Title: The IESR Content Manager
1The IESR Content Manager
- Leigh Morris
- MIMAS,
- The University of Manchester, UK
2Outline
- What the job involves
- Metadata quality
- Why isnt it easy to ensure quality?
- Processes
- Quality Assurance
- The future
3IESR Content Manager is people!
- Who am I?
- Job title
- Information Technology Officer,Development and
Service Support Joint Information Systems
CommitteeInformation Environment Service
RegistryContent Manager
4What am I supposed to do?
- Manage content of IESR
- Project plan
- Consistent, relevant metadata in the IESR
- Up to date data creation guidelines
- Quality Assurance procedures
- In addition, run IESR website
5So I ensure quality then
- Project plan in more detail
- Data checking
- Check consistency of data submissions, implement
quality assurance procedures and liaise with data
contributors to ensure data quality - Maintain and update data creation guidelines
- Make changes to guidelines as required
- Contacting contributors
- Contacting potential content providers and
encouraging the creation of metadata for
appropriate services
6What is quality metadata?
- What is quality?
- Hard to define
- Subjective, semantics
- For the IESR, dont know what quality means yet
- Probably means Fit for purpose
- IESR purpose Resource discovery
7Characteristics of quality metadata
- According to Hillman and Bruce, quality metadata
has - Completeness
- Accuracy
- Provenance
- Conformance to expectations
- Logical consistency and coherence
- Timeliness
- Accessibility
- The Continuum of Metadata Quality. In Metadata
in Practice ALA, 2004.
8Why is quality important?
- If the data is not quality then
- Trust in IESR data lost
- No use of IESR
- The Information Environment will break down!
- Resource discovery - quality ensures
- Resource can be found
- Resource can then be used
9Why isnt it easy to ensure quality?
- Collection description involves cataloguing
resources - Librarian skills
- Subjective
- Service description requires technical knowledge
about the service - Who creates descriptions?
- What skills do they have?
- Time Money
10Problem properties Collection Description
- Use
- Used in searching
- Might be displayed by e.g. portal
- What makes a good description?
- Can only make an informed judgement
- Define criteria for what a good Description
should contain - Currency a problem
11Problem properties Collection Subject
- Subjective
- Which controlled vocabulary?
- Specificity
- Number of terms
- Dewey
- Backbone for searching
- Requires licence
12Problem properties Service properties
- Interface information for Z39.50, SOAP, SRW,
web-cgi services - Probably needs to be manually created currently
- Output
- Supports Standard
13Getting data
- How do we get data?
- Will be just via the data editing interface
- Data suppliers must register
- Manual process
- One record at a time
- This makes it a bit easier
- Not accepting XML
- Not harvesting from other sources
14How do we ensure metadata quality?
- Direct contact with data suppliers
- Support
- Helpdesk (email, telephone)
- Guidelines for data/content creation
- Quality Assurance procedures
- Ownership - its your data
15How do we help data suppliers?
- Find out about their
- cataloguing skills
- Technical knowledge about the services
- Why does this make it easier?
- Get personal contact with data suppliers
- Very important
- Be there for them
- IESR Content Management is people
16Support to create IESR data descriptions
- Data/Content creation guidelines
- Help in the data editing interface
- Examples very important
- Lack of examples as little data in IESR
- Written guidelines can only do so much
- Need direct support too
17Cataloguing support
- Help with creating subject terms
- What standard vocabularies do data suppliers have
access to? - Some easier to get to then others
- Dewey terms?
- Added by Content Manager if data supplier does
not have licence
18Quality Assurance
- Get data via data editing interface
- Data checked by data editing interface
- Check for missing data
- Data validated
- Manually check initial submissions
- Feedback, re-submit data
- When were both happy, let them loose without
supervision
19QA what the software does
- Checks for missing data
- Mandatory properties
- Validates some properties
- Date values in correct formatYYYY-MM-DD,
YYYY-MM, YYYY (W3CDTF) - Check email addresses contain _at_
- Check URLs start with http//
- Might check language values look like a language
code (RFC 3066)
20QA What a human does
- Checks Title, Alternative Title explain any
acronyms, abbreviations - Checks Collection Description manually
- Checks subject terms
- Checks rights information
- etc
21Update frequency
- When do records go out of date??
- Up to you, the data suppliers
- System to email you at regular intervals
- Default will be 3 months, but you can change this
to - 1 month
- 3 months
- 6 months
- 12 months too much time between updates
22Ongoing Quality Assurance
- Dump a random selection of records out of IESR
every month - How many?
- Check properties manually
- Title explains any acronyms/abbreviations
- Check description against criteria for a good
description - Check subjects
- Automatic checking
- Already check Z39.50 targets weekly
23The future
- Harvesting of records
- No personal contact with data suppliers
- How will this affect data quality, quality
assurance procedures? - How many records?
- IESR Kite mark
- Might mark records to say they meet IESR quality
expectations - Decay, use by date, need for frequent checking,
updating of record
24Contact details
- Leigh Morris
- leigh.morris_at_manchester.ac.uk
- IESR Helpdesk
- iesr_at_mimas.ac.uk
- 0161 275 7179
- IESR website
- http//iesr.ac.uk/
- Who is hungry?
- Retire to MBS for lunch