Organizing Information in School Libraries: Basic Principles and New Rules
By (Author) Cynthia Houston
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Libraries Unlimited Inc
7th December 2015
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Library and information services
025.3
Paperback
202
Width 216mm, Height 279mm
539g
Covering both classification and cataloging principles as well as procedures relevant to school libraries, this book provides a teaching kit for a course on this critical subject that includes content and practice exercises. A valuable resource for instructors in LIS programs who teach courses in cataloguing with an emphasis on school libraries, this textbook explains the nuts and bolts of classification and cataloging as well as the functionality of integrated library systems and how these systems critically serve the mission of the school. Author Cynthia Houston covers Web 2.0 and the social networking features of these systems as well as examining in detail the principles and procedures for subject classification using Sears subject headings or Dewey Decimal Classification using the Sears tool. This teaching tool kit addresses the cataloging of print materials, audiovisual materials, and electronic materials separatelybut all within the specific context of the school library. It supplies a number of examples and exercises to reinforce the key concepts and skills as well as to demonstrate the real-world applications of learning concepts and procedures. Based directly on Houston's extensive experience in teaching classification and cataloging courses, the included content and practice exercises enable instructors to use this book for content, for instruction, and for providing student feedback.
Cynthia Houston is a professor in the Master of Science program in library media education at Western Kentucky University, Bowling Green, KY.