The document discusses issues around making materials from the State Library of Victoria findable online. It summarizes the different types of materials held in the collections, including books, maps, manuscripts, and digital resources. It also outlines the various sources of metadata that describe these materials, and the pathways that this metadata takes between different discovery platforms and databases. Key challenges mentioned include data synchronization between systems, complexity in handling different material formats, and addressing legacy descriptive practices and uncatalogued materials. The document seeks input on these findability challenges from the perspective of audiences and users.
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Making materials findable at State Library Victoria, May 2015
1. 26 May 2015
Making Materials Findable at the State Library of Victoria
Alan Manifold, Digital and Library Applications Manager
Finding the bodies
“Finding the bodies” - http://handle.slv.vic.gov.au/10381/256941
2. P–2
State Library of Victoria Collections
Digitised
SubscriptionsOther
Print
Pictures
Maps
Manuscripts
Diaries
Pamphlets
Books
Serials
Plans
Sound files
Videos
Open stacks
Closed stacks
BOSS
Pictures
Maps
Manuscripts
Rare
Plans
Realia
LPs
Art
Kits
Primo Central
SFX
MetaLib
eBooks
Political
Ephemera
Databases
3. P–3
Audiences
Onsite Users
Remote Users (more than 50% of web access)
Victorian
Other (domestic and foreign)
Identified audience segments:
Creatives and Contributors
Culture Seekers
Researchers
Transactional Users
Young Learners and Families
4. P–4
Sources of metadata
Cataloguing in Voyager (MARC)
Cataloguing module
Web form for Australiana
Spreadsheet cataloguing (Excel to MARC or Dublin Core)
Vendor record loads (MARC and MARC-XML)
DigiTool serial loads (METS)
DigiTool Deposit Module (Dublin Core)
Acquisitions Staff
Selected and trained external contributors
General public?
DigiTool individual images (Dublin Core)
Archivist’s Toolkit (EAD)
6. P–6
Issues with all these data transfers
Synchronisation issues
Divergence
Lag time
Complexity
Data redundancy
Script issues
Multiplicity
Complexity
Maintenance
Currency
Timing
“Database of record” question
Multiple repositories of data
No database has all of the data
Record level differences (bib vs volume vs item)
8. P–8
Access methods
Internet
Explorer
Firefox Chrome Etc
v.10 v.11 v.31 v.32 v.36 v.37 v.??-1 v.??
Super
Hi-Res
Hi-Res
Not So
Hi-Res
Lo-Res Icky old
Res
In-house Anywhere else
Via Primo,
DigiTool
& Web
Via API
& Z39.50
Desktop
Laptop
Tablet
Smart Phone
Mac
9. P–9
Some Issues: Copyright
In copyright
In copyright, copyright assigned to SLV
In copyright, restricted
Out of copyright
Orphaned works
Copyright undetermined
In-House Use
Embargoes
Low Resolution
11. P–11
Some Issues: Uncatalogued and Poorly catalogued materials
P–11
The more material is available online…
The more material patrons expect to be online…
Which leads to the unrealistic idea that everything is online…
Which leads to not searching anywhere else…
Which causes frustration from not finding materials…
http://handle.slv.vic.gov.au/10381/185891
[Woman destroying television set] [art original] / Mary Leunig
12. P–12
Some Issues: Complex Formats
Manuscripts and Books
Each page is an image
Can include transcripts
Serial Titles
Each page is an image
Each issue is an entity
The title is another entity
Primo handles these poorly
Designed for record=title
Adapted to handle
images
No parent/child concept
13. P–13
Some Issues: Legacy Data
Never possible to get it all consistent
Problem from being on leading edge
Current best practices vs Consistency