Publisher's Synopsis
Classification is an essential skill for all information workers but a difficult concept to grasp - and it's even more difficult to put that theory into practice. This practical guide shows the reader how to go about classifying a document from scratch.
Essential Classification
The characteristics of the major general schemes of classification (LCC, DDC, UDC and BC1) are discussed and their suitability for different classification needs. Some basic issues of theory are included to support practical considerations. The emphasis in the chapters on the major classification schemes is on the practical application of those schemes. Key areas discussed are:
the purpose of classification
the rightness of classification
controlled indexing languages
concept based retrieval and word based retrieval
the structure of classification
varieties of classification 1: the enumerative scheme
varieties of classification 2: the analytico-synthetic scheme
varieties of classification 3: the faceted scheme
management aspects of classification
the need for classification
After reading this book the novice cataloguer will understand the purpose of classification, will be able to choose the best classification scheme to use for their purposes and will have practical experience of the application of those schemes using real documents, practical exercises and worked examples.
Readership