Mr. B's Career Web
Career clusters, activities, online resources,
entrepreneurship, and MORE!
School Matters
Help a child succeed in school, resources
for kids, families, and teachers
BreitLinks
A collection of education-themed resources
for kids, families,and teachers
Dewey Decimal System
Keeping books organized on the shelves is important.
It helps us find a book that we want to read. It also allows us to
look at the shelves, "browse", and choose books that we will enjoy.
Most public libraries and school libraries use a number system called the
Dewey Decimal System. Here's a slideshow that explains this in a way
that kids can understand. Just click the RIGHT ARROW BUTTON to advance
through this slideshow and see how the Dewey System works.
Imagine you have hundreds of great books, books you love and want to
share. How would you keep track of them? How would you make it easy for
you and your friends to find something fun to read?
You might start with a list of the books - in a library, this is called
a "catalog". Today, libraries use computers to create their
catalog. Using a computer makes it easy to search the listing of books.
You would also probably want to group books, keeping books on similar
topics together. That way, it will be easy to look on a shelve and find
all the books that cover a topic. Libraries do this too - nonfiction
books are grouped together by subject. Fiction books are grouped together
alphabetically by their author.
The system that libraries use to organize books on shelves was invented
by Melvil Dewey, who lived from 1851 to 1931. Using the Dewey
Decimal System, each book is assigned a three-digit number based
on what it is about - think of it as a code for that subject. A book's
Dewey number is also called its "call number".
A digit is one number, 0 through 9. For example, the number 629 has 3
digits - the first one is a 6, the second is a 2, and the third is a 9.
The first digit of a three-digit Dewey number tells you what main Dewey
group a book belongs in.
The Dewey Categories are:
000 General Knowledge. Encyclopedias, general reference
works, computers, newspapers, magazines
100 Philosophy and Psychology. Optical illusions, brain
research, question and answer books
200 Religion and Mythology. Bible stories, religions of the
world, Greek myths
300 Social Science and Folklore. Communication, education,
law, sociology, transportation, etiquette, folklore and fairy tales
400 Language. Grammar books, sign language, dictionaries,
and picture books in many languages
500 Math and Science. Experiments, mathematics, astronomy,
chemistry, physics, geology, biology, and
dinosaurs, books on specific animals
600 Medicine and Technology. Human body, medicine,
airplanes, space travel, cookbooks and domesticated animals such as
dogs, cats, horses
700 Arts and Recreation. Art, artists, how-to-draw books,
crafts, origami, music, joke and riddle books, sports
800 Literature. Poetry, plays and classic literature
900 Geography & History. History, geography and travel,
atlases, explorers, and biographies
To see examples of the subject areas and Dewey numbers that are popular
with kids, click HERE.
As you can see from our Dewey listing above, the main categories can
cover many different subject areas. The second digit in a book's Dewey
number subdivides the subject and tells you what a book is about. This
keeps books on the same subdivision together, making it easy to look for
books that are on the shelves.
The third digit provides even more information. It breaks the
subdivision down into even more groupings by subject. Additional digits
after the third digit, placed after a decimal point (.), narrow the
subject matter down even more.
Dewey numbers can be used to create very specific groups of books, all
about the same topic or subject. This is why you can look at the
nonfiction books on the shelves of a library and see that books on the
same subject are always kept together. What a great idea!
Each book has a label that shows the Dewey number and the first three
letters of the author's last name. This label is put on the "spine"
of the book - the part of a book you see when you look at the shelves.
The spine usually also has the title of the book printed on it and the
name of the author.
In libraries, nonfiction books are put on the shelves in the order of
their Dewey numbers. The numbers act as a code, telling you what the book
is about. The numbers keep books about the same topic together.
This makes it easy to look for and find books that you want to read.
If you know where to look for the Dewey number, finding books is simple -
when you know the Dewey number, you know where the book should be on the
shelves.
The Dewey numbers keep books on the same topic together. This makes it
easy to go into a library and look at books that are on the shelves.
Similar books are together. You can look at the shelves containing the
Dewey numbers for the subjects you are interested. Finding books like
this is called "browsing".
The Dewey number also makes life easier for librarians. When you
return a book, they can put it back on the shelves by looking at the Dewey
number and putting it back in order on the shelves.
Sometimes, libraries have books that are too big for their shelves,
these books are called "oversized books". Libraries still
assign them Dewey numbers, but put them in order on special shelves that
are large enough for these big books.
Fiction books can be placed in the Dewey Decimal System, in the 800's,
but most libraries have a special fiction section instead. Instead of
having a large section of fiction within the 800's, it is easier to put
fiction books together on shelves alphabetically by author.
Most libraries use the three letters FIC to show that a book is
fiction. Instead of giving it a number, libraries just use the first
three letters of the author's last name. For example, a fiction book
written by John Meyers would be assigned FIC MEY.
Even though this results in assigning a code that is all letters,
librarians still call this a "call number". Keeping fiction
books arranged alphabetically by author makes it easy to find books. It
also makes it easy to find more good books written by your favorite
authors.
So imagine you had hundreds of great books that you enjoy reading and
sharing. Using the Dewey Decimal System for nonfiction and assigning each
book a call number using a three-digit code would be a great idea. For
fiction books, you could create a call number beginning with FIC, followed
by the first three letters of the author's last name.
This is what libraries do. If you had hundreds of good books, wouldn't
this system also make it easy for you to to organize and share books?