At the 2011 ALA conference in Minneapolis, I went to a session about ditching the Dewey Decimal Classification System, in favor of a bookstore model. There are a lot of articles in the literature (and blogosphere) about this, and, judging by the attendance, it was a popular session. With that said, though, I don't think I was the only one who walked away disappointed. The librarian in question was setting up a new school library, with all new books. These were done via the bookstore model by Mackin. What good did that do those of us with an average collection age of 1989?
"The card catalog is no longer the necessary first
stop in a visit to the library" by dfulmer. http://www.flickr.com/photos/annarbor/4350627292/sizes/l/ Used under Creative Commons
license.
In my practicum, I had put my toe into the
bookstore model, by doing a "featured collections" section which was hugely popular with
the students (593% increase in circulation for the military books!) and have
done that here, too. Doing that makes it easy for young students to find the
books they really want - dinosaurs! princesses! football! kittens! - and keep
them from messing up the nonfiction stacks. It was only for a few categories,
though, with a small percentage of the nonfiction titles.
We've done a lot
of physical changes here at the elementary library this summer - see these posts for pictures - but I think the biggest change will be
some things we've done to the collections. We had already physically separated
higher level fiction from lower level, but that was just by eyeballing it when
we put them on the shelves. This summer, we've set up three collections for
that - Fiction (Hoot by Carl Hiaasen, Harry Potter and the
Sorcerer's Stone) is against the north wall, Juvenile Fiction (Junie B.
Jones and the Stupid, Smelly Bus, Captain Underpants and the Attack of
the Talking Toilets) is against the south wall, and a new section, "Early
Reader" is near the south wall, parallel. This section includes very early
books, whether they be picture books, nonfiction, or fiction. This is your
Hop on Pop type of books. Last year, students would come in to find
"good fit books" for Daily 5 literacy instruction, and for those very beginning
readers, it was hard to find appropriate books. Going to picture books was hit
and miss, when you have books that really could be used with junior or senior
high students. And the itty-bitty nonfiction books, appropriate for this level,
simply don't get checked out if shelved in nonfiction. So this will help, I'm
sure. (We got stickers from Demco for the JF and ER collections. It's a
beautiful thing.)
The reason I want to transition to something a little different is this: the inconsistency of spine labels. I don't know about you, but I hate doing spine labels. (I know, I know, I could get processing done, but half of my books come from Amazon.) But let's say you have a book on grizzly bears - 599.784. But I don't like to put three digits to the right of the decimal, so I'll round that to 599.78. But perhaps a past librarian would do the whole number, or round to 599.7, or god forbid, 599. So then, if you - or your Junior Librarians - have faith in your spine labels, your books might be: grizzly bear, polar bear, grizzly bear, panda bear, gazelle, grizzly bear, hyena. Chaos, I tell you! Chaos!
What I'm doing this year, then, is using fiberboard dividers that stick out a bit from the books, with the category name and Dewey number included. So we'll have "Fairy Tales" and "Bears" and "World War II." We'll get more specific with the category when there are at least ten books on a topic. We'll still mostly adhere to the Dewey order, though we'll use our judgment - we'll put all of the Titanic books together (910, Ti-tan-tic history - just like in the Dewey Decimal Rap). NASCAR is going out of the 796s and into 388s, sorry (cars, not sports). This if course will require me to make more spine labels . . .
The fact is, I rarely have anyone come in looking for a particular nonfiction book. Someone will want a book on the Vietnam War or a fairy tale that isn't too long or a print encyclopedia (ha ha, just kidding on that one). This will make it easier to find books on a topic, for my Junior Librarians to shelve books, and I think it will encourage browsing by students who thought they didn't like nonfiction.