NAME:
DATE:
Dewey Decimal system:
The Dewey Decimal system is a way to group book so we can find what we need. The same decimal system you learn in math class. Non-fiction (true factual) books are grouped by topic and assigned a decimal number. This number is found in the OPAC and on the side of the book.
Play the shelving Game
Directions: Walk around the room quietly and find the following areas. Write down two topics or types of books found there.
Area of the library / Type of book / Type of book000 / Example: encyclopedias
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
900
FICTION
FICTION books are arranged on the shelves by the author’s LAST name, then by first name.
Books written by Joe Smith are shelved in front of books by Thomas Smith
Directions: Find a Fiction book on the shelves and answer the following questions.
- What is the title ______
- Who is the author ______
- What is the call number (on the side) ______
- What is the barcode number? 1ebrj______
- What is the difference between the Call number and the barcode?
______
______
______
______
OPAC PRACTICE
Directions:
1.Open the OPAC
Click start, Student menu, Library, OPAC
2.Answer the following questions:
- How many books do we have by Laurie Halse Anderson? ______
- Look up dogs. Write down one title
______
What is the CALL number of the title you wrote down?
______
How many pages does the book have? ______
Fiction Continued
What does the Red box indicate in this example?
______
______
______
What can you do if a book you want is signed out?
______
______
______
Visual OPAC
Click VISUAL
Click People, click US Presidents
Find a book on President Obama.
What is the title? ______
What is the CALL NUMBER? ______
Is the book a Fiction, non Fiction or Biography? (Circle one)
Explain how you knew what kind of book it was. ______
______
______
Advanced OPAC
Truncation: * example: farm* gives us farm, farms, farming, farmer
Boolean Searching
This is used to enhance keyword searching.
Using Boolean operators AND, OR, NOT, will help you find the information you want in the
OPAC.
The Boolean operators must be typed in all capital letters.
• “AND” limits the search to materials that have information on two topics, for example
High school AND sports. With “AND” you will locate items that discuss both high
Schools and sports.
• “OR” locates materials that have information on either of two topics, for example dog
OR cats will find items on dogs or cats. “OR” produces the largest number of items.
• “NOT” limits the search to materials on one topic, excluding another topic. You can
search for materials on sports but not baseball. If you want material on sports but not
baseball, search sports NOT baseball.
Directions: using our OPAC find books on:
Find books on Sports but NOT baseball. How many do we have?______
How many books do we have on Dogs and Horses? ______
How many mysteries do we have by Matt Christopher?
What can you try if you can’t spell the whole word? ______