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Metadata

Metadata is structured information that describes a record, object, image, or digital file. It may include title, identifier, date, source type, rights status, access level, sensitivity level, measurements, and update history.

Metadata makes records searchable, comparable, maintainable, and reusable. Without metadata, a digital catalog becomes difficult to navigate and trust.

  • Look for fields that identify the object and record.
  • Check whether dates, rights, and source type are clear.
  • Notice whether uncertainty is marked.
  • Ask whether the metadata is consistent across related records.

Ask students to compare two records with different metadata quality. Which one is easier to cite, understand, and reuse?

Public sources will be added as this entry is reviewed and expanded.

This entry explains metadata for documentation and public catalog use. It does not provide acquisition, transfer, ownership, or biological material handling guidance.