Showing posts with label Workshops. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Workshops. Show all posts

Friday, July 19, 2019

Onsite Corporate Taxonomy Training



I enjoy teaching about taxonomies. The feedback I get from my students or workshop participants helps me improve my methods of communication, teaching, and consulting, and I learn about the varied implementations of taxonomies. The courses evolve and improve over time.  I teach online courses, conference workshops, and corporate onsite workshops. I’ve been making enhancements to the latter offering and this week led a  two-day onsite workshop at a major company on the West Coast.
Heather Hedden leading an onsite corporate training workshop in taxonomy design and creation.

Accommodating a varied audience

 

The participants in my “introductory” workshops, whether at conferences or at their corporate offices, have varied knowledge and experience with taxonomies. Some are complete beginners and are curious to learn about taxonomies and what they can do. Others have been tasked to build a taxonomy with little instruction and are looking for best practices and guidelines. Some of have read my book but have not had the opportunity to put what they have read into practice, so the workshop’s exercises are very helpful. Finally, some participants are experienced taxonomists seeking to fill in the gaps in their knowledge.

The absolute beginners may feel overwhelmed at the amount of information on taxonomies presented in one of my workshops, but I feel it’s important to provide enough instruction to enable people to actually create basic taxonomies (while ideally still getting feedback from someone more experienced). Also, I expect people to combine instruction from my workshop with other methods of learning taxonomies, such as reading my book, taking my online course, attending conference session on taxonomies, or getting advice from a taxonomist in their organization. While I would like to offer a more advanced workshops, it’s difficult to find enough experienced practicing taxonomists at the same location. (At a conference is possible, but sometimes conference organizers equate advanced taxonomy topics with ontologies.)

Interactive exercises

 
Taxonomy workshop participants doing a card-sorting exercise
Workshop participants doing a card-sorting exercise

Participants like interactive or hands-on exercises. One of the learning benefits of my onsite workshops is that they include interactive exercises that involve the entire group or class. My online course includes exercises or assignment to learn from the practice and from feedback I provide, but only the onsite workshops offer the opportunity to work on assignments with others and thus learn from others. Creating taxonomies, like designing websites or software user interfaces, needs to consider different views and is somewhat subjective. The classroom setting offers the opportunity to learn from others. 

Small-group exercises are the best for this kind of learning. My full-length workshops include small-group exercises for designing a set of facets and for doing a card-sorting exercise to categorize topics. Groups may comprise from three to six participants, depending on the total number. In addition to hearing ideas from their group members, participants then share the resulting taxonomy outline to the larger class, and I provide comments. Even exercises that do not involve small groups, but are assignments to consider and shout out answers, are beneficial, because we obtain, discuss, and evaluate various answers beyond the answers that any one individual might consider.

Remote participation is also possible, especially if the remote participants are co-located in the same office. They can form their own small group for the small group exercises, and they can do the card-sorting exercise online. This was the case in my latest corporate workshop.

Customizing corporate workshops

 

Heather Hedden leading a corporate onsite trainging workshop in taxonomy design and creation
To what extent I should customize the workshops for a specific organization was a question when I first offered corporate workshops. It’s not necessary, nor worth the time, to customize every example of taxonomy terms in the workshop presentation with something from the client’s domain of content. Rather, I found that it is sufficient yet instructive to customize just a few slides, such as those with examples of content types and use cases.

Another way I customize the workshops is by the outline and topics included. While all workshops include the basics (taxonomy types, definitions, uses and benefits, standards, structural design, best practices for creating terms and relationships, and governance), optional topics include: user interface display options, metadata and taxonomies, testing taxonomies, tagging, mapping taxonomies, multilingual taxonomies, integration with search, and taxonomy management software.

Finally, I customize the group exercises so that the choices for topics for facets would be applicable, and the card-sorting exercise may take an actual example especially if the client has a public taxonomy I can use as a basis for the exercise. I also include discussion questions, so that the participants can share and discuss the taxonomy issues as pertinent to their organization. In any case, I sign an NDA, so the client can comfortably share information with me which I may sue in the workshop.

Continuous improvement 

 

I found that asking the client for some input on possible customization, I can also generalize the issues to enhance the workshop presentation for future use. In other words, the client input on “customization” is not always that, but rather leads to a general improvement. The result has been to make the workshop presentation based more on real-world scenarios and less theoretical than my previous conference presentations. I actually did not consider my conference presentations to be that theoretical in the first place (since, after all, my knowledge of taxonomies is based on my work experience, not on studies for a degree in library/information science). But now I have made the workshops even more practical. 

Input from the client can also lead to topics for clarification, such as differing use of terminology. For example, a client wanted me to discuss taxonomy “mapping,” which we taxonomists understand to mean the creation of equivalence links between terms in one taxonomy and another, so that one taxonomy may be used to retrieve content that was tagged in the other taxonomy. However, what my client meant by “mapping” was a kind of “see also” related-term relationships between terms in two different taxonomies. Now I know to clarify and discuss both kinds of links between taxonomies.

Just as I am an accidental taxonomist and then an accidental consultant, so am I now also an accidental trainer. Details of my corporate training offerings are on my website

Saturday, July 30, 2016

Who Are Accidental Taxonomists?

Turning to the name of this blog, who are the accidental taxonomists? I sought an answer to this questions through some of the questions of a survey I conducted of taxonomists to gather information on the opening chapter of my book, and more recently I looked at the job titles of those who had registered for my online taxonomies course.

I conducted the survey twice, in late 2008 and May 2015 in order to gather information for my first and then second edition of book. The participants were solicited from various online discussion groups, such as Taxonomy Community of Practice and those of related subjects of content strategy, information architecture, digital asset management, knowledge management etc. So, perhaps there was a slight degree of predetermining the participants by choosing where to announce the survey, although it can be assumed that practicing taxonomists of any background could be members of Taxonomy Community of Practice.

The differences in responses to some of the same questions over that time period are presented in my blog of June 2015 “Taxonomist Trends.” Among other findings, trends in the backgrounds of those involved in taxonomy showed an increase in backgrounds of knowledge management, content management, content strategy and digital asset management; and a decrease in those with a background in Software/IT and database design, development, or administration. Other backgrounds did not change much.

Another source of information on the backgrounds and current jobs of accidental taxonomists, which I did not include in my book, comes from the job titles and introductions of students in the online continuing education workshop “Taxonomies & Controlled Vocabularies,” which I taught through Simmons College School of Library and Information Science for the past eight years (2008-2016) and now teach on my own. I estimate I have had a total of about 500 students take the workshop, which has been offered of average five times per year. It’s impressive what varied backgrounds these “students” of taxonomy have.

Some of the continuing education students were already employed as taxonomists, and they want to fill in the gaps of their knowledge, especially if they had never taken a course on the subject before. Some were librarians, particularly Simmons School of Library and Information Science alumni, since the continuing education program was marketed towards them. These librarians may not need to create taxonomies in their current position, but they are curious to learn about it and perhaps hope to get into taxonomy work later in their careers. A few participants were even current library science students.

However, the majority of the continuing education students are indeed accidental taxonomists. As they explain in their introductions, they have found that the need to learn about taxonomy creation and maintenance is important to their current jobs. As for what their current jobs are, many are involved with content management, digital asset management, or archives. Job titles, based on self-introductions, of those in the past 6 months have included: archivist, business analyst, cataloger, chief operating officer, consultant, data coordinator, digital asset administrator, digital asset cataloger, digital asset manager, director of content standards, information manager, linguist, photo editor product manager, program manager, senior product analyst, and senior records analyst.

In the first chapter of my book “Who are Taxonomists?” there are five pages of job titles, which were obtained from (1) 130 taxonomist survey respondents indicating their job titles, and (2) obtaining job titles from LinkedIn profiles of several hundred people who had “taxonomy” or “taxonomies” in their profile. I did not look at the job titles of my continuing workshop students for my research for that book chapter. There is a slight difference of who is included, because the survey for my book was specifically of those people already engaged in some degree of taxonomy work. Students of my online workshop, on the other hand, may not have done any taxonomy work yet, but are anticipating doing it. They are potentially accidental taxonomists. Their job titles are thus more varied.

Following is a list of job titles that students of the online workshop “Taxonomies & Controlled Vocabularies” put down on their registration form (although some left the job title field blank), over the years of 2009 - 2014. (After 2014, this information was not included in most of the class lists I received.)
Account Representative
Advance Technical Editor
Archives & Digital Collections Manager
Archivist
Assistant Professor
Business Analyst
Business Research Specialist
Career Resource Consultant
Cataloging Librarian
Classification Model Developer
Collection Development Librarian
Content Management Assistant
Content Strategist
Corporate Data Steward & Taxonomist
Digital Archivist
Digital Asset Coordinator
Digital Asset Librarian
Digital Content Specialist
Digital Content Strategist
Digital Resources & Metadata Coordinator
Director, Information Architecture
Director, Library & Archives
Electronic Services Supervisor
Engineering Records Specialist
E-Records Manager / Analyst
Graphic Arts Accessioner
Graphic Designer
Graphics Project Archivist
GTA/LIS Student
Head Librarian, Collections Management
Head of Public Services
Human Factors Engineer
Indexer
Information Analyst
Information Architect
Information Consultant
Information Manager
Information Resources Librarian
Information Scientist
Information Specialist
Information Technology Consultant
Instructional Design Analyst
Instructional Services Librarian
Internal Communications Officer
Knowledge & Information Manager
Knowledge & Learning Specialist
Knowledge Management Analyst
Knowledge Management Associate
Knowledge Management Officer
Knowledge Manager
Lead Library Technician
Legal Editor
Librarian
Library Director
Library & Research Specialist
Library Assistant
Manager, Knowledge Resource Center
Manager, Library Services
Managing Partner
Marketing Director
Media Content Analyst
Metadata Analyst
Metadata Librarian
Metadata Production Specialist
Metadata Specialist
Monographs Cataloger
Ontologist
Operations Specialist
Photographer
Program Records Manager
Project Analyst
Rare book cataloger
Recipe Processor
Records Manager
Reference & Electronic Resources Librarian
Reference Librarian
Relationship Manager
Research & Information Management Coordinator
Research Fellow
Research Librarian
Research Publications Manager
Research Specialist
Resource Center Customer & Product Specialist
Science Librarian
Search Specialist
Senior Associate Regulatory Affairs
Senior Business Analyst (Records Management)
Senior Business Systems Analyst
Senior Content Manager
Senior Content Strategist
Senior Data Curator
Senior Information Architect
Senior Information Security Analyst
Senior Knowledge Base Specialist
Senior Management Consultant
Senior Market Analyst
Senior Metator/XML Analyst
Senior Researcher
Senior Specialist, Technology & Metrics
SharePoint Lead Specialist
Social Sciences Liaison Librarian
Staff Writer
Supervising Librarian
Supervisor, Knowledge Management
Systems Librarian
Taxonomist
Teacher
Teacher Librarian
Team Lead Data & Quality
Technical Editor / Taxonomist
Technical Services Librarian
Technical Writer
User Services & Cataloging Librarian
UX Designer
UX Project Manager
Visual Resources Curator
Web Administrator
Web Services Librarian
Worldwide Metadata Coordinator

Finally, the industries in which the taxonomy students work included:
Broadcasting & media
Computer hardware & software
Consulting
Consumer electronics
Engineering technology
Federal government agencies
Financial services
Health insurance
Healthcare
Healthcare information technology
Information services/publishing
Information technology
International agencies
Law firms
Manufacturing
Medical devices
Military
Municipal government
Oil & gas
Publishing
Religious organizations
Research & development
State/provincial government
 

Simmons College School of Library and Information Science has put its Continuing Education Program on hiatus for evaluation and restructuring. I hope to be able to offer my online workshop again through Simmons in a future year. In the meantime, I am offering this workshop as an online course directly to individuals or groups. This and other taxonomy training offerings are listed on my website: Online Taxonomy Course.

Monday, December 8, 2014

Taxonomy Courses

Note: Since this blog post was written, Simmons College discontinued its continuing education program. I am now offering the 5-week online workshop, previously offered through Simmons, independently through Hedden Information Management. Information is at: http://www.hedden-information.com/courses-workshops/taxonomy-course/

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I have been teaching workshops on how to create taxonomies for over seven years. Coming up in the winter and spring of 2015 I am offering more kinds of workshops and learning options than ever before. I had offered customized corporate onsite workshops in the past, but since I don’t have the time for that any more, it makes sense to accept opportunities to offer general training in taxonomies. I don’t intend to offer directly competing course offerings, so this blog post aims to outline the differences between these various taxonomy courses.

The differences are primarily in learning approach (online or in-person, synchronous or asynchronous), the depth of instruction, cost, and convenience. The audience focus of each is not substantially different. The level in most cases is primarily “advanced beginner.” Prior exposure or use of taxonomies, general training in library/information science, and/or work in related fields such as information architecture, metadata, records management, indexing, content management, digital asset management, etc., is highly beneficial. No such background, however, does not preclude participation, but may make it a little more challenging. Prior experience in creating or editing taxonomies, on the other hand, does not necessarily make you too advance for the classes, as your experience may be limited to just one kind of taxonomy. The only difference is the SLA full-day course, which is aimed more directly at beginners. The workshops are also suitable for both practitioners and managers.

Simmons College School of Library and Information Science continuing education workshop

5-week online workshop with next available session in March 2015, and likely another two or three times later in the year.  Description, Registration
Benefits:
- Individual feedback on submitted assignments.
- Simmons College certificate and record of completion
- Access to free trial of taxonomy management software which you could not get on your own (in - additional to others, which you could get a 30-day trial on your own)
- Opportunity to email questions and get answers
- Greater learning opportunity through assignments and feedback and more material to read
Disadvantages:
- Limited space, usually filling up a month or more in advance (January 2015 session filled)
- A greater total time commitment and over a specific period of time
- Inability to easily save formatted lessons. While you can copy lesson content for your own purposes, the Moodle platform does not offer an easy way to save lessons in the original formatting.

American Society for Indexing Online Learning: “Practical Taxonomy Creation”

Three weekly one-hour sessions, January 14, 21, and 28, 2015, and/or recordings, Description, Registration
Benefits:
- Live phone Q&A
- Unlimited capacity. Sign up at the last minute and still get in. Or register after the live session for access to the recording.
- Limited time commitment
- Option to attend some live and some as recording, if not all sessions fit in your schedule.
- Access to the presentation and recording for unlimited repeated viewings/listening
Disadvantages:
- No individualized assignment feedback
- Topics that are not core not covered due to limited time
- Less learning time (excluding webinar replays)
- Limited time for questions

American Society for Indexing conference 3-hour workshop: “Topics in Taxonomy Creation”

Either April 30 or May 1 (TBD) in Seattle, WA, Description, Registration
Benefits:
- In-person learning experience
- Personal connection with me the instructor and other participants for better networking
- May interrupt the presentation with questions (unlike the webinar in which you must wait for the Q&A time)
- Live demos of taxonomy management software
- Copy of the slides and handouts to keep
Disadvantages:
- Travel time and costs to Seattle
- Required registration for conference (no separate workshop registration)
- Limited instruction time and content

SLA conference full-day (8 hours) conference continuing education workshop: “Introduction to Taxonomy”

Saturday, June 13, 2013, Boston, MA, Description, Registration
Benefits:
- Appropriate for complete beginners
- In-person learning experience
- Personal connection with me the instructor and other participants for better networking
- May interrupt the presentation with questions (unlike the webinar in which you must wait for the Q&A time)
- Live demos of taxonomy management software
- Copy of the slides and handouts to keep
- Ample live Q&A time
- Discounted student and retired SLA member pricing
Disadvantages:
- Travel time and costs to Boston
- A lot of material to digest if a short period of time

Why learn about taxonomies? It is a key tool/method/component of knowledge management and information management.

Friday, February 3, 2012

Taxonomy Training Workshops

I give a workshop in creating taxonomies in two formats, full-day in person and online.  The question sometimes comes up from prospective participants as to the differences. Since a full-day onsite workshop is coming up soon, this would be a good time to address the similarities and differences.

Both workshops cover essentially the same content with a similar outline. Some of the examples are the same, and the participant exercises are the same, too.  The workshops address the same diverse audience, comprising the range from quick-learning beginner who has at least a background in information science to someone already experienced in creating taxonomies but within a limited context and seeks to broaden those skills to more applications. In both kinds of workshops, the audience is also diverse in its professional backgrounds: librarians, corporate content managers and knowledge managers, indexers, web usability professionals and information architects; from industry, academia, nonprofits, and independent professionals. With such a wide diversity of backgrounds, the online workshop seems to resonate a little better with participants, none of whom then feels like a minority in a classroom of other types.

There is an organizational difference, whereby the outline of the onsite PowerPoint-based workshop has 10 topics, and online workshop comprises 5 weekly lessons: (1) an introduction of examples and applications, (2) software for creating taxonomies, (3) hierarchical and associative relationships, (4) preferred term wording and nonpreferred terms, and (5) miscellaneous topics of project processes, governance, folksonomies, and taxonomy jobs. Two onsite workshop topics may be covered in one weekly online lesson, although the onsite workshop does have the additional topics of the sources for terms and the comparison hierarchical taxonomies with alphabetical indexes (when presented as a pre-conference workshop for the American Society for Indexing). The order of topics is also different. The online workshop introduces software earlier on, so students have the option of using trial software to apply principles learned in later lessons.

The use of software is a significant difference in both workshops. In the onsite workshop, I give demos of Synaptica and Data Harmony Thesaurus Master, both web-based, and the PC software MultiTes. In the online workshop, participants access the demo software themselves, with the additional option to download the trial Mac software of Cognatrix (which I don’t demonstrate in my onsite workshop, since I don’t use a Mac.) Obviously, you can learn more when you try out the software yourself. Trial versions of MultiTes and Cognatrix are available to the public, but trials to Synaptica and Data Harmony are not and are made available by special arrangement for students of the workshop.

Q&A is more dynamic and engaging in the classroom setting. Although the online workshop has discussion forums, there is no simultaneous chat. Although the technology is there, the problem is that for a continuing education workshop this is in addition to everyone’s full time job and personal life. Spread out over different time zones too, it would be too difficult to get an agreeable time of day to chat. In the classroom it’s easier and less inhibiting to raise a question or make a comment. Online, it’s in writing, permanent for the duration of the course, and your name is attached to it. Thus, the online discussion of the workshop has usually been less than optimal.

Then there are the obvious differences.  Some people learn better by listening to a speaker, and some people learn better by reading texts on their own. Convenience of location and timing will also make a difference. The onsite workshop is usually offered only once a year (although a customized corporate onsite version is an option), whereas the online workshop is offered every other month and is accessible by Internet globally. However, the latter tends to fill up 2-3 months in advance, and the onsite workshop usually has room for same-day registrations (at a higher cost).