order to deal with a wider variety of material than simply academic monographs.