JISC-CETIS Metadata and Digital Repositories SIG Meeting, 16 April 2007
Notes by Sarah Currier
The JISC-CETIS Metadata SIG
I presented on the DC-Ed Community and the
DC-Education Application Profile
work to the SIG meeting, which was, as always, attended by number of
UK-based e-learning software developers, learning technologists and
librarians, all with an interest in developing, implementing and
managing metadata and repositories for learning objects and other
teaching & learning materials.
This audience is primarily interested in the
IEEE LOM,
so it was encouraging to see a good turnout of people wanting to know
about how Dublin Core is dealing with educational metadata. Before I
took the stage, they had already been apprised of the
Joint DCMI/IEEE LTSC Taskforce and
DCAM work by Pete Johnston (along with a number of other DC-related presentations). Follow the
meeting link to see all of the presentations and download audio files. Pete also
posted on the meeting at his eFoundations blog.
Sarah's presentation on DC-Ed AP work
I showed the SIG the
three use cases
and the four suggested criteria for candidate vocabularies for the AP,
and invited questions and discussion. I then muddied the water somewhat
by showing them the
NSDL Metadata Registry,
to show them one way in which they might be able to easily make their
vocabularies meet the suggested criteria. I was aware that my
presentation was to be followed by a similar registry presentation on
the
Becta Vocabulary Bank and Studio, which gives UK-based educational technologists and librarians another way of registering and managing vocabularies.
SIG discussion on the four criteria for vocabularies
A lively discussion then ensued as participants wondered what exactly we meant by
criteria.
For instance, how closely would vocabularies be held to these
criteria, and what would happen with good vocabularies that don't meet
them? It was pointed out that virtually no existing vocabularies would
currently meet all four criteria, and may not for some time to come, if
ever.
SIG discussion on recommending vocabularies for the AP, and registering vocabularies
There is an implied over-arching question here: what do we mean when we say we are
recommending
a vocabulary? Misgivings were expressed that people would not want to
or be able to make their vocabularies meet the criteria set out. There
seemed to be a misapprehension (no doubt due to lack of clarity on my
part) that we are saying that a vocabulary has to be registered in order
to be recommended by DC-Ed, whereas we are saying that we believe these
are extremely useful criteria to be working towards, and that using the
NSDL Metadata Registry, or the
Becta Vocabulary Bank and Studio,
or some similar service, is one easy way for people to enable their
vocabularies to meet the criteria, if they weren't already.
SIG discussion on vocabulary registries in general
A couple of issues with registries came up: what if you are using
someone else's vocabulary and you want to register it, when they aren't
interested, or they have "disappeared" (e.g. a project that has gone
defunct). In this case you don't have intellectual property rights to
that vocabulary, so you can't register it, although many others may wish
to use it or may already be using it. Also, just putting a vocabulary
into a registry doesn't mean that it will be maintained.
Conclusion
There was general agreement, however, that the criteria were in and of
themselves laudable in light of the goal of creating real-world metadata
interoperability. The misgivings in the end seemed to centre around
what the criteria mean in terms of recommending vocabularies in the
DC-Ed AP; how we present the message to encourage people to give access
to their vocabularies, rather than putting them off altogether; and that
we shouldn't conflate registration of vocabularies with their
acceptability for recommendation in the AP.
Way forward for candidate vocabularies for the DC-Ed AP?
We ended with a tentative suggestion that we begin, here on the DC-Ed
Wiki, by listing vocabularies that people suggest to us, with an
indication of which of the criteria they meet, so that those looking for
vocabularies can make an informed decision, and those suggesting them
can see their vocabularies included and possibly be encouraged to
increase the potential interoperability of their vocabularies by working
towards the criteria. We already have an extensive list of potential
vocabularies in the
JISC-CETIS Pedagogical Vocabularies Review
and elsewhere, but making these visible on the Wiki alongside the
criteria would be a start at seeing what is out there. We also need to
have a go at writing an introduction to the criteria that explains what
we intend by them, and also what it means to be a vocabulary recommended
by a DC Community.