Tags: the backbone of a marc record – Follett VERSION 6.00 User Manual

Page 266

Advertising
background image

04/04

266

Cataloging

Brief records contain enough information to let you circulate the item. However,

they lack detail, which can make them difficult to locate during a search.

Additionally, brief records may not have enough information to prevent them

from being duplicated during Cataloging's import process.
Full records provide a greater level of detail, including the fields for brief records

plus subject headings and notes. You might also consider following the CEMARC

(CurriculumĆEnhanced MARC) standard. CEMARC records include curriculum

objectives along with grade level and target audience information.
The following table shows the suggested minimums for these three record types:

Information needed

Tag number

Brief

Full

CEMARC

Standard number (LCCN, ISBN, or ISSN)

010, 020, or 022

S

S

S

Title, medium, statement of responsibility

245

S

S

S

Imprint (place, publisher/producer, date)

260

S

S

S

Physical description (units, size)

300

S

S

S

Author (if applicable)

1XX

S

S

Variant titles (if applicable)

246

S

S

Series (if applicable)

440

S

S

SubjectĆrelated index terms

6XX

S

S

Other authors or responsible parties

7XX

S

S

Review (if applicable)

520

S

Target audience

521

S

CurriculumĆrelated index terms

658

S

Cataloging does have the following size limitations for bibliographic records;

however, it's possible that you may never exceed some of them:

Record component

Maximum

Record length

10,240 characters

Tags and subfields per record

256 tags, 1024 subfields

Single tag length

2048 characters

Copies per record

4000 copies

Tags: the backbone of a MARC record

Every MARC record contains fixed-length tags and variable-length tags (usually

just called tags). By choosing the template that matches your material type, you

Advertising