Decide What You Want to Learn

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Step 2: Decide what you want to learn.

Nothing is more important to the research process than deciding what you want to learn. What you want to accomplish may vary, but usually, building up to it with well-documented research will help. It is not practical to thoroughly document all information on all of your lines by yourself. So thoughtfully select a few families of greatest interest to you. Do the genealogical research on those families and do it really well. Have faith that in time someone else will research the families you could not, and join their work with yours through programs like New FamilySearch.

Most researchers have a final destination in mind even before they begin research. This is your research quest. However, to achieve your quest, you should divide it into several achievable goals. Goals are achieved by dividing them into specific research objectives and then accomplishing each objective in turn. A research objective is a specific piece of information about one person. See the examples in the following box.

A single, clearly defined research objective will—


 * Focus your efforts, one step at a time, on a single task (such as a name, event date, event place, relationship, etc.)
 * Improve your chances of selecting a record that has the information you seek.
 * Reduce the confusion of trying to work on several objectives at once.
 * Help you succeed and enjoy your research experience.

In order to select a specific research objective, you will first identify several individuals or families you could research, then you will choose one. With one individual or family in mind, you will have a goal and can then identify questions about him or her. Next, select one question as the research objective. Then you will prepare and use a research log.

At the end of this step you should have a research log that includes—


 * The name of a person you want to research.
 * What you want to find (the objective.)
 * If appropriate, the approximate time and place of the event.

= Identify Candidate Families for Further Research =

Your genealogical quest has already pointed you in a direction, such as learning when your mother’s family first came to the country. Now identify goals that will advance you towards your quest. Most goals focus on researching an individual or that individual’s family.

Browse through your various family group records. Look for families that would move you toward fulfilling your quest AND be easiest to research first. This would probably be a family closer to you in time—a parent or grandparent family. There is a greater chance living people would recall events, and have records or mementos of more recent generations. Starting research on earlier generations before pinning down the information about more recent generations might cause time consuming errors. Don’t skip any family links.

= Select One Goal-Family to Research at a Time =

Research is usually more successful when you work on an entire family group (father, mother and all children). Important clues about an individual are found in his relationships to his family. Community and family context helps us correlate and corroborate data, or reveals inconsistencies. Often it is only by learning about brothers or sisters that you can prove parentage. Experienced genealogists recognize the importance of completing work on an entire family before moving to a different family. It may even help to work on clusters of families that married into each other.

If researching two or more families would move you toward your overall quest, start with the family that is already the best documented and has the most complete event places and dates. Leave the families with less well documented events, or events with vague places or dates until later.

A good research goal is to complete genealogical research and document each event on a selected family group record.

= Focus on One Research Objective =

Within a family you can more freely choose which individual you will research. You can skip around among family members seeking first the easiest-to-document events in the family. The easier to document events will lead to new clues for finding more-difficult-to-document events in the family.

Compare all the events on the family group record. Notice which events are most complete and have the best documentation. Also note the events with missing, partial, or estimated information, or with poor source footnotes. In general, first check on the already-cited sources to verify your own records. Then one event in a person’s life at a time you look up new sources to document a poorly sourced event. Start first with events that have the most complete place, and most complete dates.

You should be able to name the exact person and identify exactly which event in his life you want to document. Stay focused on that research objective. Do not change research objectives lightly. If at first you don’t succeed, continue with the same research objective. Try a variety of records and record types, change the jurisdictions you search, inquire at many repositories, and if necessary research even kin and associates in order to find documentation for your research objective.

As you begin to find things, slowly work you way to objectives involving the least sourced events in the family, with skimpiest place or date information. Sometimes events which are not mentioned on the family group record could be guessed to have happened, and need research. Try to obtain complete genealogical information for each family member. Stick with the same family until work on documenting all the events in their lives is mostly finished.

= Using a Research Log =

Keep your research log up to date. Organize and document as you go. Record the following:


 * Your research objective (name the person and event) as soon as you have chosen them.
 * The records you want to search.
 * The results of your search. It is probably easiest to enter records as you select them (usually while still looking at the catalog). Record enough information about each source so that someone could readily find it again—the source footnote information.
 * Your e-mail and correspondence. Include the address you wrote to and what you requested. Including e-mail and correspondence on your research log is more efficient than on a separate Correspondence Log.
 * Genealogical telephone calls and visits. Include dates, full names, and results.
 * Notes about your strategies, analysis, discrepancies, and questions. Logs should be more than just a list of sources. Make your research logs as well the journals of your genealogical thinking and ideas.

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