The seven courses in the Knowledge Base Editing series
are currently available in a variety of formats: Web-based, face-to-face,
and on-site. All include instructor mentoring and the creation of knowledge
base deliverables — e.g. reports, catalogs, document archives, A
- Z indexes, controlled vocabularies, thesauri, topic maps — using
a Web-based lab. Optional follow-up products and services include customized
versions of the Lab software, assistance in preparing a knowledge base
publishing "roadmap," and a train-the-trainer program (see Montague
Fellows in Knowledge Base Publishing).
Team instruction
Individuals can register for one or more courses, but we highly
recommend a team approach, of 2 - 10 ten individuals. Discounts
are available for more than 5 participants. For additional savings, you
can license your staff to teach the courses in house (see the Fellows
program).
Introduction
to Knowledge Base Publishing The business case for Knowledge Base Publishing.
Best practices for organization and staffing. How to create a basic
knowledge base for a single business domain that includes a document
repository, controlled vocabulary, and expertise database.
Taxonomies, search & Sharepoint How to create and use taxonomies and metadata to enhance information retrieval in Microsoft Office Sharepoint Server 2007 (MOSS).
Metadata
and search How and when to
use a full text search engine in conjunction with other retrieval
and navigation tools. How to integrate a taxonomy with a metadata-aware
search engine.
Organizing
and managing images How to create and
modify an organization scheme for electronic images. How to set
up an efficient image archive. How to manipulate and transform
images for print, Web, and database publishing.
Integrating
taxonomies How to bridge interdisciplinary
gaps with mapped thesauri (cross references between two different
vocabularies). How to standardize personal, organizational, and product
names (authority files).
Information
modeling and metadata management How to develop an efficient knowledge base
publishing architecture. How to adapt, extend, and integrate existing
technical, organizational, and topical information models. Pros and
cons of various modeling methods.
Created on August 31, 2004 l Last updated on
September 12, 2007