Classification
Library Cataloging

Classification


Information architecture: learning how to classify by Gerry McGovern talks about the need for metadata in information management. He seems to mean something different than I do when discussing classification.
If you are a knowledge worker, a key skill you require is how to classify content. Classification skills are needed in order to better organize content on your computer, for your emails, and for how you compose documents. If you have responsibility for a website, classification is an essential skill.




- Classify From Oclc
Classify is a service from OCLC. Search, the resulting FRBR set is checked and then the classification numbers used displayed. Quick, simple way to get a class number. No need to be an OCLC member. Does Dewey, NLM, and LCC at least. Not sure about other...

- Bso Classification Scheme
A classification system that is new to me is the Broad System of Ordering (BSO), a general, faceted classification scheme for information exchange and switching.BSO is a compilation of about 6800 terms, arranged in an order which is systematic or structured...

- Classification
Managing Content with Automatic Document Classification by Rafael A. Calvo, Jae-Moon Lee, and Xiaobo Li appears in Journal of Digital Information, vol. 5, no. 2.News articles and Web directories represent some of the most popular and commonly accessed...

- Subject Access
The Information Management Resource Centre (IMRC) of the Canadian government has a page, Classification, Thesauri and Controlled Vocabularies.The resources in this section are directed at persons interested in improving the organization and retrieval...

- Classification
Still on the classification topic. There has been some discussion on a list of what classification schemes are used in Europe. As I remember Dewey and the Universial Decimal Classification (UDC) are the most common. The Bliss Classification is used in...



Library Cataloging








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