In the past with your full-level authorization, you could replace minimal and lower level records and add or edit or delete information in a specific list of fields in other records. Now, you can replace full level records and add or edit or delete in almost all fields in almost all records. Only PCC records (both BIBCO and CONSER) are excluded.
Any Full-Level authorization or higher (including CONSER Regular, CONSER National, Regular Enhance, National Level Enhance, NACO Regular, NACO National, and Agent) will be able to participate. All existing Enhance, CONSER, and NACO authorizations will continue to work as they always have but will also have all of the additional capabilities allowed within the Expert Community.
No, there is no application process. Your existing full-level authorization is all you need. Before you start, please read the Guidelines.
When you log on to Connexion, the system displays a greeting:
Hello, [your user name]! You will be using the service in [name of level] mode.
If you see "FULL" as the "name of level", you have a full-level authorization. NACO-level authorizations are the equivalent of full-level authorizations in terms of bibliographic record functionality.
With the Expert Community, your full-level Cataloging authorization allows you to do much of what an Enhance Program participant can do. But that doesn't mean that the Enhance Program is going away. OCLC staff are talking with Enhance Program participants about ways in which the Enhance Program might be refocused in other ways that would continue to make use of the talents and expertise of current and future participants.
Yes, there are some fields that are essential to the operation of OCLC's systems that you cannot edit or delete from the WorldCat record. See the Guidelines for a complete list.
Yes, you can.
Yes, you may edit and upgrade almost all fields in CIP records (unless it is a Library of Congress CIP record coded 'pcc'). However, you will not be able to change the encoding level from 8 to a higher level.
Controlling headings should work regardless of whether the heading text changes so, if you correct a name or subject heading so that it matches the authority record for that heading, please control that heading before replacing the record.
If you are using the Connexion client, you do not need lock it before editing. If you are making a quick change to correct a non-filing indicator or a typo in an access point, it may be more efficient to make your edits and replace the record without locking it first. If you are doing more extensive editing (to upgrade a minimal-level record, for example), it may be preferable to lock the record first.
OCLC encourages you to use the OCLC-CAT list to share your experiences. If you're not already subscribed to that list, you can subscribe using the Internet Subscription Request form. We are eager to have your input.
If you have a specific question for OCLC quality control staff, you can send your question to the email address: askqc@oclc.org.
These replace transactions are counted in the general category of WorldCat Replaces in the Online Cataloging section of Usage Statistics. In addition, specific counts for your institution are available in OCLC Product Code Detail Usage Report, which is made available each month in My Files (under the WorldShare Metadata tab).
Yes, you can add additional headings from the same scheme. For example, if the WorldCat record contains one LCSH heading, you can add additional LCSH headings when appropriate and in accord with LC subject cataloging policy. You could also add subject headings from other schemes.
Yes, you can already do that as part of the Database Enrichment capability. See Bibliographic Formats and Standards, section 5.3, for more information.
OCLC staff will have access to "before" and "after" images of each replace transaction but a history display (similar to what is available for authority records) will not be available to member libraries at this time.
The system will reject the whole transaction as it has in the past. The error message includes the change that was not allowed.
If your institution does not have the expertise to work with the various non-Latin scripts that OCLC supports, you may wish to leave that activity to institutions with the appropriate language and script skills.
If you do work on records containing non-Latin scripts, please use the same care in your replace transaction as you would in creating a new full-level record. Make sure to maintain appropriate relationships between Latin and non-Latin scripts fields, especially when any of the following changes were made in the Latin field:
Remember also that Library of Congress topical subject terms and non-geographic subdivisions should not be linked to non-Latin script terms. Field 650 with 2nd indicator 0 can be linked to a non-Latin script counterpart with a second indicator coded 4 only to express a component place name in a non-Latin script. All LCSH terms are in English even if derived from native words or phrases in other languages, e.g., "Feng shui," "Origami," "Kabuki," "Bazaars," "Ummah," "Haskalah," etc.