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Retrospective Conversion is an essential guide for library catalogers and technical services managers in the process of converting manual catalog records to machine readable form. It clearly illustrates the advantages and disadvantages of the three conversion methods--converting in-house, contracting to a vendor, and a combination of the two--and covers the areas of cost, staff, time, and record quality for each. Catalogers will learn how to make a bigger investment in advance planning to achieve better end results. These helpful chapters emphasize the need for planning, quality control, and…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Retrospective Conversion is an essential guide for library catalogers and technical services managers in the process of converting manual catalog records to machine readable form. It clearly illustrates the advantages and disadvantages of the three conversion methods--converting in-house, contracting to a vendor, and a combination of the two--and covers the areas of cost, staff, time, and record quality for each. Catalogers will learn how to make a bigger investment in advance planning to achieve better end results. These helpful chapters emphasize the need for planning, quality control, and authority control in the creation of a complete catalog in a machine readable form.

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Autorenporträt
Brian Schottlaender, MLS, is Assistant University Librarian for Technical Services at the University of California at Los Angeles where he has coordinated projects resulting in the retrospective conversion of over one and a half million bibliographic records.