ACRL - Day Four, Part OneYou get to see how I take notes!
Session of the morning:
PennTags: Building a Social Tagging System in an Academic Library presented by Laurie Allen
UPenn is University of Pennsylvania in Philly
(Michael Winkler is the tech end of the presentation, but not present.)
PennTags = del.icio.us for the Penn community
- If they've got it on the web, it's taggable or will be soon. Ie. OPACs, etc.
Users collect resources
- add tags like del.icio.us
- unlike del.icio.us, long annotations are possible (specifically in response to one assignment on campus)
- annotations displayed in OPAC records and on PennTags website, RSS feeds, etc.
Copyright used 4 times more often than fair use.
Most recent posts go to the top of the page below tag cloud on main page.
If in OPAC, in tagged list, title linked to record.
PennTags projects, example given "Reclaiming p2p" found by just clicking through various tags.
Demo of how users actually use PennTags.
Call number included in citation record.
Recent tags available for quick addition.
SFX/RFX links available in a database means you can use PennTags to tag content.
Bookmarklet (like Blogger's) available for general webpages (doesn't really work in Safari).
PT too small to use as a way to find resources, at this point more as a personal collection tool.
PT *NOT* a replacement for the catalog.
- Not a part of the MARC record.
-- PT display a separate part of the record's page load.
- When searching in Franklin, you are searching that database and may stumble upon a book that's tagged, when using PT, all books in Franklin that are tagged.
PT
- Sub for del.icio.us for academic purposes
- Annotated bibliographies (previously mentioned)
- Base for research guides by libns
- "Shadow" catalog - specialized collections by enthusiasts - dkelly's for music scholarship
PT designed *FOR* the Penn community.
"Books are for use"
What used to be private types of use is moving into the public sphere (categorizing, remembering, etc.)
-- Libraries need to be more involved because of this.
PT has not ever been marketed, only really shown to the one instructor's classes.
- More librarians in general libraryland know about PT than Penn community members.
Working on a new version and when that's available a large marketing campaign will be launched.
-- New version will be more robust in functionality.
Tags have the potential for usage indicator in weeding considerations.
- Most books that have been tagged have been checked out at this point.
Lexis-Nexis will supposedly be having durable URLs in the near future.
PT default is public, but you can designate posts to be private.
- In upcoming version, you can "friend" people to view private posts.
New version will have copyright assignment functionality (Creative Commons/all rights reserved).
When Franklin was redesigned, Subject Headings were moved from the "Detailed View" to the "Basic View" mainly because tags were being displayed in the Basic View.
Labels: acrl, acrl2007, conferences, library 2.0, penntags, social bookmarking