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LIB 630 Classification and Cataloging Spring 2010. Subject Analysis. What’s it all about, Alfie?. What is it?. Subject analysis
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LIB 630 Classification and CatalogingSpring 2010 Subject Analysis What’s it all about, Alfie?
What is it? • Subject analysis • Examination of a bibliographic item by a trained subject specialist to determine the most specific subject heading(s) or descriptor(s) that fully describe its content, to serve in the bibliographic record as access points in a subjectsearch of a librarycatalog, index, abstracting service, or bibliographic database. When no applicable subject heading can be found in the existing headings list or thesaurus of indexingterms, a new one must be created.
Say what? From ISP 603Information ProcessingDenise A. GarofaloAugust 3, 1998, rev. September 14, 2000
Why do all that? • If we don’t we can’t find stuff! • “Subject analysis is [essentially] all methods and processes which can be described as representation for retrieval of information by its subjects, be they names, geographic locations, or topical subjects.” • Quoted from Williamson, N. J. (1997). The Importance of Subject Analysis in Library and Information Science Education. Technical Services Quarterly 15(1/2):67-87 by Pamela Hill in LS 500 Organization of InformationTuesday, February 24, 2004
The rose by another name • Intellectual access • Mission and Goals of the School Library Media Program • The mission of the library media program is to ensure that students and staff are effective users of ideas and information. This mission is accomplished: • by providing intellectual and physical access to materials in all formats • Information Power: Guidelines for School Library Media Programs (1988), p.1
What’s that all about? • What’s the difference between intellectual and physical access??? • What is it all about? • It’s about what it’s about, compared to touching on the book • Now, figure that one out! • Librarians talk about ABOUTNESS
Aboutness • Aboutness • The totality of subjects explicitly or implicitly addressed in the text of a document, including but not limited to the meaning(s) of the title, the stated and unstated intentions of the author, and the ways in which the information may be used by readers. Levels of specificity must be considered in ascertaining the subject(s) of a work.
What do you mean? • Example from aboutnessentry in ODLIS: • In the case of the hypothetical titleThe Japanese Teamwork Approach to Improving High School Effectiveness, is the work about: • education? • educational effectiveness? • high school effectiveness? • teamwork? • a Japanese approach to teamwork?
How do you find out? • Walk like an Egyptian? • NO! Think like a librarian!!!!
An Important Factor • Cataloger’s judgment • Individual perspective • – Informed by the cataloger’s background • knowledge of the subject • – Informed by the cataloger’s cultural background • Consistency in determining “What is it about?” leads to greater consistency in assignment of subject headings • Basic Subject Cataloging Using LCSH —Trainers’ Notes
Another perspective • It’s “a precarious business” • The ability to determine what the item is “about” depends a great deal upon the cataloguer’s knowledge, biases, and judgment. • Deciding the “aboutness” of a particular item also relies upon the patrons, which are served by a particular library or library system. Library Sciences SitePaula LauritaBellaOnline's Library Sciences Editor
In other words • How you do it • Depends on • What you know • What your users know (or, rather what you think they know!) • What might interest your users
Steps • Determine the main subject or subjects of the book • This is done by examining the title, table of contents, description on the dust jacket, preface, text, and illustrations. • The next step is to write down the subject and check to see if that choice is permitted in the standardized list. • If the subject selected is not in the list, the related subjects must be consulted. It is possible, although not advisable, to add a local subject heading. • Chapter 6: Subject Headings
Why use a standardized list? • Why Subject Headings? • Subject headings often indicate the contents of books in terms that their titles do not use, which often may be nondescriptive or very general. Subject headings in online databases are often referred to as descriptors, but they serve the same purpose in locating valuable resources. • Along with their subdivisions, subject headings provide a clear and systematic way of scanning the catalog for what is needed. Assigned headings are usually the dominant, and most important, subjects of a given item. • Subject headings bring like materials together, requiring less use of the wide variation of synonomous terms that may appear to describe a single concept (teen, youth, adolescent, young adult, etc.). • Using Subject Headings in PantherCat
Robert Bratton, original cataloger, discusses the question “Where do subject headings come from?” (a) The stork delivers them. (b) They grow on trees. (c) They magically appear on catalog records (which also magically appear). (d) Through the determined, diligent work of librarians. • As a cataloger, I wish the answer was a, b, or c, but I know too well that it is d. No longer publicly available on the web
More on subject headings • Bratton explains: • First, catalogers at the University of Maryland Libraries utilize Library of Congress Subject Headings (LCSH) on bibliographic records. • Second, LCSH is based upon the concept of “literary warrant,” which means that the topics in published literature drive the creation of subject headings. New subject headings are created when works about new topics are published and acquired by libraries. When a cataloger cannot find an appropriate subject heading for a work, he or she then considers proposing a new subject heading. • Where do subject headings come from? From
What about LMS and subject headings? • Manitoba provides an answer that is true for USA as well: • The individual library may choose between Sears List of Subject Headings and Library of Congress Subject Headings (see Bibliography). • The Sears List has long been the standard for school and smaller libraries. For most school libraries it will suffice. The Library of Congress subject headings should be considered only for larger libraries. All other situations cannot support the cost. Changes in technology may justify the use of Library of Congress subject headings in the future. Commercial vendors will provide the opportunity to select one or the other or both. When cataloguing is purchased, both Sears and Library of Congress subject headings should be requested. Then when the records are loaded, Sears would be used for the present time. The school library must update its edition of Sears regularly.
Sears • Her publisher’s words: • For 80 years, Sears List of Subject Headings has served the needs of small and medium-sized libraries, delivering a basic list of essential headings, together with patterns and examples to guide the cataloger in creating further headings as needed. Practical features include a thesaurus-like format, an accompanying list of cancelled and replacement headings, and legends within the list that identify earlier forms of headings. • See also Minnie Earl Sears: The Woman Behind Sears List
Tips on using Sears • Use as specific a heading as possible: • A book about bears should be given the subject heading BEARS rather than the general heading ANIMALS. For a book about several different animals, the more inclusive heading ANIMALS should be used rather than separate headings for each animal mentioned in the text. Determining whether to use a specific or a general subject entry can pose difficulties. The introduction to Sears describes how to designate them correctly. • School libraries often find it valuable to include subject headings for Fiction and Easy materials. This makes it easier to identify storybooks about a particular subject or theme. In general, add the word FICTION as a subdivision of other subjects to indicate that the item is a work of fiction. • FromCataloguing and Processingch. 6
A useful rule • “Rule of Three”: • Observe the rule of three. • That is, if a book is about two or three subjects, class with the first. or one receiving more space, but if about four or more, class with the more general subject, e.g., a book about four fruits goes in the general number for fruit, and a book about four mammals goes in the general number for mammals. • SUBJECT CATALOGUING CHEAT SHEET