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Index card

An index card (or record card in British English and system cards in Australian English) consists of card stock (heavy paper) cut to a standard size, used for recording and storing small amounts of discrete data. A collection of such cards either serves as, or aids the creation of, an index for expedited lookup of information (such as a library catalog or a back-of-the-book index). This system is said to have been invented by Carl Linnaeus, around 1760.[1][2][3]

An index card in a library card catalog. This type of cataloging has mostly been supplanted by computerization.
A hand-written American index card
A ruled index card

Format edit

The most common size for index card in North America and the UK is 3 by 5 inches (76.2 by 127.0 mm), hence the common name 3-by-5 card. Other sizes widely available include 4 by 6 inches (101.6 by 152.4 mm), 5 by 8 inches (127.0 by 203.2 mm) and ISO-size A7 (74 by 105 mm or 2.9 by 4.1 in).[4][5] Cards are available in blank, ruled and grid styles in a variety of colors. Special divider cards with protruding tabs and a variety of cases and trays to hold the cards are also sold by stationers and office product companies. They are part of standard stationery and office supplies all around the globe.

Uses edit

Index cards are used for a wide range of applications and environments: in the home to record and store recipes, shopping lists, contact information and other organizational data; in business to record presentation notes, project research and notes, and contact information; in schools as flash cards or other visual aids; and in academic research to hold data such as bibliographical citations or notes in a card file. Professional book indexers used index cards in the creation of book indexes until they were replaced by indexing software in the 1980s and 1990s.

An often suggested organization method for bibliographical citations and notes in a card file is to use the smaller 3-inch by 5-inch cards to record the title and citation information of works cited, while using larger cards for recording quotes or other data,[6][7] but some people have also given the opposite advice to put everything on one size of card.[8][9][10]

Index cards are used for many events and are helpful for planning.[11]

History edit

 
Filing cabinet for paper slips in Vincent Placcius's De arte excerpendi (1689)[12]

The first early modern card cabinet was designed by 17th-century English inventor Thomas Harrison (c. 1640s). Harrison's manuscript on the "ark of studies"[13] (Arca studiorum) describes a small cabinet that allows users to excerpt books and file their notes in a specific order by attaching pieces of paper to metal hooks labeled by subject headings.[14] Harrison's system was edited and improved by Vincent Placcius in his well-known handbook on excerpting methods (De arte excerpendi, 1689).[12][15] The German polymath Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (1646–1716) was known to have relied on Harrison's invention in at least one of his research projects.[15]

Carl Linnaeus, an 18th-century naturalist who formalized binomial nomenclature,[16] is said to have "invented the index card" c. 1760[1] in order to help deal with the information overload facing early scientists that occurred from overseas discoveries,[17] though there is room for dispute about whether he alone was the index card's inventor.[18] Linnaeus had to deal with a conflict between needing to bring information into a fixed order for purposes of later retrieval, and needing to integrate new information into that order permanently. His solution was to keep information on particular subjects on separate sheets, which could be complemented and reshuffled. In the mid 1760s Linnaeus refined this into what are now called index cards. Index cards could be selected and moved around at will to update and compare information at any time.[1]

In the late 1890s, edge-notched cards were invented, which allowed for easy sorting of data by means of a needle-like tool. These edge-notched cards were phased out in the 1980s in favor of computer databases, and they are no longer sold.

 
Kardex index card filing system

James Rand, Sr.'s Rand Ledger Company (founded 1898) with its Visible Ledger system, and his son James Rand, Jr.'s American Kardex dominated sales of index card filing systems worldwide through much of the 20th century. "Kardex" became a common noun, especially in the medical records field where "filing a kardex" came to mean filling out a patient record on an index card.[19]

Library card catalogs as currently known arose in the 19th century, and Melvil Dewey standardized the index cards used in library card catalogs in the 1870s.[20]: 91  Until the digitization of library catalogs, which began in the 1980s, the primary tool used to locate books was the card catalog, in which every book was described on three cards, filed alphabetically under its title, author, and subject (if non-fiction). Similar catalogs were used by law firms and other entities to organize large quantities of stored documents. However, the adoption of standard cataloging protocols throughout nations with international agreements, along with the rise of the Internet and the conversion of cataloging systems to digital storage and retrieval, has made obsolescent the widespread use of index cards for cataloging.

Many authors have used index cards for the writing of books.[20] Vladimir Nabokov wrote his works on index cards, a practice mentioned in his work Pale Fire.[21]

See also edit

  • Address book – Database used for storing contact details
  • Card sorting
  • CRC cards – software brainstorming tool
  • Edge-notched card – Index card with notches to store data
  • Hipster PDA – Pen and paper pad created as a way of criticizing the modern obsession with digital organizers
  • Paper size – Standard sizes of paper
  • Punched card – Paper-based recording medium
  • Rolodex – Rotating card file device

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Carl Linnaeus Invented The Index Card". ScienceDaily. 16 June 2009. Retrieved 2020-07-31.
  2. ^ Müller-Wille, Staffan; Scharf, Sara (January 2009). Indexing Nature: Carl Linnaeus (1707–1778) and his Fact-Gathering Strategies (PDF) (Working paper). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics. p. 4. 36/08. See also the summary of the research project: "Rewriting the System of Nature: Linnaeus's Use of Writing Technologies". Centre for Medical History, University of Exeter. Retrieved 19 September 2022.
  3. ^ Everts, Sarah (2016). "Information Overload". Distillations. 2 (2): 26–33. Retrieved 20 March 2018.
  4. ^ "Index card sizes compared". Quill. Retrieved 2022-10-13.
  5. ^ "Business card sizes". Printernational. Retrieved 2022-10-13.
  6. ^ Williams, Cecil B. (1963). "Notes and Note-taking". A Research Manual for College Studies and Papers (3rd ed.). New York: Harper & Row. pp. 95–105 (97). OCLC 1264058764. it is better to use different sizes of cards to avoid confusing the bibliographic and subject notes with each other.
  7. ^ Cantor, Norman F.; Schneider, Richard I. (1967). "Research Note-taking". How to Study History. New York: Crowell Publishing. pp. 196–203 (200). ISBN 0690419937. OCLC 679321. Keep bibliographical entries on 3 × 5 cards [...] Notes taken from sources should be written in ink or typed on either 5 × 8 cards or sheets of loose-leaf paper.
  8. ^ Hockett, Homer Carey (1948) [1931]. "Forms for Notes on Bibliography". Introduction to Research in American History (2nd ed.). New York: Macmillan. p. 10. OCLC 1374221. Many workers do not use cards at all, but make their notes on bibliography and subject-matter on slips or sheets of paper of uniform size. [...] The use of two cabinets of different sizes, one for bibliography cards and one for subject-matter notes, is likely to prove inconvenient.
  9. ^ Alexander, Carter; Burke, Arvid James (1958) [1935]. "Note-taking in Work with Library Materials". How to Locate Educational Information and Data: An Aid to Quick Utilization of the Literature of Education (4th ed.). New York: Teachers College, Columbia University. pp. 168–180 (169). hdl:2027/uc1.b3389054. OCLC 14603864. In extensive library studies, however, it usually saves much time and energy to organize the bibliography cards in one system and all other notes in another system, even though both systems use the same headings and cards of the same size.
  10. ^ Barzun, Jacques; Graff, Henry F. (2004) [1957]. "The ABC of Technique". The Modern Researcher (6th ed.). Belmont, CA: Thomson/Wadsworth. pp. 15–36 (23). ISBN 0155055291. OCLC 53244810. For all these purposes, experience shows that you must take notes in a uniform manner, on paper or cards of uniform size.
  11. ^ For example: Justice, Thomas; Jamieson, David (1999). The Facilitator's Fieldbook: Step-by-Step Procedures, Checklists and Guidelines, Samples and Templates. New York: AMACOM. ISBN 0814470386. OCLC 40573268. In this book, index cards appear in instructions for various procedures for facilitating events, including chapters on "Storyboarding Basics", "Brainstorming Variations", "Moderating Focus Groups", "Voting", and "Gantt Chart Planning".
  12. ^ a b Placcius, Vincent (1689). De arte excerpendi vom gelehrten Buchhalten liber singularis, quo genera & praecepta excerpendi, ab aliis hucusq[ue]; tradita omnia, novis accessionibus aucta, ordinata methodo exhibentur, et suis quaeque materiis applicantur ... (in Latin). Stockholm; Hamburg: Apud Gottfried Liebezeit, bibliop. literisq[ue] Spiringianis. p. 138. OCLC 22260654.
  13. ^ Harrison, Thomas (2017). Cevolini, Alberto (ed.). The Ark of Studies. De diversis artibus. Vol. 102. Turnhout, Belgium: Brepols. ISBN 9782503575230. OCLC 1004589834.
  14. ^ Blei, Daniela (2017-12-01). . The Atlantic. Archived from the original on 2021-05-08. Retrieved 4 July 2021.
  15. ^ a b Malcolm, Noel (September 2004). "Thomas Harrison and his 'ark of studies': an episode in the history of the organization of knowledge". The Seventeenth Century. 19 (2): 196–232 (220–221). doi:10.1080/0268117X.2004.10555543. S2CID 171203209.
  16. ^ Calisher, CH (2007). "Taxonomy: what's in a name? Doesn't a rose by any other name smell as sweet?". Croatian Medical Journal. 48 (2): 268–270. PMC 2080517. PMID 17436393.
  17. ^ Müller-Wille, Staffan; Charmantier, Isabelle (March 2012). "Natural history and information overload: the case of Linnaeus". Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences. 43 (1): 4–15. doi:10.1016/j.shpsc.2011.10.021. PMC 3878424. PMID 22326068.
  18. ^ Charmantier, Isabelle; Müller-Wille, Staffan (April 2014). "Carl Linnaeus's botanical paper slips (1767–1773)". Intellectual History Review. 24 (2): 215–238. doi:10.1080/17496977.2014.914643. PMC 4837604. PMID 27134642.
  19. ^ "Kardex". A Dictionary of Nursing. 2008. Retrieved September 11, 2014 – via Encyclopedia.com.
  20. ^ a b Krajewski, Markus (2011) [2002]. Paper Machines: About Cards & Catalogs, 1548–1929. History and Foundations of Information Science. Vol. 3. Translated by Peter Krapp. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press. doi:10.7551/mitpress/9780262015899.001.0001. ISBN 9780262015899. JSTOR j.ctt5hhmbf. OCLC 698360129.
  21. ^ Gold, Herbert (1967). "Vladimir Nabokov, The Art of Fiction No. 40". The Paris Review. Summer-Fall 1967 (41). Retrieved 7 April 2013.

Further reading edit

  • Cevolini, Alberto, ed. (2016). Forgetting Machines: Knowledge Management Evolution in Early Modern Europe. Library of the Written Word. Vol. 53. Leiden; Boston: Brill Publishers. doi:10.1163/9789004325258. ISBN 9789004278462. OCLC 951955805.
  • Flanders, Judith (2020). "I is for Index Cards: From Copy Clerks to Office Supplies in the Nineteenth Century". A Place for Everything: The Curious History of Alphabetical Order. New York: Basic Books. pp. 197–220. ISBN 9781541675070. OCLC 1143631587.
  • Maxwell, John W.; Armen, Haig (8 September 2013). "A Bird in the Hand: Index Cards and the Handcraft of Creative Thinking". publishing.sfu.ca. Simon Fraser University. Retrieved 18 September 2022.
  • Wallace, Patricia E.; Thomas, Violet S. (1987). "Card-Storage Systems". Records Management: Integrated Information Systems (2nd ed.). New York: Wiley. pp. 148–155. ISBN 0471821608. OCLC 14272476.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Index cards at Wikimedia Commons

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For the book see The Index Card Card index redirects here For the rotating device used to store information see Rolodex For the note system used by writers see Card file An index card or record card in British English and system cards in Australian English consists of card stock heavy paper cut to a standard size used for recording and storing small amounts of discrete data A collection of such cards either serves as or aids the creation of an index for expedited lookup of information such as a library catalog or a back of the book index This system is said to have been invented by Carl Linnaeus around 1760 1 2 3 An index card in a library card catalog This type of cataloging has mostly been supplanted by computerization A hand written American index cardA ruled index card Contents 1 Format 2 Uses 3 History 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksFormat editThe most common size for index card in North America and the UK is 3 by 5 inches 76 2 by 127 0 mm hence the common name 3 by 5 card Other sizes widely available include 4 by 6 inches 101 6 by 152 4 mm 5 by 8 inches 127 0 by 203 2 mm and ISO size A7 74 by 105 mm or 2 9 by 4 1 in 4 5 Cards are available in blank ruled and grid styles in a variety of colors Special divider cards with protruding tabs and a variety of cases and trays to hold the cards are also sold by stationers and office product companies They are part of standard stationery and office supplies all around the globe Uses editIndex cards are used for a wide range of applications and environments in the home to record and store recipes shopping lists contact information and other organizational data in business to record presentation notes project research and notes and contact information in schools as flash cards or other visual aids and in academic research to hold data such as bibliographical citations or notes in a card file Professional book indexers used index cards in the creation of book indexes until they were replaced by indexing software in the 1980s and 1990s An often suggested organization method for bibliographical citations and notes in a card file is to use the smaller 3 inch by 5 inch cards to record the title and citation information of works cited while using larger cards for recording quotes or other data 6 7 but some people have also given the opposite advice to put everything on one size of card 8 9 10 Index cards are used for many events and are helpful for planning 11 History edit nbsp Filing cabinet for paper slips in Vincent Placcius s De arte excerpendi 1689 12 The first early modern card cabinet was designed by 17th century English inventor Thomas Harrison c 1640s Harrison s manuscript on the ark of studies 13 Arca studiorum describes a small cabinet that allows users to excerpt books and file their notes in a specific order by attaching pieces of paper to metal hooks labeled by subject headings 14 Harrison s system was edited and improved by Vincent Placcius in his well known handbook on excerpting methods De arte excerpendi 1689 12 15 The German polymath Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz 1646 1716 was known to have relied on Harrison s invention in at least one of his research projects 15 Carl Linnaeus an 18th century naturalist who formalized binomial nomenclature 16 is said to have invented the index card c 1760 1 in order to help deal with the information overload facing early scientists that occurred from overseas discoveries 17 though there is room for dispute about whether he alone was the index card s inventor 18 Linnaeus had to deal with a conflict between needing to bring information into a fixed order for purposes of later retrieval and needing to integrate new information into that order permanently His solution was to keep information on particular subjects on separate sheets which could be complemented and reshuffled In the mid 1760s Linnaeus refined this into what are now called index cards Index cards could be selected and moved around at will to update and compare information at any time 1 In the late 1890s edge notched cards were invented which allowed for easy sorting of data by means of a needle like tool These edge notched cards were phased out in the 1980s in favor of computer databases and they are no longer sold nbsp Kardex index card filing systemJames Rand Sr s Rand Ledger Company founded 1898 with its Visible Ledger system and his son James Rand Jr s American Kardex dominated sales of index card filing systems worldwide through much of the 20th century Kardex became a common noun especially in the medical records field where filing a kardex came to mean filling out a patient record on an index card 19 Library card catalogs as currently known arose in the 19th century and Melvil Dewey standardized the index cards used in library card catalogs in the 1870s 20 91 Until the digitization of library catalogs which began in the 1980s the primary tool used to locate books was the card catalog in which every book was described on three cards filed alphabetically under its title author and subject if non fiction Similar catalogs were used by law firms and other entities to organize large quantities of stored documents However the adoption of standard cataloging protocols throughout nations with international agreements along with the rise of the Internet and the conversion of cataloging systems to digital storage and retrieval has made obsolescent the widespread use of index cards for cataloging Many authors have used index cards for the writing of books 20 Vladimir Nabokov wrote his works on index cards a practice mentioned in his work Pale Fire 21 See also editAddress book Database used for storing contact details Card sorting CRC cards software brainstorming toolPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Edge notched card Index card with notches to store data Hipster PDA Pen and paper pad created as a way of criticizing the modern obsession with digital organizers Paper size Standard sizes of paper Punched card Paper based recording medium Rolodex Rotating card file deviceReferences edit a b c Carl Linnaeus Invented The Index Card ScienceDaily 16 June 2009 Retrieved 2020 07 31 Muller Wille Staffan Scharf Sara January 2009 Indexing Nature Carl Linnaeus 1707 1778 and his Fact Gathering Strategies PDF Working paper Department of Economic History London School of Economics p 4 36 08 See also the summary of the research project Rewriting the System of Nature Linnaeus s Use of Writing Technologies Centre for Medical History University of Exeter Retrieved 19 September 2022 Everts Sarah 2016 Information Overload Distillations 2 2 26 33 Retrieved 20 March 2018 Index card sizes compared Quill Retrieved 2022 10 13 Business card sizes Printernational Retrieved 2022 10 13 Williams Cecil B 1963 Notes and Note taking A Research Manual for College Studies and Papers 3rd ed New York Harper amp Row pp 95 105 97 OCLC 1264058764 it is better to use different sizes of cards to avoid confusing the bibliographic and subject notes with each other Cantor Norman F Schneider Richard I 1967 Research Note taking How to Study History New York Crowell Publishing pp 196 203 200 ISBN 0690419937 OCLC 679321 Keep bibliographical entries on 3 5 cards Notes taken from sources should be written in ink or typed on either 5 8 cards or sheets of loose leaf paper Hockett Homer Carey 1948 1931 Forms for Notes on Bibliography Introduction to Research in American History 2nd ed New York Macmillan p 10 OCLC 1374221 Many workers do not use cards at all but make their notes on bibliography and subject matter on slips or sheets of paper of uniform size The use of two cabinets of different sizes one for bibliography cards and one for subject matter notes is likely to prove inconvenient Alexander Carter Burke Arvid James 1958 1935 Note taking in Work with Library Materials How to Locate Educational Information and Data An Aid to Quick Utilization of the Literature of Education 4th ed New York Teachers College Columbia University pp 168 180 169 hdl 2027 uc1 b3389054 OCLC 14603864 In extensive library studies however it usually saves much time and energy to organize the bibliography cards in one system and all other notes in another system even though both systems use the same headings and cards of the same size Barzun Jacques Graff Henry F 2004 1957 The ABC of Technique The Modern Researcher 6th ed Belmont CA Thomson Wadsworth pp 15 36 23 ISBN 0155055291 OCLC 53244810 For all these purposes experience shows that you must take notes in a uniform manner on paper or cards of uniform size For example Justice Thomas Jamieson David 1999 The Facilitator s Fieldbook Step by Step Procedures Checklists and Guidelines Samples and Templates New York AMACOM ISBN 0814470386 OCLC 40573268 In this book index cards appear in instructions for various procedures for facilitating events including chapters on Storyboarding Basics Brainstorming Variations Moderating Focus Groups Voting and Gantt Chart Planning a b Placcius Vincent 1689 De arte excerpendi vom gelehrten Buchhalten liber singularis quo genera amp praecepta excerpendi ab aliis hucusq ue tradita omnia novis accessionibus aucta ordinata methodo exhibentur et suis quaeque materiis applicantur in Latin Stockholm Hamburg Apud Gottfried Liebezeit bibliop literisq ue Spiringianis p 138 OCLC 22260654 Harrison Thomas 2017 Cevolini Alberto ed The Ark of Studies De diversis artibus Vol 102 Turnhout Belgium Brepols ISBN 9782503575230 OCLC 1004589834 Blei Daniela 2017 12 01 How the Index Card Cataloged the World The Atlantic Archived from the original on 2021 05 08 Retrieved 4 July 2021 a b Malcolm Noel September 2004 Thomas Harrison and his ark of studies an episode in the history of the organization of knowledge The Seventeenth Century 19 2 196 232 220 221 doi 10 1080 0268117X 2004 10555543 S2CID 171203209 Calisher CH 2007 Taxonomy what s in a name Doesn t a rose by any other name smell as sweet Croatian Medical Journal 48 2 268 270 PMC 2080517 PMID 17436393 Muller Wille Staffan Charmantier Isabelle March 2012 Natural history and information overload the case of Linnaeus Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 43 1 4 15 doi 10 1016 j shpsc 2011 10 021 PMC 3878424 PMID 22326068 Charmantier Isabelle Muller Wille Staffan April 2014 Carl Linnaeus s botanical paper slips 1767 1773 Intellectual History Review 24 2 215 238 doi 10 1080 17496977 2014 914643 PMC 4837604 PMID 27134642 Kardex A Dictionary of Nursing 2008 Retrieved September 11 2014 via Encyclopedia com a b Krajewski Markus 2011 2002 Paper Machines About Cards amp Catalogs 1548 1929 History and Foundations of Information Science Vol 3 Translated by Peter Krapp Cambridge MA The MIT Press doi 10 7551 mitpress 9780262015899 001 0001 ISBN 9780262015899 JSTOR j ctt5hhmbf OCLC 698360129 Gold Herbert 1967 Vladimir Nabokov The Art of Fiction No 40 The Paris Review Summer Fall 1967 41 Retrieved 7 April 2013 Further reading editCevolini Alberto ed 2016 Forgetting Machines Knowledge Management Evolution in Early Modern Europe Library of the Written Word Vol 53 Leiden Boston Brill Publishers doi 10 1163 9789004325258 ISBN 9789004278462 OCLC 951955805 Flanders Judith 2020 I is for Index Cards From Copy Clerks to Office Supplies in the Nineteenth Century A Place for Everything The Curious History of Alphabetical Order New York Basic Books pp 197 220 ISBN 9781541675070 OCLC 1143631587 Maxwell John W Armen Haig 8 September 2013 A Bird in the Hand Index Cards and the Handcraft of Creative Thinking publishing sfu ca Simon Fraser University Retrieved 18 September 2022 Wallace Patricia E Thomas Violet S 1987 Card Storage Systems Records Management Integrated Information Systems 2nd ed New York Wiley pp 148 155 ISBN 0471821608 OCLC 14272476 External links edit nbsp Media related to Index cards at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Index card amp oldid 1210486905, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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