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About CENDI Highlights from FY 1999
MEMBERSHIP GROWS TO 10 AGENCIESThe Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Research and Development, joined CENDI this year bringing the total membership to a "Perfect 10." FEDERAL STI LEADERSHIP AND FORUM FOR DISCUSSIONCENDI provided leadership in discussions of STI topics with over 36 outside organizations including agencies from all branches of the federal government, international organizations, academic institutions and commercial companies. Dialogs were hosted with information communities outside of the federal STI community to identify issues in information management futures:
CENDI took a leadership role in the area of copyright. Based on its analysis of the operational issues that copyright raises for CENDI members, CENDI was asked to participate in the Federal Library and Information Center Committee General Counsel’s Copyright Forum. The Executive Director and several CENDI members participated in a National Academy of Sciences workshop on "Promoting Access to Scientific and Technical Data for the Pubic Interest: An Assessment of Policy Option.s" JOINT PROJECTS AND TECHNICAL COOPERATIONPilot projects helped to advance CENDI as a backbone for a virtual/digital library for government scientific and technical information.
STI EDUCATION AND INFORMATION LITERACYThe CENDI Web site was enhanced during 1999. The STI Manager now has 150 evaluated and fully cataloged links related to STI policy, information life cycle management, standards, etc. CENDI Working Groups provided educational opportunities for cataloging and indexing staff to improve their understanding of metadata developments. Based on the Metadata Initiatives Workshop held in 1997, the Cataloging Working Group produced a crosswalk of the metadata elements use by the agencies to document non-traditional products such as educational curriculum and images. The Cataloging Working Group and the Subject Analysis and Retrieval Working Group jointly sponsored a conference on Controlled Vocabulary and the Internet at the National Library of Medicine which was attended by over 175 people. Search TipsSearches are not case sensitive. You can search on words or phrases (surround phrases with quotations marks, i.e., "this is a phrase"). To make sure that a specific word is always included in your search topic, place the plus (+) symbol before the key word in the search box. To make sure that a specific word is always excluded from your search topic, place a minus (-) sign before the keyword in the search box. By typing an * within a keyword, you can match up to four letters. Example: Try wish* to find wish, wishes, or wishful. Hide Search Tips |
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