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a guide to choosing a metadata schema

Posted on July 30, 2007 by Marie Kennedy

i’ve been working on an article that is meant to guide digital collection developers to consider particular aspects of how he/she intends the collection to be used, in order to choose an appropriate metadata schema.  i’ve seen in real life, and heard stories about, how a collection gets rolling, gets digitized, and then gets to the metadata stage without a real plan of which elements are important.  the guide is a series of nine questions to help the developer consider practical things, like, “who is your user?”  clarifying potential users (and uses) of a digital collection will guide a developer to identify key elements that the user will employ in a search of the collection, and those elements can play a dominant role in the schema that is ultimately chosen.  an example: if the collection is designed for history majors, who are very concerned about when things happened, it would be appropriate to include at least one date element in the schema, with a standardized way of entering the date information.

so, all you metadata experts out there, is there any one aspect of schema creation that you think a collection developer has to identify before choosing a schema?  leave a comment.

About Marie Kennedy

Putting everything into neat piles.
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  • Marie Kennedy is the Serials & Electronic Resources Librarian at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles, CA. This blog is about organization, librarianship, and sometimes monkeys and/or bananas.
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