School of Information Management & Systems. Spring 2001.
245 Organization of Information in Collections.
M. Buckland.
A CRITIQUE OF TOPICAL ACCESS.
Intentions due ASAP, Brief progress report due April 11, Final report due May 6.
Several small assignments were designed to build understanding and
expertise. This assignment, to be worked on in the in the last
third of the semester, is a critique of access for a topic of your choice.
(Past topics.)
Access systems, whether using "natural language" (keywords, subject
headings) or artificial notation
(classification schemes), is a language activity. Language reflects
the knowledge,
values, and perspectives of those using the language.
Access systems, then, reflect the knowledge and culture of its context,
the perspectives of those who create it, and, in principle, their assumptions
about the
group(s) to be served.
Knowledge, values, and perspectives vary as cultures vary -- between cultures
and over time. Topical (Subject) access systems for general, nation-wide use
such as the Library of Congress Subject Headings, the Library of Congress
Classification, and the Dewey Decimal Classification tend to reflect generally
prevailing culture and language of their origins
and to lag behind changes in knowledge, values, and perspectives.
Examine these issues.
There can be any combination of three emphases:
An historical approach: Select some changing topic. Technological
change tends to work less well than a social issue on which attitudes
have changed. Examine, describe, and critique the treatment of this
topic currently and over time in any appropriate categorization system,
e.g. classification scheme (e.g. LCC, and Dewey) or verbal access
(e.g. LCSH).
A comparative approach. Seek out other indexes, thesauri, etc., that
illustrate the treatment of the
selected topic. See how they differ from each other and from what you
would recommend.
A prescriptive approach. Design something better! Select a specialized
topic about which you are knowledgeable.
Select or imagine a specialized collection, large website, or a small
library to support research and
education on that topic. Assume it has been developed in an orthodox
manner: LCSH and LCC [substitute DC if you prefer] are used unchanged.
There is a vertical file of pamphlets and clippings.
Deliverables:
Make recommendations of the following kinds for your chosen topical area.
Specify your assumptions concenring
the context, groups(s), and purpose(s) for which you are designing
the recommendations:
(i) Assuming you cannot change the system, give examples of additional
cross-references that would improve accessability by redirecting
searchers from their terms to the systems terms (e.g. Vietnam War
SEE Vietnamese Conflict).
(ii) Assuming you could modify the system, recommend selective changes:
new terms, modified terms, references.
(iii) Replacement: Outline, with examples, a replacement thesaurus,
subject heading list, and / or classification scheme.
(iv) Assume telnet MELVYL is used for access. Make recommendations
for enhanced search capabilities.
(v) Prepare an leaflet for users explaining how to find materials
(topical access only) in this collection as revised. Make social or
other commentary as you wish.