Monday, March 3, 2014

WorldCat, CAMIO and More


WorldCat

In the WorldCat catalogue, you can search in many different ways including by author, material type, composer, ISBN number, and various others.  I chose to search the title Where the Red Fern Grows.  There were 180 records found, but only 161 of them were in English which I found to be very interesting.  A total of 2045 libraries worldwide have the first item! Wow! Not too surprising considering the novel is considered a classic. The top library is Black Hills State University.  The novel had several descriptors including: Hunting dogs -- Juvenile fiction.Human-animal relationships -- Juvenile fiction.; Dogs -- Fiction.; Hunting -- Fiction. When I clicked on the authors name, I found a total of 439 results, with only 235 of those results being books.  When I went into the information, the majority of the results were Where the Red Fern Grows.  I liked that it also contained a link to the citation for the page (very useful for students working on research papers!).


Using the OAIster search, I found an article on Agriculture Mediation and Counseling.  The information was about a farm program available to SD farmers for additional assistance.  I could see the information being helpful if you had received a copy of a pamphlet or handout and lost your copy.  I could see it being helpful because you could find a new copy with all of the information and contact information.  I liked that you are able to access a link with the information without having to print it out (save a tree).


In CAMIO, I found many interesting links on the Sioux.  I found that a lot of the results were Costume and Jewelry   I also liked that the information contains the creator and the museum location.  I could see this resource being a great tool for incorporating the Oceti Sakowin standards in the classroom.  It would be wonderful to have pictures of actual materials that we are discussing.  I could also find this being helpful when discussing different artists within pieces of literature.  What a great way to get students exposed to art! I could see the personalizing favorites being very helpful to have students present.  How neat is it that the search engine puts the information into a slideshow for you and allows you to compare certain images.

2 comments:

Fabric and Books said...

Excellent review of WorldCat, CAMIO and more. You've identified the features that make WorldCat so powerful--the ability to see different editions, locations etc of content. And the citations are very useful!
Wonderful ideas for CAMIO. It is such an amazing resource to give students access to art.
Thank you so much for your post!
Julie

faith library said...

Camio is fun too. When I had my 5th and 6th graders do a scavenger hunt on the databases found at the State Library, then we went over the questions together; after that they each picked a site that they would be interested taking a look at in more depth; a couple of the students were excited about this site! I even showed some of our high school art students - cool, was the comment.