Issues in Science and Technology Librarianship | Winter 1999 |
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DOI:10.5062/F4NP22F9 |
URLs in this document have been updated. Links enclosed in {curly brackets} have been changed. If a replacement link was located, the new URL was added and the link is active; if a new site could not be identified, the broken link was removed. |
So, now that you've got the machines and the software, where does the data come from? Data discovery and acquisition can be the most time-consuming part of GIS projects, whether hunting down and purchasing already existing data or creating your own. There are also the issues of documentation and metadata to consider before making an acquisition. A clear understanding of your user group is necessary to know what, exactly, to stock your library with. By using a combination of data from local, state, and federal government sources, plus data created locally and produced by vendors, your collection can be rounded out to serve a diverse user base. The University of Washington will be used as an example. The article will also look at some of the collection development literature concerning both traditional and digital formats.
The best place to start is with traditional collection development policies for map libraries, or libraries collecting cartographic materials. Typically, digital materials should reflect the traditional collection. At the University of Washington, the Map Collection is global, with emphasis on the United States, the Pacific Northwest, Washington State, Western Washington, and the Puget Sound area. Our digital collection reflects the same geographic emphasis. (Highlights from the collection development policy for the University of Washington Map Collection are online at {http://www.lib.washington.edu/Maps/UsingCollection/about.html}). In the third edition of Map Librarianship: An Introduction, Mary Larsgaard talks about materials that can be easily obtained in both digital and traditional formats: reference and thematic maps of the world, maps of continents and nations, topographic maps of the world, world atlases, state atlases, aerial photos, monographs and serials; as well as outline and basemaps (Larsgaard 1998). When establishing GIS operations, this kind of basic information will provide a solid foundation.
In some institutions, there is also going to be a wide range of users, from beginners (which may include yourself) to those who have helped write some of the existing programs on the market. Arc/Info, after all -- one of the industry's key software packages -- is 18 years old, and the digital data collection will have to support these expert users as well as the novices.
At the University of Washington, the librarians working with GIS data have for years been members of the University of Washington Consortium on Geographic Information and Analysis (UWCGIA). This group includes GIS users from all over the campus, and meets on a regular basis to discuss various research applications of GIS. Non-campus users also come talk to the group, and there is a listserv available, which has members from campus and around the Seattle area. The listserv is an excellent way to disseminate information to a widespread group of people -- it is used for meeting announcements, to poll campus users, to post jobs both on campus and off, and serves as a technical support outlet for hardware- and software-related questions as well as for those seeking data. The librarians have also been involved with individual classes and departments, helping develop class assignments and giving workshops on finding and using digital geospatial data. Input from these workshops has helped the library understand users' activities and needs.
Another good source of data and GIS information is through partnerships with other agencies and groups. Carolyn Argentati states that "Partnerships and grants linking libraries with governmental and commercial organizations have offered opportunities for collaboration on service models and the development of large data collections and new access tools. These extensive collections of digital spatial data are being organized and made available via the Internet frequently with a regional or local focus that is relevant to a library's primary constituency." She continues: "One strong partnership often leads to others and to additional contacts with people and organizations engaged or interested in GIS" (Argentati 1997). Being involved in the local community is a good way to start in on these partnerships.
Larsgaard (Larsgaard 1997) provides a checklist of issues to consider when acquiring data, regardless of format. She suggests considering that the information:
Even if a library decides on one major GIS package, there will no doubt be multiple pieces of software that the library staff will need to be familiar with. The big GIS packages often work in conjunction with other software; ESRI has a free data viewer that many users are likely to want to use; and each electronic atlas, gazetteer or mapping software will be structured differently. One or many of the library's staff will have to become familiar with these software packages, at least familiar enough to be able to walk a user through setup and the help files. For the frequently used or older (perhaps DOS-based) packages, additional user guides may have to be written.
The University of Washington Map Collection has hundreds of CD databases in-house, with many other CDs in other library branches, and an abundance of data offered on the web. There is no way one person can know everything in the collection. Luckily, standards are emerging, both from the U.S. government, and from commercial, proprietary sources. These standards include everything from file formats (SDTS, mentioned above); metadata (Federal Geographic Data Committee); and similar software interfaces (ArcView and MapInfo look very similar, and the next version of Arc/Info will be highly based on graphical user interfaces, as opposed to the traditional command-line interface it is famous and infamous for). This is another reason that written user guides are important, so that the institution's GIS knowledge is easily shared.
The focus of a library, however, is not on hardware and software, but data provision. "These infrastructure issues are secondary, however, to the even larger and more important responsibilities of collection, organization, and dissemination of geospatial data. ... Beyond hardware and software issues, any management discussion must address collection, describing, and accessing spatial data" (Lamont 1997).
The University of Washington checks license agreements before purchasing to make sure the product will be usable by the widest number of users. In some cases the university has been able to negotiate a separate license -- in some cases that negotiation involved months of legal wrangling over an official agreement, and in other cases the Libraries has promised that we will refer all non-UW patrons back to the data provider. To enforce the agreements the Map Collection has click-through agreements on its web site, and hands out paper agreements to patrons coming in to the library.
If the dataset is from a local government, for example, then updating and currency become factors in the acquisition decision. The library may be fine with a one-time purchase, or may want to receive quarterly updates. Local datasets may also involve privacy issues, especially when dealing with data from assessor's offices, but privacy is something that should be ironed out with the license or usage agreement. The University of Washington has had good luck with organizations being willing to add themselves on to our existing agreements. For example, UW provides a standard data use agreement (available at {http://www.lib.washington.edu/maps/datause.html}) -- several providers have provided their data with the understanding that this agreement will be given to users, rather than negotiating a separate agreement.
If metadata and documentation aren't available for a dataset, the data has lost a great deal of value -- much like using an unattributed quote in an article suggests laziness or falsehood, lack of data description suggests error. If metadata or documentation does not exist for a dataset of interest, the library staff must consider whether they want to spend the time creating the metadata, pursuing metadata from the source, or deciding not to purchase the data at all.
Larsgaard, Mary Lynette. 1998. Map Librarianship: An Introduction. Libraries Unlimited Inc., Englewood, Colorado.
Lamont, Melissa. 1997. Managing Geospatial Data and Services. Journal of Academic Librarianship V23, No6.
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