University of Arizona
School of Information Resources & Library Science
IRLS 401/501 - Organization of Information
Fall 2004 - Syllabus
Instructor: Anita Sundaram Coleman
Contact: Office - SIRLS 21, Phone +1 (520) 621-4026, Email - WebCT
Instructor Office Hours: By WebCT email and appointment in the WebCT
Chatroom
WebCT GAT: John Stanton
Course GAT: Youfen Su
Mode of Instruction: WebCT
First day of classes: Aug. 23, 2004; First day for IRLS 401/501: Sept.
3, 2004 (but you can start familiarizing yourself with this syllabus Aug.
27 - see below, Schedule)
Course Listserv: For WebCT backup and announcements you must subscribe
to IRLS401-501,
the official course listserv. You must have u.arizona.edu email - which
you can get from here, http://account.arizona.edu/
Communication Policy: Students who have NOT subscribed to the IRLS401-501
course list by Sept. 3 will be administratively dropped. The course list
is your communication tool should WebCT go down or you lose WebCT access.
Therefore, it is imperative that you subscribe and be able to use the
listserv to communicate with the class and the instructor.

REQUIRED TEXTS
Taylor, Arlene. 2004. The Organization of Information. Englewood,
CO: Libraries Unlimited.
Coleman, Anita. 2004. Guide to Selecting and Cataloging Quality
WWW Resources for the Small Library. Fairfield, CA: LRACCC.
IMPORTANT NOTE: You must buy the Guide from the UA Bookstore
to get a discounted price.This guide is needed for completing assignments.
CATALOG DESCRIPTION
IRLS 401 -- Organization of Information (3 units)
Description: Introduction to the theories and practices used in the organization
of information. Overview of national and international standards and practices
for access to information in collections. May be convened with: IRLS 501.
Usually offered: Fall, Spring.
COURSE DESCRIPTION
This course studies the history, theory and practices of information
organization, primarily in traditional and digital libraries. However,
other organizations and information evironments such as archives, museums
and management information systems are also included. This is an introductory
course that surveys the information and knowledge organization techniques
that exist or are emerging and focuses on standards and tools that are
used in large text-based information environments.
COURSE HISTORY
Read Coleman, A. 2002. Interdisciplinarity: The Road Ahead for Education
in Digital Libraries. D-Lib Magazine, 8 (7/8), July/August. Available
online. URL: http://www.dlib.org/dlib/july02/coleman/07coleman.html
This article will help you understand the sequence of courses that you
can take in the area of Knowledge Organization. Note that the old course
name was Knowledge Structures I and may still be used within WebCT or
by adjunct professors teaching this course.
GOALS AND OBJECTIVES
The main goal of the course is to become familiar with the concepts
and practices of bibliographic and non-bibliographic information organization.
By the end of the course, the student will be able to:
- Define the knowledge structures (a.k.a. information handling
tools) used in various information environments for organizing information
and knowledge
- Describe the main theories in library and archival cataloging
(including recent trends in metadata), categorization, classification,
and subject analysis
- List the uses, advantages, and disdvantages of a sample range
of knowledge structures (information handling tools)
- Demonstrate basic skills in subject analysis
- Demonstrate basic skills in metadata creation
- Demonstrate basic knowledge of at least two metadata standards
- Articulate the similarities and differences between a thesaurus,
ontology, authority file, subject heading list, and library classification
scheme
COURSE REQUIREMENTS
Deliverable: Exercise in resource selection & metadata
creation
Details shared in WebCT
Deliverable: Major Project in electronic resources organization
Details shared in WebCT
Deliverable: Bibliography (selective, annotated)
Details shared in WebCT
METHODS OF INSTRUCTION
The classroom environment for this virtual course is WebCT. Here are guidelines to help
learning:
- I have never had significant problems with WebCT but students
do seem to have WebCT woes when Fall classes start. Therefore, I do
not expect you to do too much within WebCT until Sept. 3. Use this time
to read your text, familiarize yourself with the course syllabus, etc.
- Course Notes (lectures) will be posted weekly by 5 pm Friday
- General Class Participation and Discussions are encouraged!
Use Discussion and the topics *Main* for ALL questions related to
course.
- Complete weekly readings from the text (Author: Taylor) by
the end of the day they are scheduled.
- Course Requirements help assess instruction and student learning
and it is important that you follow posted guidelines.
With the exception of Discussions all work must be submitted using
the Assignments WebCT DropBox link. This will allow submissions only
until a pre-determined date and time. Make sure you DO NOT miss this
date or wait until the last minute to submit. Assignments submitted
late (and not excused) or not in HTML will automatically earn a grade
of C or lower.
- Netiquette is essential in the electronic world. Learn and
practice it. A good introduction to
Netiquette is available from the Instructional Computing Online Library
at Indiana University at Bloomington. Another good source is an
interactive quiz (thanks to Garry Forger in the Office of Distributed
Learning for this pointer) that you can take - http://www.albion.com/netiquette/netiquiz.html.
When reading electronic text, give others the benefit of the doubt;
remember that the written word has no verbal/body language cues to soften
it's effect, and don't always be quick to assume the worst. Don't be
afraid to post or ask questions but at the same time, make sure you've
read everything. Practice by reading this course outline thoroughly
and then, give yourself time to reflect on it.
- Successful learning for this course REQUIRES weekly participation,
DAILY visits to the course pages within WebCT, and prompt, thoughtful,
polite responses to your peers, instructor, and their posts.
- Adhere to the UA
codes of student conduct and academic integrity.
- Practical knowledge is an important part of professional learning.
You will have the opportunity to work with plenty of practical tools
from the KS Toolbox. Discussions, exercise, and final project papers
will require you to select and use some of these tools. Start browsing,
reading, and interacting with the resources assembled here.
SCHEDULE
Important Note: This is a schedule of readings from the text only.
- Week 1, Aug. 27 - What's Your
Learning Style? | Familiarize yourself with syllabus
- Week 2, Sept. 3 - Organization of Recorded Information &
Retrieval Tools
Read Taylor, Chapter 1, 2
- Week 3, Sept. 10 - Development of the Organization of Recorded
Information in Western Civilization
Read Taylor, Chapter 3
- Week 4, Sept. 17 - Encoding Standards, & Systems and System
Design
Read Taylor, Chapter 4, 5
- Week 5, Sept. 24 - Metadata, Metadata: Description, Metadata:
Access & Authority Control
Read Taylor, Chapter 6, 7, 8
- Week 6, Oct. 1 - Catch-up
Review chapter 1-8 and post in Discussions
- Week 7, Oct. 8 - Subject Analysis
Read Taylor, Chapter 9
- Week 8, Oct. 15 - Systems for Vocabulary Control
Read Taylor, Chapter 10
- Week 9, Oct. 22 - Systems for Categorization
Read Taylor, Chapter 11
- Week 10, Oct. 29 - Systems for Categorization (contd.)
Read Taylor, Chapter 11 (review)
- Week 11, Nov. 5 - The Making of Retrieval Tools
Read TBD
- Week 12, Nov. 12 - Arrangement & Display
Read Taylor, Chapter 12
- Week 13, Nov. 19 - Review II
Read Taylor, your choice
Week 14, Nov. 26 - Break
Happy Thanksgiving!
- Week 15, Dec. 3 - Final Review: What Have We Learned?
Review, Practice, Discuss Recent Advances & Trends.
- Week 16, Dec. 10 - Present Major Project to class
Share in WebCT Presentations and Discussions - Week 17, Dec.
17 - Finals week (last day of class)
MILESTONES/IMPORTANT DATES
Oct. 4 - Assignment 1 completed and submitted
Oct. 18 - Start working on final Major Project
Oct. 30 & Nov. 30 - Selective Annotated Bibliography selected
and compiled
Dec. 10 - Assignment 2 - Major project presented to class
Dec. 13 - Last date to submit major project in WebCT
EVALUATION
General guidelines for evaluation include:
- All work must be turned in on the dates due by 5:00 pm Arizona
time (unless other times are allowed by the WebCT submission facility).
WebCT will NOT allow submissions past the DUE Date/Time if I have set
it up to be so. Therefore, read your Assignments page and instructions
carefully. Availability times are very clearly marked under the Assignments
link in WebCT and in case of doubt, email the Course GAT.
- All work must be turned in using the submit/email facility
within WebCT. This means that you DON'T email/send me the work outside
WebCT.
- HTML format must be used for all work turned in for grading
(except discussions).
Grade Breakdown (501 students):
- Exercise 1: 40%
- Bibliography: 10%
- Major Project: 50%
- Total: 100%
Grade Breakdown (401 students):
- Exercise 1: 40%
- Bibliography: 10%
- Major Project [scaled down version]: 50%
- Total: 100%
Assignment of Course Grades:
401/501 Course grades will be assigned as follows:
A=90+ (Superior Work)
B=80-89 (Very Good)
C=70-79 (Marginally Satisfactory)
F=0-69 (Failed to meet requirements)
Coleman Home
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First Created: 06/26/04
Created By: Anita S. Coleman