Demystifying FRAD: Functional Requirements for Authority Data
By (Author) Qiang Jin
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Libraries Unlimited Inc
5th June 2012
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Politics and government
025.3
Paperback
148
Width 178mm, Height 254mm
Improve your understanding of the basics of Functional Requirements for Authority Data (FRAD): A Conceptual Model with this text and help readers create RDA authority records. RDA will be implemented by thousands of libraries in the United States and around the world. RDA streamlines the process of making library collections accessible through improved authority data, either on-site or virtually. Catalogers need to understand the FRAD model in order to create RDA authority records. The first book of its kind, Demystifying FRAD: Functional Requirements for Authority Data provides clear, applicable information to help catalogers get up to speed by explaining the Functional Requirements for Authority Data (FRAD): A Conceptual Model. It illustrates the Conceptual Model for Authority Data with specific examples. It provides many specific examples that explain the FRAD entities, the attributes of those entities, and the relationships between those entities. This book also includes some brief RDA authority records exemplifying the major FRAD relationships.
Demystifying FRAD serves as an excellent, all-in-one resource for understanding the FRAD model and its relationship to authority work under RDA. Its greatest applicability is as a 'ready-reference' guide, a resource that a librarian can pull off the shelf when encountering questions about a specific situation. * Library Resources and Technical Services *
A clearly written, copiously illustrated, and well-organized book that truly does 'demystify' FRAD . . . Demystifying FRAD is both timely and valuable. * College & Research Libraries *
Overall, Qiang Jin has succeeded in shedding light on FRAD. She has included a number of excellent examples, the FRAD to RDA mapping, and the chapter on relationships. This book is definitely a much-needed entry into an area that has seen little to no publications on the subject. * Online Audiovisual Catalogers, Inc *
Qiang Jin is senior coordinating cataloger, NACO coordinator, and associate professor of library administration at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Library.