There are 4 sources of notation for building numbers which includes 7 table as per below :
Table 1 - Standards subdiviosion
Table 2 - Geographic areas, historical periods, persons
Table 3 - Subdivision for individual literatures for specific literary forms.
Table 4 - Subdivision of individual languaage
Table 5 - Racil, ethnic, national group
Table 6 - Language
Table 7 - Groups of person
Monday, October 24, 2011
Monday, October 17, 2011
Week 06 - CLASSIFICATION
What are classification systems? Why do we need them? A structured organizer used to determine groups based on similar characteristics.
At the most basic level this is what a classification system is, items that have been compartmentalised or categories in a particular structure that allows the user of the classification system to see the items in a particular content
Dewey Decimal Classification is a system of library classification made up of ten classes, each divided into ten divisions, each having ten sections (although there are only 99 of 100 division)
The Ten Main classes of Dewey Decimal Classification are :
The Ten Main classes of Dewey Decimal Classification are :
000-099 – Computer science, information & general works
100-199 – Philosophy and psychology
200-299 – Religion
300-399 – Social sciences
400-499 – Language
500-599 – Science
600-699 – Technology
700-799 – Arts
800-899 – Literature
900-999 – History, geography, (& biography)
The details of the ten small devition and section, kindly refer to:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Dewey_Decimal_classes
Week 05 - SUBJECT HEADING
Book 1
Flannes, Steven W.
Essential people skills for project managers / Steven W. Flannes, Ginger Levin. – Vienna : Management Concepts, c2005.
xxi, 181p.; 22cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 1-56726-168
1.Project management. 2.Personnel management. 3.Emotional intelligence. 4.Social intelligence.
I.Levin, Ginger II.Title.
Book 2
Shipka, Barbara.
Leadership in a challenging world : a sacred journey / Barbara Shipka. – Washington: Butterworth Heinemann, c1997.
xxix, 220p.; 21cm.
Includes bibliographical references, ill. and index.
ISBN 0-7506-9750-4
1.Leadership. 2.ManagementI.Title.
Flannes, Steven W.
Essential people skills for project managers / Steven W. Flannes, Ginger Levin. – Vienna : Management Concepts, c2005.
xxi, 181p.; 22cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 1-56726-168
1.Project management. 2.Personnel management. 3.Emotional intelligence. 4.Social intelligence.
I.Levin, Ginger II.Title.
Book 2
Shipka, Barbara.
Leadership in a challenging world : a sacred journey / Barbara Shipka. – Washington: Butterworth Heinemann, c1997.
xxix, 220p.; 21cm.
Includes bibliographical references, ill. and index.
ISBN 0-7506-9750-4
1.Leadership. 2.ManagementI.Title.
Monday, October 3, 2011
Week 04 - AACR2
Induction Set : Presentation of ISBD to refresh on previous lesson.
What is AACR2??
AACR2 stands for the Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules, Second Edition. It is published jointly by the American Library Association, the Canadian Library Association, and the Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals in the UK. The editor is Michael Gorman, a British-born librarian living in the Chicago area and honored by both the ALA and CILIP. AACR2 is designed for use in the construction of catalogues and other lists in general libraries of all sizes. The rules cover the description of, and the provision of access points for, all library materials commonly collected at the present time.
Despite the claim to be 'Anglo-American', the first edition of AACR was published in 1967 in somewhat distinct North American and British texts. The second edition of 1978 unified the two sets of rules (adopting the British spelling 'cataloguing') and brought them in line with the International Standard Bibliographic Description. Libraries wishing to migrate from the previous North American text were obliged to implement 'desuperimposition', a substantial change in the form of headings for corporate bodies.
AACR2 exists in several print versions, as well as an online version. Gorman has edited several revisions of AACR2 including a concise edition. Print versions are available from the publishers. The online version is available only via Cataloger's Desktop from the Library of Congress. Various translations are also available from other sources.
Principles of AACR include cataloguing from the item 'in hand' rather than inferring information from external sources and the concept of the 'chief source of information' which is preferred where conflicts exist.
Over the years AACR2 has been updated by occasional amendments, and was significantly revised in 1988 (2nd edition, 1988 revision) and 2002 (2nd edition, 2002 revision). The 2002 revision included substantial changes to sections for non-book materials. A schedule of annual updates began in 2003 and ceased with 2005.
AACR2 has been succeeded by Resource Description and Access (commonly referred to as RDA), which was released in June 2010. This new code is informed by the Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records and was conceived to be a framework more flexible and suitable for use in a digital environment. In the fall of 2010, the Library of Congress, National Library of Medicine, National Agricultural Library, and several other institutions and national libraries of other English-speaking countries performed a formal test of RDA, the results of which were released in June 2011
What is AACR2??
AACR2 stands for the Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules, Second Edition. It is published jointly by the American Library Association, the Canadian Library Association, and the Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals in the UK. The editor is Michael Gorman, a British-born librarian living in the Chicago area and honored by both the ALA and CILIP. AACR2 is designed for use in the construction of catalogues and other lists in general libraries of all sizes. The rules cover the description of, and the provision of access points for, all library materials commonly collected at the present time.
Despite the claim to be 'Anglo-American', the first edition of AACR was published in 1967 in somewhat distinct North American and British texts. The second edition of 1978 unified the two sets of rules (adopting the British spelling 'cataloguing') and brought them in line with the International Standard Bibliographic Description. Libraries wishing to migrate from the previous North American text were obliged to implement 'desuperimposition', a substantial change in the form of headings for corporate bodies.
AACR2 exists in several print versions, as well as an online version. Gorman has edited several revisions of AACR2 including a concise edition. Print versions are available from the publishers. The online version is available only via Cataloger's Desktop from the Library of Congress. Various translations are also available from other sources.
Principles of AACR include cataloguing from the item 'in hand' rather than inferring information from external sources and the concept of the 'chief source of information' which is preferred where conflicts exist.
Over the years AACR2 has been updated by occasional amendments, and was significantly revised in 1988 (2nd edition, 1988 revision) and 2002 (2nd edition, 2002 revision). The 2002 revision included substantial changes to sections for non-book materials. A schedule of annual updates began in 2003 and ceased with 2005.
AACR2 has been succeeded by Resource Description and Access (commonly referred to as RDA), which was released in June 2010. This new code is informed by the Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records and was conceived to be a framework more flexible and suitable for use in a digital environment. In the fall of 2010, the Library of Congress, National Library of Medicine, National Agricultural Library, and several other institutions and national libraries of other English-speaking countries performed a formal test of RDA, the results of which were released in June 2011
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