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7 th Edition  Read-Smith, Ginn Records Management © 2002 South-Western Educational Publishing Chapter 8 Numeric Records Management.

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Presentation on theme: "7 th Edition  Read-Smith, Ginn Records Management © 2002 South-Western Educational Publishing Chapter 8 Numeric Records Management."— Presentation transcript:

1 7 th Edition  Read-Smith, Ginn Records Management © 2002 South-Western Educational Publishing Chapter 8 Numeric Records Management

2 © 2002 South-Western Educational Publishing Numeric Records Management  A systematic arrangement of records according to numbers 17 25 31 16 75 50 16 72 32 Consecutive Numbering 189 40 2891 331 55 2187 786 67 1258 Terminal-Digit Numbering

3 © 2002 South-Western Educational Publishing Examples  Numeric filing systems are used by  Physicians and medical-related organizations  Banks and financial institutions  Lawyers  Architects  Insurance companies  Social welfare agencies

4 © 2002 South-Western Educational Publishing Advantages  Advantages of numeric filing systems  Easy to expand numeric files  Impersonal numbers ensure confidentiality of records  Working with numbers is faster and easier than with letters  Existing numbers can be used for coding (purchase order or invoice numbers)

5 © 2002 South-Western Educational Publishing Disadvantages  Disadvantages of numeric filing systems  Indirect access system, index required  More guides are needed than for other systems  More time needed to index and code  Some methods cause congestion at the end of the files

6 © 2002 South-Western Educational Publishing Consecutive Arrangement  Assigns numbers to records in ascending order sequence  Also called serial or sequential numbering  Numbers are considered in normal reading order from left to right 17 25 31 16 75 50 16 72 32 Consecutive Numbering

7 © 2002 South-Western Educational Publishing Components  Components of a numeric system include  A numbered file  An alphabetic (general) file  An accession log  An alphabetic index

8 © 2002 South-Western Educational Publishing Numbered Files  Numbered guides and folders for the numbered file 102 FREY GEORGE C 101 HIGH SEAS FUEL 100 BROWN SUSAN D 100 Folder Main guide

9 © 2002 South-Western Educational Publishing Alphabetic File  Alphabetic guides and folders for the general alphabetic file AP-AZ AG-AO AA-AF A Folder Main guide

10 © 2002 South-Western Educational Publishing Accession Log  A serial list of numbers assigned to records ACCESSION LOG Code No.Correspondent Date 100BROWN SUSAN D 9/03/00 101HIGH SEAS FUEL 9/03/00 102FREY GEORGE C 9/04/00 103LOSARCOS EQUIPMENT 9/05/00 ACCESSION LOG Code No.Correspondent Date 100BROWN SUSAN D 9/03/00 101HIGH SEAS FUEL 9/03/00 102FREY GEORGE C 9/04/00 103LOSARCOS EQUIPMENT 9/05/00

11 © 2002 South-Western Educational Publishing Alphabetic Index  A list of correspondent names or subjects for a numeric file ALPHABETIC INDEX APACHE ADVERTISING122 APPLICATIONS106 BROWN SUSAN D100 COOK MARIETTAG FREY GEORGE C 102 LASTRADA PRODUCTS122XSEE APACHE ADVERTISING ALPHABETIC INDEX APACHE ADVERTISING122 APPLICATIONS106 BROWN SUSAN D100 COOK MARIETTAG FREY GEORGE C 102 LASTRADA PRODUCTS122XSEE APACHE ADVERTISING

12 © 2002 South-Western Educational Publishing Storage and Retrieval Procedures Check for release mark Read content to determine subject Code the filing segments and assign a number or the letter G Indicate record location under alternate titles in the alphabetic index  Inspect  Index  Code  Cross- Reference

13 © 2002 South-Western Educational Publishing Storage and Retrieval Procedures Arrange records numerically Place record in appropriate folder Locate record under code identified on the alphabetic index  Sort  Store  Retrieve

14 © 2002 South-Western Educational Publishing Cross-Reference Example  Computer index record and cross-reference

15 © 2002 South-Western Educational Publishing Terminal-Digit Arrangement  A nonconsecutive numeric storage method  Breaks numbers into groups  The last group of digits used as the primary file division  Number groups read left to right  A nonconsecutive numeric storage method  Breaks numbers into groups  The last group of digits used as the primary file division  Number groups read left to right 6401 Primary Group 6401 Primary Group 058 Tertiary Group 32 Secondary Group

16 © 2002 South-Western Educational Publishing Middle-Digit Arrangement  A nonconsecutive numeric storage method  Breaks numbers into groups  The secondary group of digits used as the primary file division  Number groups read middle to left to right  A nonconsecutive numeric storage method  Breaks numbers into groups  The secondary group of digits used as the primary file division  Number groups read middle to left to right 32 Primary Group 32 Primary Group 058 Secondary Group 6401 Tertiary Group

17 © 2002 South-Western Educational Publishing Comparison  Comparison of numbers sorted for terminal- digit and middle-digit storage Terminal-Digit 786 55 1258 331 55 2187 189 40 2891 303 99 2891 947 28 6314 287 29 6314 Terminal-Digit 786 55 1258 331 55 2187 189 40 2891 303 99 2891 947 28 6314 287 29 6314 Middle-Digit 947 28 6314 287 29 6314 189 40 2891 331 55 2187 786 55 1258 303 99 2891 Middle-Digit 947 28 6314 287 29 6314 189 40 2891 331 55 2187 786 55 1258 303 99 2891

18 © 2002 South-Western Educational Publishing Chronologic Arrangement  A nonconsecutive numeric storage method  Records filed by calendar date  Date on document used as numeric code  Followed in all methods of storage as records are placed in their folders  A nonconsecutive numeric storage method  Records filed by calendar date  Date on document used as numeric code  Followed in all methods of storage as records are placed in their folders 5/30/99 2/14/00 9/13/01

19 © 2002 South-Western Educational Publishing Coding Systems Numbers separated by a dash, space, or comma  Duplex-numeric  Decimal-numeric Numbers used in units of ten  Alphanumeric Main subjects coded by alphabet, subdivisions coded by number Groups of numbers represent subjects in an encyclopedic arrangement  Block-numeric

20 © 2002 South-Western Educational Publishing Alphanumeric Example MGT – MANAGEMENT MGT-01RECORDS MANAGEMENT MGT-01-01FILING EQUIPMENT MGT-01-02FILING SYSTEMS MGT-01-02-01AUTOMATED MGT-01-02-02ELECTRONIC MGT-01-02-03PROCEDURES MANUAL MGT-01-03RETENTION SCHEDULE MGT-02SALES MANAGEMENT MGT-02-01ADVERTISING MGT – MANAGEMENT MGT-01RECORDS MANAGEMENT MGT-01-01FILING EQUIPMENT MGT-01-02FILING SYSTEMS MGT-01-02-01AUTOMATED MGT-01-02-02ELECTRONIC MGT-01-02-03PROCEDURES MANUAL MGT-01-03RETENTION SCHEDULE MGT-02SALES MANAGEMENT MGT-02-01ADVERTISING

21 © 2002 South-Western Educational Publishing Computer Indexes  Eliminate re-entering data  Are easy to access and update  Can be sorted for consecutive, terminal- digit, or middle-digit arrangements


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