Talk:Q635734
Autodescription — archivist (Q635734)
- Useful links:
- View it! – Images depicting the item on Commons
- Report on constraint conformation of “archivist” claims and statements. Constraints report for items data
- Parent classes (classes of items which contain this one item)
- Subclasses (classes which contain special kinds of items of this class)
- ⟨
archivist
⟩ on wikidata tree visualisation (external tool)(depth=1) - Generic queries for classes
- Generic queries for position
This section is generated using {{Generic queries for positions}}
- List of people holding the position, sorted by starting date (query)
- List of people and their ID's on other systems (query)
- Number of people having hold this position by gender (query) – List of people having hold this position with gender (query)
- Number of people having hold the position by country of citizenship (query) – List of people having hold the position by country of citizenship (query)
- People having hold the function by length of term (query)
- List of people having hold the position by total duration in the position (query)
- List of people having hold the position by gender at the starting date (query)
- List of people holding the function with employer as qualifier (query)
- List of people having hold the position as qualifier of employer (P108) (query)
- See also
- This documentation is generated using
{{Item documentation}}
.
Archivists aren't a kind of librarian edit
Removed statement that archivists are a subclass of librarians. They are related fields which overlap, but archives are not subclasses of libraries, nor are archivists subclasses of librarians. While archivists may have master's degrees in library science (others come in from history, materials conservation, etc.), libraries are archives are separate kinds of institutions per the society of American Archivists. The Archivist entry on Wikipedia as of 2018-12-03 puts it very well:
"The archivist occupation is distinct from that of librarian. The two occupations have separate courses of training, adhere to separate and distinct principles, and are represented by separate professional organizations. In general, the librarian tends to deal with published media (where the metadata, such as author, title, and date of publication, may be readily apparent and can be presented in standardized form), whereas the archivist deals with unpublished media (which has different challenges such as the metadata not always being immediately apparent, containing complications and variety, and more likely to depend on provenance)." Ruthbrarian (talk) 20:25, 3 December 2018 (UTC)
- Support Perhaps subclass of Q1662485 (information professional)? Dan scott (talk) 01:41, 4 December 2018 (UTC)
That's a good idea, Dan. Perhaps librarians should also be subclassed to those, since right now they're subclassed to "white-collar worker" which isn't wrong but isn't very specific either. Ruthbrarian (talk) 13:59, 4 December 2018 (UTC) - ETA that info professionals are subclasses of white-collar workers, which means librarians inherit that.