Dr. D. Karpuk
Individual Project
Organizing for Retrieval
GOAL:
To understand the
decision issues associated with organizing, describing, indexing, classifying,
and retrieving items in a collection.
Throughout this
project, you serve as the information professional providing access to your
collection, keeping your user groups in mind.
STEP #1: (Start
before class meeting)
Select a collection
of 15-20 items, ideas include:
(I use buttons as a
in-class exercise, so buttons may not be used)
15-20 paperweights,
15-20 cooking utensils, 15-20 different types of beads, 15-20 rubber stamps,
15-20 types of honey, 15-20 shop tools, 15-20 brushes, 15-20 Orthodox icons,
etc.
You may get creative
and have fun. E-mail me when you have
selected a collection of items.
Use: arizonakarpuk@aol.com SUBJECT LINE: Project idea
Do the following:
Think about how you
would retrieve groups of items from your collection, i.e. all red items at
½” (searching by color and size). Will discuss in class using in-class
exercise.
STEP #2: (OK to find materials about collection)
Bibliographic records
for Resources about your collection:
(OK to look at
resources. I will discuss specific
areas of bibliographic records in class.)
You will locate ten
(10) items (books, videos, software, maps, DVD’s, posters, sound recordings,
etc.) in at least three different formats that discuss your collection.
You will evaluate how
books, etc. about your collection are described. Additional aspects of the descriptive record will be discussed in
class, such as classification, subject headings, note fields.
Do the following:
STEP #3: (OK to surf)
If you search the
WWW, then:
Do the following:
The “Help” pages for
the search engines are useful resources.
STEP #4: (Will be
discussed in class)
Subject headings,
thesauri, indexing terms:
The Library of
Congress Subject Headings, Art and Architecture Thesaurus, and other term lists
will be discussed in class.
Do the following:
When looking for
materials relating to your collection, note the terms used. An in-class exercise will introduce
vocabulary control, syndetic structure, references, and consistency aspects of
subject analysis. Key definitions will
be discussed in depth, along with examples.
STEP #5: (Do not
start)
Database searching:
Using databases
available through UA’s SABIO system, select five (5) databases that would have
articles about your collection. Examine
the subject headings, term lists, and search instructions for retrieving articles
about your collection.
Do the following:
STEP #6: (Do not start)
Classification
systems:
An in-class exercise
will demonstrate structural components of different classification systems and
applications in information retrieval.
Examples will be presented in class.
The Dewey Decimal Classification System, Library of Congress
Classification System, and other systems will be discussed in class.
Do the following:
STEP #7:
User perspectives and
searching:
Target user groups
identified at the outset of the project will post questions to your
organizational design. An in-class
exercise will illustrate how the use or multiple uses of your
organization/retrieval system impact levels of description, access, indexing,
classification, and display. You will
re-examine user targets and pose questions to your system from the user
perspective.
Do the following:
Note: User Perspectives comprises the focus of the
Online Discussions.
STEP #8: (Recap of findings and conclusions)
Final project and
de-briefing:
Drafts of each
component of this project have been submitted and returned for adjustment. In this way, you may fine tune your project
and make adjustments in your thinking based on instructor feedback and
additional “experience” with organizing and retrieval. Class discussion will provide opportunity to
share examples with colleagues.
Conclude your project
with a summary de-briefing. This allows
you the opportunity to summarize your learning experience.
Examples for this
section include:
Add additional observations
as appropriate.
FINAL WORDS:
Creative thinking is
expected. Select an interesting
collection and have fun!
Recognize that this
project involves analytical thinking.
Think visually, think descriptively, think about retrieval, and think
about your user groups.
You may expand each
of Steps #1-#8. Each project will be
different, therefore, there is no “one size fits all” template suitable for all
projects.
You may creatively
package your submission as long as each area of the project is professionally
presented.
PROJECT EVALUATION:
|
APPLICATION |
STEP |
POINTS |
DRAFT DUE DATE |
|
Non-Bibliographic
Organizational Problem |
1 |
10 |
Jan. 3, 2004 |
|
Bibliographic
Description |
2 |
10 |
Jan. 3, 2004 |
|
Subject Headings,
Thesauri, Indexes |
3 & 4 |
10 |
Jan. 4, 2004 |
|
Classification |
5 & 6 |
10 |
Jan. 5, 2004 |
|
User Perspectives
and Searching |
7 |
20 |
Jan. 6, 2004 |
|
Final Project and
Project Debriefing |
8 |
40 |
Jan. 13, 2004 |
FINAL PROJECT
SUBMISSION:
Grades are due 72
hours after Winter Session ends, therefore, I need to have your project by:
Jan. 13th AT THE LATEST. I will begin
checking the P.O. Box for project mailings on Jan. 10th.
Consult your local
Post Office for the best way to mail from your location.
PRIORITY MAIL is
generally 2-3 days from a major metropolitan area.
MEDIA MAIL is the
least expensive but is slower.
EXPRESS MAIL is
expensive but is guaranteed.
NO METERED POSTAGE AS
RETURN POSTAGE
IF you want your
project returned, INCLUDE SUFFICIENT POSTAGE FOR RETURN.
NO METERED POSTAGE AS
RETURN POSTAGE
NOTE:
These projects get
lengthy.
Electronic
submissions are not practical for this instructor, as Dr. K does not evaluate
assignments online.
MAILING ADDRESS:
Dr. Deb Karpuk
P.O. Box 270729
Littleton,
Colorado 80127