What good is it if you cannot find it?
The Importance of an Organization System
One of the most important tools for a researcher is
organization. Your future searches and
your success depend upon how you file your papers, how you sort your sources
and where you put the collected data; both digital and paper.
What good is an original source if you cannot examine it as needed? What good is a document if
you cannot locate it when you need it?
What good is a copy of anything if you cannot find it when you need
it?
There are many ways to organize what you have researched
and there are many ways to organize your future research. The best organizational tool is the one that
works for you!
I hate to file; I would rather research. However, I must file, so for me, filing
documents numerically has worked best. I use that same numerical number for my
paper files and for my digital files. I
also feel compelled to cite my sources extensively; so I keep an index of my
sources and then use the index citation as my source citation in my genealogy
software program. My source citation
includes a brief description of who created the source, the date of the source,
who is included in the source and where I found the source. There are two ways to find a source: 1-look in my software program and get the
source number or 2-do a computer search in my index (Word Document) for the
source number. Then I take that source
number and locate the original in my documents binders or in my digital file
folder.
Here it why it works for me: easy and fast filing (because as I am
collecting documents I am going in numerical order the same order I file the
documents), I utilize the same source citation twice (once in the index and
once in the software program) and finally when I need to find a source I
can—that is the most motivation I need to keep and stay organized!
The next organizational tool is a “research log”. I don’t use a typical research log because I
research in areas and locations rather than for specific individuals, so I have utilized Excel. I have an Excel file
for each of the on site locations I research and I have sub folders for each
repository. In each of these tables, I
have what I hope to find, dates and any other pertinent information that I may
need while researching. This provides me
with a list of onsite sources to look at while I am on location and at each
repository in that area. I also keep the
notations of things I was unable to find so I don’t waste my time looking for
them ever again. This works best for me
because when I am researching and I come up with something I want to look at, I
immediately add it to the proper research table and then when I am ready for
one of my onsite research trips, my research log is up-to-date and ready-to-go!
The best organizational tool is the one that works for
you and the one that you are able to keep up with. Try several and use what works, but discard
what doesn’t. Tailor your organizational
tools to your needs and your personality.
Use Word, Excel, One Note and other non-genealogy programs to your
advantage. Because after all, what good
is a source if you can’t easily find it again?!?!
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