Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Tagging 101

During our cataloging course when we were learning the ins and outs of the Dewey Decimal System, we noted the difficulty in finding all the references for a certain topic if the topic spanned more than one Dewey classification (dogs as mammals, dogs as pets, dogs as workers, etc.). Add to that, any esoteric reference (It's a dog-eat-dog world, It's raining cats and dogs . . .) and the problem is compounded exponentially.

Currently, in my technology discussion group, we are discussing whether Library Thing will replace Dewey. At first blush I felt the question was comparing apples to oranges. I still think they serve different purposes, but after viewing Tagging 101, I very clearly see that tagging ANYTHING (books, videos, photos) makes the ability to retrieve it much more likely.

I see tremendous applications for our kids trying to piece together research on everything from dogs to Minnesota: to the extent that they can "browse" the connections others have made to their topic, not only will they get a birds-eye-view of content, but also insight into different ways to connect their content to other topics.

Corita Kent (one of my soul mentors) said that creativity comes from unexpected pairing: thoughts, pictures, words, ideas, events. Well, tagging takes one person's expected association on a topic and pairs it with other people's associations, many of which will be unexpected. It's a lot to ponder.

2 comments:

thealouise said...

Julie,

Your post was so insightful! I agree with you that the implications for kids are tremendous. I think libraries need to follow the Danbury Connecticut Public Library's lead and find a way to incorporate tagging and other social aspects of new Web 2.0 tools into our online catalogs.

Julie Marie said...

Me, too, thea. It's sort of like the practice of putting post-its of personal comments in the books as students read them. In this way they are creating a community of readers. I love it when I get a book back in the library and a little third grader has left her notes inside. I get to know so much about her! LibraryThing is just a big post-it note viewer!