Metadata Standards Implementation
Apply Dublin Core, METS, MODS, and other metadata schemas for digital collections and archival materials.
Overview
This skill enables professional metadata creation for digital collections. It encompasses schema selection, metadata creation, and standards implementation to ensure discoverability and interoperability of digital humanities resources.
Capabilities
Metadata Schemas
- Dublin Core elements
- METS structure
- MODS description
- EAD encoding
- Schema.org vocabularies
Metadata Creation
- Element selection
- Value assignment
- Controlled vocabulary use
- Authority control
- Quality assurance
Interoperability
- Crosswalks development
- Harvesting support
- Linked data principles
- API exposure
- Format conversion
Quality Control
- Completeness checking
- Consistency verification
- Accuracy validation
- Standards compliance
- Enhancement planning
Usage Guidelines
Implementation Process
- Analyze collection needs
- Select appropriate schemas
- Develop local guidelines
- Create metadata records
- Validate against standards
- Enable interoperability
- Maintain quality
Schema Selection Criteria
- Collection type
- User needs
- System requirements
- Interoperability goals
- Resource constraints
Quality Standards
- Complete required fields
- Use controlled vocabularies
- Follow local guidelines
- Maintain consistency
- Enable discovery
Integration Points
Related Processes
- Digital Archive Development
- Data Visualization for Cultural Research
- Spatial Humanities Mapping
Collaborating Skills
- tei-text-encoding
- archival-finding-aid-interpretation
- gis-mapping-humanities
References
- Dublin Core documentation
- Library of Congress standards
- Digital preservation guidelines
- Metadata best practices