a brief introduction to encoded archival description

Post on 22-Apr-2015

1.750 Views

Category:

Education

2 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

DESCRIPTION

A basic presentation prepared for Queens College (CUNY) Graduate School of Library and Information Science, May 2011. Describes what EAD is, how it is created, and how it is implemented.

TRANSCRIPT

1

Overview

I. EAD BasicsII. Finding AidIII. ImplementationIV. Resources

2

I. The Basics

3

What is EAD?

XML standard for encoding finding aids

I. Basics

4

XML standard for encoding finding aids

I. Basics - What is EAD?

XML (eXtensible Markup Language):set of rules for structuring data

5

<item>2011</item>

<container type=“box”>2011</container>

<unitdate era=“CE”>2011</unitdate>

6

XML standard for encoding finding aids

I. Basics - What is EAD?

Tag:

<unitdate era=“ce”>2011</unitdate>

Attribute:

<unitdate era=“ce”>2011</unitdate>

Element:

<unitdate era=“ce”>2011</unitdate>7

XML standard for encoding finding aids

I. Basics - What is EAD?

<ead> <eadheader> <titleproper>Guide to the

Papers of Leo N. Tolstoy</titleproper>

</eadheader></ead>

8

XML standard for encoding finding aids

I. Basics - What is EAD?

XML standard for encoding finding aids

Defined set of containers for descriptive data

Other encoding standards:MARC (books)Dublin Core (electronic objects)

9

I. Basics - What is EAD?

XML standard for encoding finding aids

Valid elements, attributes and entities are defined by a DTD or Schema

10

I. Basics - What is EAD?

XML standard for encoding finding aids

A description of records that gives the repository physical and intellectual control over the materials and that assists users to gain access to and understand the materials (SAA)

11

I. Basics - What is EAD?

XML standard for encoding finding aids

Describing Archives: A Content Standard (DACS)

12

I. Basics - What is EAD?

II. Finding Aid

13

EAD Finding Aid Structure

<ead><eadheader>Information about repository and finding aid</eadheader><archdesc>Description of archival materials</archdesc>

</ead>

II. Finding Aid

14

Guide to the Arthur Abelmann Collection

15

II. Finding Aid

Questions?

16

II. Finding Aid

III. Implementation

17

III. Implementation:Creating EAD

18

Archivists’ ToolkitIII. Implementation: Creating EAD

19

ArchonIII. Implementation: Creating EAD

20

OxygenIII. Implementation: Creating EAD

21

NoteTabIII. Implementation: Creating EAD

22

EADitorIII. Implementation: Creating EAD

23

NotepadIII. Implementation: Creating EAD

24

EAD Tag LibraryIII. Implementation: Creating EAD

25

III. Implementation:Using EAD

26

Now What?III. Implementation: Using EAD

27

XSLTIII. Implementation: Using EAD

28

XSLTIII. Implementation: Using EAD

29

EAD to HTMLIII. Implementation: Using EAD

30

EAD to HTML with DCIII. Implementation: Using EAD

31

EAD to HTMLIII. Implementation: Using EAD

32

EAD to PDFIII. Implementation: Using EAD

33

EAD to MARCIII. Implementation: Using EAD

34

Other Uses

• Bulk updates• EAD consortia • Metadata for digitized collections• Faceted searching• Anything structured data allows

III. Implementation: Using EAD

35

IV. Resources

36

EAD ToolsIV. Resources

37

Upcoming SAA Webinars

• July 7: Archivists’ Toolkit: Shortening the Path from Accession to Researcher

• July 21: EAD Tips and Tricks: Repurposing EAD with XSLT

IV. Resources

38

Tinker!

• EAD Cookbook

• An XML Editor

• Library of Congress EAD files

IV. Resources

39

Download via Slideshare:

http://www.slideshare.net/archivistkevin/a-brief-introduction-to-encoded-archival-description

Twitter @archivistkevin

Thank you!

40

top related