I have been "working" my genealogy for close to
27 years now. Yes I say work because I didn't think of it as just play. In fact
there have been a lot of people in and around my world of late who have used that
word "play" to describe so many of the things that they do. Playing
can be a good descriptive word but it also has the tendency, in my opinion, to
not take seriously one's art form. For me the art form is genealogy and the
study of family.
So for all of these years even though I thought I was
working my family in my reality I was playing. It was when I enrolled last year
in the ProGen Study Group that I realized
that even though I thought I was working I really wasn't to my full capacity.
That was because I really hadn't learned all of the things I should have from
the beginning correctly. I am a self taught genealogist and that being said I
can tell you that I have missed things along the way. Catch up can be a
nightmare but I am bound and determined.
When I first started to do all of this there was very
little internet and software programs were pretty much nonexistent. I was a
microfilm, paper and pencil kind of researcher. In fact there are still times
that I like to work that way. In my current studies my homework assignments
lead me to do some things that I should have been doing all along, such as correspondence
logs, research logs, research plans and the one that I have just finished
working on…the research report. In fact it was in this last assignment that
most things have started to really come together for me.
That is why Tuesday's tip would be that if you are a
beginning genealogist learn it correctly from the onset. Don't think that you
should go on a website, click a few leaves and you have instant family. You
need to fill out the research log so that you don't duplicate your time spent.
You need to cite every single source correctly so that you won't have to go
back and play catch-up. Build a research plan and don't make it the size of the
elephant in the room so to speak. It is so easy to take hold of that first find
in your search and run with it to the next find. I know how many times I have
been guilty of just that. Education has taught me differently now.
Find a good quality genealogy course if you can afford to
do that. If not go to some excellent quality books. Read the reviews first.
Sometimes you might find a good reasonably priced course in your local area,
check your public library or adult education courses. If whatever you choose
does not teach you about some of the things I have talked about here in the
beginning then my suggestion to you is find another. These things are so
important.
So join the genealogy craze that is sweeping the earth
but do it smartly from the start.
Until next we meet… Create a smart appointment for
yourself!