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FEB. 3, 2009 LIBRARY BASICS AND CLASSIFICATION AND ORGANIZATION LIBS101 – Spring 2010
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From Last Week Republish introductory posts so they appear on Student Blogs Student Blogs Jami L. Bryan - Spring 2010 2 Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0
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UMW Libraries Basics Simpson Library Main Collection Special Collections Reference, Circulation and Technical Services CGPS Stafford Library Branch Library on Graduate Campus Subject Collections Reference and Circulation Services
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UMW Libraries Website Information about Library Services Account Access ILL Access to: Catalog Databases Research Assistance
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How would you organize these items? Organization Exercise Jami L. Bryan, Spring 2010 5 Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0
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Please answer the following: Jami L. Bryan, Spring 2010Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 6 What information about each item would someone searching for the item want to know? How would you organize the items you have into a collection? What information about each item would be necessary to find the item within your collection?
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How are Items/ Materials/ Resources Arranged in a Library? Easy, Logical Access is the Goal Resources usually physically arranged in the Library by: Subject Format Combination of Subject and Format Resources usually virtually arranged by: Subject Format Combination of Subject and Format
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What does a classification system offer? Location Organization Bring comparable items together in a logical arrangement Controlled Vocabulary to describe Subjects Consistency
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Common Classification Systems Dewey Decimal System Public and Small Libraries Library of Congress Academic Libraries Library of Congress Classification: http://www.loc.gov/catdir/cpso/lcco/ http://www.loc.gov/catdir/cpso/lcco/ Controlled Vocabulary: http://authorities.loc.gov/http://authorities.loc.gov/ SuDocs US Government Documents United Nations Symbol Numbers UN Publications
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Library of Congress Call Numbers SB451.D85 1989 SB451.D85 1989 SB451 = Classification Number S = Class/Subject Area (Agriculture) SB = Subclass (Plant Culture) 451 = Class Number within that Subject Area (Gardens) Read as a whole number (451 comes before 4400) .D85 = Book Number Read the letter alphabetically (D comes before E) and the number as a decimal (.85 comes after.840) 1989 = Date of edition Subjects: Gardens -- History -- Congresses. Gardens -- History -- Congresses. Gardens -- Historiography -- Congresses. Gardens -- Historiography -- Congresses. Landscape architecture -- History -- Congresses. Landscape architecture -- History -- Congresses. Landscape architecture -- Historiography -- Congresses. Landscape architecture -- Historiography -- Congresses.
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The Research Process* 1. Clearly define your topic or "information need" 2. Collect/find information 3. Evaluate the information you find 4. Use and/or do something with the information 5. Use the information ethically and legally * From the LSU Libraries tutorial “The Research Process”: http://www.lib.lsu.edu/instruction/research/research-process01.html
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Step 2: Collect and Find Information Step 2 = Search Strategy a) Select and Locate Information Sources and Tools appropriate to your Need b) Determine Search Terms and Expressions appropriate to Tools c) Perform Search and Evaluate the effectiveness of the Search d) Modify and Repeat your Search as needed Note: "Source" meaning the book or article or report with the information you need and "Tool" meaning what you use to get to that source, like the Library Catalog, databases, or a search engine.
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2A. Select and Locate Information Sources and Tools 1. What type of information are you looking for? 2. What Tools will get you to that Source?
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Getting Access to Resources Various Tools provide information ABOUT available resources: Catalogs --> Items in a Library (Books, Journals) Databases --> Articles in Journals, Magazines and Newspapers Search Engines and Internet Directories --> WebsitesInternet Directories Finding Aides --> Archival Materials Finding Aides These tools allow you to access resources (Call #s, Citations, Full-Text, URLs, Box #s)
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What type of information are you looking for? Overview of Topic Find in: General Encyclopedias, and some Books and Periodicals Tool: Catalog, Search Engines Definitions Find in: Dictionaries Tool: Catalog, Search Engines Primary Sources Find in: Newspapers, Research Reports, Archival Documents, Government Documents Tool: Catalog, Search Engines, Databases, Finding Aides Secondary Sources Find in: Books, Magazine and Journal Articles, Subject Encyclopedias Tool: Catalog, Databases
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What type of information are you looking for? Facts Find in: Almanacs and Yearbooks, Statistics, Government Documents Tool: Catalog, Search Engine Current Information Find in: Magazine, Journal, and Newspaper Articles, News sites Tool: Databases, Search Engine Historical Information Find in: Books, Encyclopedias and Reference Books, Periodicals Tool: Catalog, Databases, Search Engine, Finding Aides Evaluative Sources Find in: Book Reviews and Biographies Tool: Databases
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Next Week – 2/10 Jami L. Bryan, Spring 2010Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 17 Due: Pathfinder Topic Declaration (Blog)Pathfinder Topic Declaration (Blog) Topic: Books and Reference Sources Course Preparations Course Preparations
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