Monday, July 16, 2012

The Problem With Volunteers is That They Don't Get Paid


The problem with volunteers is that they don’t get paid. No, don’t laugh. I’m quite serious.

First let me explain that I have a long history with volunteers. I volunteer and have done so often. I have been in charge of volunteers. My mother was also a great volunteer and when she worked at a paying job for a non-profit, she had authority over the volunteers. Additionally, she had this habit of telling me all of her problems and frustrations. (Mothers, please don’t do this to your children!) So, all in all, I think I can say I’ve been there and done that.

Do you remember those studies done on the subject of leadership? There were a bunch of them with different groups and different ages. They all followed the same pattern. The researchers took all of the “leaders” from several groups or gangs and put them together. Then, they took the followers and put them together. At first, the leaders fought with each other and the followers twiddled their thumbs but eventually they settled down. With each of these groups, what happened is that some became leaders and others became followers. The end result was pretty much the same stratification as before. Then, they took all of these new leaders and put them together and all of the followers and put them in their own group. The same thing happened all over again. No matter how often they shuffled the groups, they ended up with about the same percentage of leaders in each group.

Have you listened to or watched pledge drives on public radio or TV? If so, I suspect you’ve heard that only about 10% of listeners/viewers donate. The stations give all sorts of recognition and gifts to people who donate and yet, the percentage of donors remains about the same.

If you’ve volunteered much in any sort of organizations, you will have observed that the same few people do almost all of the work. This is always the way it is. Genealogy isn’t different in this regard. Groups give all sorts of recognition and rewards and these are important but they don’t seem to increase the number of volunteers. What will? Maybe nothing. Maybe this is just the natural order of things.

There are volunteers who don’t get paid, there are professionals who do get paid, and there are executive volunteers who don’t get paid but have authority (power) over other volunteers. These are the definitions I’m going to use. They are not necessarily the best definitions, just the ones I will use. Getting paid means a person has value. The person may believe s/he deserves more pay, has greater value, but still every pay day there is evidence that this person’s labor is valued. Volunteers don’t get paid. They need a whole lot of ego satisfaction to make up for this, to prove they are valuable to the organization. It is nearly impossible to provide volunteers with proof of their value. No matter what is given to them, it is not constant or consistent the way employment is. Further, the professionals might feel they are superior to the volunteers. Their paid status is proof of this. They may be ever so nice to the volunteers but their condescension will come through. Executive volunteers are often elected which gives them higher status and feeds their egos. Being appointed to a position may expand egos even more.

So, the ordinary “grunt” becomes a lesser being. People who feel relegated to second class status are not very committed to the organization and do not feel inclined to work hard for it. The only possible solution would be to find a way for all members to feel of equal value. I’m not sure how to do this or even if it can be done. It requires a mental shift and it requires this of everyone.

We have to stop thinking of people as superior or inferior. The roles we play may be but the people aren’t. Society isn’t going to help with this. In an odd way, genealogy might. Doing one’s own research is a great leveler. Of course, some know more about how to do this than others but the newcomers can see that, given time and experience, they can be just as good as the old timers. What if the ones who know “abc” were all put to work teaching the newbies? The ones who know “def” could be teaching the abc’ers. The “ghi” folks can teach the def’ers. The teachers would all get their egos massaged by being “experts”. The newer members would learn a lot and graduate to teaching themselves. Maybe we don’t always need outside “experts” to teach us. Maybe we can do it ourselves and in the process, bond more tightly with each other.

This would reinforce the superior/inferior status somewhat but would also clearly point out how one could progress up the status ladder. It would be important to present the teaching as an opportunity and as something the person had earned by doing such wonderful genealogical research. Offer assistance to the shy ones but make sure everybody is involved. Getting every member involved is the first step.

Next, we would have to find the members’ talents and skills and pleasures and get them on the “right” committees to help with things that they can do and will enjoy doing and will feel a sense of accomplishment doing. Now, we’ve got them as volunteers.

The next part is very easy and very hard. Love them. I’m not saying, “Be nice to them.” I’m not saying give them this or that. I’m saying love them, appreciate them, respect them, admire them, and do all of this from our very core. Love is the best possible paycheck. People who feel loved and wanted and needed will work hard to remain members of the group.   

Sunday, July 8, 2012

Ancestry.com, Accuracy and King Arthur


This was the query on a genealogy list paraphrased slightly and shortened.

Ancestry.com... How accurate is this site? … I was able to trace my roots back to King Arthur…I’m confused…Is King A my 46th Great Uncle?

Now folks, be nice, don’t laugh. Here is my response which I think was rather good.


How accurate is what sort of Ancestry info? People post family trees on Ancestry and they are as accurate as people are. So far, I've never seen a posted or printed family history without errors, sometimes egregious ones. OTOH, Ancestry does have a lot of DOCUMENTS of a legal sort (census, vital records from varius states, etc) or of a personal sort (Bibles, gravestones, etc.) or from organizations or institutions (churches, various military organizations, fraternal organizations, etc.). Genealogy is a specialized kind of research and although any reasonably intelligent person can learn to do it, there is a learning curve. I keep telling Ancestry that their advertising is misleading and does them a disservice, but I'm just a short, fat, old lady and nobody listens to me.

The standard for genealogy is "a reasonably exhaustive search" which does not mean that you search until you are exhausted. It means you collect ALL available documents, that is, all documents available to anyone wherever they are. This means documents online and documents off line. You start with yourself and you move backward, documenting each generation in each line. As far back as each sort of record exists, you get census records, vital or BMD (birth, marriage and death), will/probate records, deed/land records, court records, family Bibles, diaries, letters, military records (service files, rolls, pensions, etc), church records, and any other mention of your person in any sort of formal or informal record. You especially look for information recorded at the time of an event. What someone writes years after the fact will depend on the person's memory and we all know how faulty memories can be. The details recorded at the time tend to be more accurate. Still, it all depends on the source of the info, whether or not that person knew what s/he was talking about, whether or not that person was lying. So, we need ALL of the records so we can evaluate them against each other to see where the facts are, or probably where they are. Lots and lots of things were never recorded and other records have been lost because of fire, flood, theft or general human incompetence. A family tree may look as though it is a factual document but all serious genealogists know that new information can change some or all of it. Most of us can get a few generations back without problems but in the US, back beyond 1800 gets trickier and trickier.

As for King A, personally I wouldn't believe it. I once found my possible connection to Alfred the Great and privately figured that if I did more research I'd find it was Alf the Insignificant instead. Actually, what I found is that even Alf was unlikely as I couldn't document anything anywhere near that far back. That said, I wouldn't blame Ancestry except that they allow undocumented trees to be posted. Of course, every other site does the same. User/subscriber/member submitted trees on any site must be taken as possible clues, probably bad clues. Every true and experienced genealogist I've encountered in 20 years of doing this (and trying to find good brains to pick) says the same thing, "Do your own research." If you just want something to brag about and don't actually care if it is accurate, go ahead and claim King A. If you want to know about your real ancestors, start with yourself and your parents and go back one generation at a time and document each person. I bet you'll discover these folks are interesting in their own way. My folks were mostly farmers with a sprinkling of carpenters and one or two possible others back as far as I have found them. Some I have found quite far back, others I am stuck on. It seems my ancestors were not rich or famous or exciting. They didn't write or paint any masterpieces, they didn't create or invent anything spectacular, they weren't unusually heroic, they were ordinary folks putting one foot in front of the other and managing to get by. I'm happy with them, even some who seemed to have believed some things I consider nonsense.

If you want to learn how to do genealogy.... There is so much information out there, so much more than when I started. I bought a book which helped me a lot. Later on, I bought other books. In fact, I just recently bought a couple more and a handful of CDs with JPGs of documents. If you go to your local library, the odds are there will be a number of books you can check out. They will likely also know about the local genealogy/historical societies and can direct you to them. There may be classes, often free, you can take. There may be reasonably priced fairs and conferences. If you go to Cyndislist.com, you can scour the Beginners, How To and How To Tutorial categories for online tuition. Other categories will also have How To sections. Cyndislist.com has over 300,000 genealogy links and a large number of them point to free sites and free info. Ancestry.com and FamilySearch.org (the LDS site) both offer free educational tutorials, guides, webinars and such. At Geneabloggers.com, you can search for blogs which share your interests. At GeneaWebinars.com, you can find upcoming webinars, most of which are free. Also, most presenters of these record them and offer them online for free for a period of time. Even YouTube.com has a bunch of genealogical videos. There are organizations on the state and national level and for certain ethnic groups which offer conferences that feature excellent speakers. GeneaPress.com is a good place to find announcements of upcoming events. Dick Eastman's blog (http://blog.eogn.com/) is an excellent source of genealogical news. The point is that if you want to learn to do genealogy and if you search for educational opportunities, you will find a lot of them. Many I have not mentioned will pop up in your searches. You will have to use some common sense to determine which are the better ones.

Doing genealogy does require some common sense and a serious effort at paying attention to the info being presented and where it comes from. My father always told me, "Don't believe anything someone says just because the person said it, no matter who the person is." It is always necessary in life to gather info from several sources and evaluate that info against what you find elsewhere and what you already knew. People lie, people say what they believe incorrectly to be true, people make mistakes, people often don't know what they are talking about. Don't believe me either. Check everything I say against the wisest people you know and against your own experience and against all of the other info you find in your research. Maybe you'll find I am wrong and there is actual documentation that King A was your 46th Great Uncle. However, I'm not going to hold my breath on this!! -------Jo


Monday, June 18, 2012

A Big Problem With Ancestry.com and the 1870 US Census

Problem With Ancestry.com and the 1870 Census Index
Years ago, when looking for my great-grandfather in WV in the 1870 census, I discovered a mistake in Ancestry.com's index for that census. The easiest way to show it to you is to tell you how to search for it. Go to Ancestry.com and choose the 1870 census database. In the "birth place" box, put in "Washington, USA". (Just do it!!) In the "lived in" or residence box, put in "West Virginia, USA". Come back here after you click on "search".

See how many hits you got? Since Washington didn't become a state until 1889, it is impossible that these folks were born there and we should not get any hits. If you flip through the hits pages, you'll find about 350 people living in rural Ritchie Co WV who were born in WA. Amazing. If, however, you look at the census images, you will find that what they actually say is these folks were born in "Virginia now WVa". OK, so the enumerator wasn't supposed to put that down, it should have just been "Virginia" but Ancestry.com doesn't improve anything by turning it into Washington.

These WV people were proud of their new state (formed 1863), were even passionate about it. They really did call it "West, by God, Virginia". I remember hearing that name for the state. I guess Ancestry.com just hired people to do their index who had little, if any, knowledge of US history. They apparently didn't know about the Civil War and how VA got split. Well, we've all heard that ignorance is no excuse. All of us, except maybe Ancestry.com

I told Ancestry about this problem about 8 or 9 years ago. Then, I naively thought they'd fix it and so forgot all about it. A few months ago, I had reason to call up that ancestor's 1870 census page and discovered that Ancestry had not fixed anything. I was and am furious. I'm going to quote my correspondence with them in its entirety, lest I mischaracterize it.

First, I called Ancestry's customer service line. It is really not worth quoting what happened except to note 2 things: 1) Apparently, customer service representatives are unable to search on Ancestry.com to find the page(s) you are talking about. That is definitely bad planning on their part and also faulty management. (I'm trying so hard to be nice!) 2) They gave me an email address which is supposed to be the place to write our complaints to, customersolutions@ancestry.com . So I sent them the following:

There is a mistake in your index for the 1870 census which affects hundreds of listed people. I found this first with West Virginia but have since noticed the problem is more widespread and more complicated. People are listed with a birth place of "Washington" but Washington didn't become a state until 1889, so this is impossible. In the WV entries, the census images actually say "Virginia now WVa" or "Va now WVa". In the Clay district of Ritchie Co WV, virtually everybody born before 1863 (when WV became a state) is listed in this way and indexed mistakenly as being born in Washington. There are hundreds of them. I guess the indexer had no idea about the history of the states and just saw a very long name and presumed it to be Washington. Anyway, it is wrong. I first told you about this 8 or 9 years ago but the problem still persists. In the last day or two, I have been trying to figure the extent of this problem and have seen instances where someone was living in MD or VA (and a few others elsewhere) who was noted on the census form as having been born in Washington but this certainly refers to the District of Columbia and not Washington state, so should be indexed as "District of Columbia". A few others are indexed as being born in Washington but the transcription mistake is something else. To see this problem, I suggest you do the following search: choose the 1870 census, do not enter a name, enter "Washington, USA" in the birth place spot, enter "West Virginia, USA" in the "living in" spot. This will give you all of the WV instances and after 35 pages, you will see the others from other locations.
Mistakes such as these should be corrected, not allowed to continue for years and years. I've been doing genealogy for over 20 years and so am not put off by mistakes but beginners get confused. They will see the "Washington" and think, "That cannot be my ancestor because mine was born in WV". Or, they will see the "Washington" and think, "Oh, that is where he was born. I never knew that." You keep advertising that doing genealogy is easy, all one has to do is enter a little info and you will do the rest. (This, of course, is altogether untrue.) If you don't correct your indexing mistakes, all you are doing is spreading misinformation. Maybe you don't care. I do.
I looked at the 1860 and 1850 censuses. In 1860, there are some who were born in the "Washington Territory" but you only put in "Washington". I think this is misleading as a huge percentage of beginners know little about American history and will not understand that this refers to a territory and not a state. Territorial records were different from state ones and those with ancestors born in territories need to learn this in order to find the info. In 1850, before there was even a Washington Territory, there are still some indexed as being born in Washington. One way or another, these are all wrong.
I'm going to keep a watch on this problem and if it doesn't get corrected in a reasonable period of time, I plan to blog about it and post on message boards and generally make a lot of noise. I've been an Ancestry.com subscriber for 10 years. I'm far enough back in my own family research that it is very rare that I find anything new and you don't have the deed/will/court record images I need. So, maybe I'll quit subscribing to your service. I don't know yet. If I do, I will be sure to tell everybody I encounter just why I quit. My New Year's resolution for this year is to make my voice heard and I intend to keep this resolution. -------Jo
End of 1st email.
I guess you are figuring that this blog post is my first attempt to make noise. It is.
Ancestry sent this reply:
March 21, 2012
Dear Jo,
Thank you for contacting Ancestry.com. We appreciate your feedback and are committed to providing excellent customer service.
We sincerely regret the frustrations you have experienced. Please send us the following so we may review your request:
The URL address where the information regarding birthdates listed in Washington state is found on our website.
URL stands forUniform Resource Locator, which is the technical name for an Internet address. The following are examples of URLs:
A URL merely specifies the location of an object on the Internet and is located at the top of your internet screen when you are viewing the information on the website.
If you have any questions regarding this or any other matters pertaining to our website, please contact us by responding to this email.
Sincerely,
Katrina
Executive Office
P
800.262.3787
360 West 4800 North
Provo, UT 84604

End of 2nd email.
You'll note they assumed I was too ignorant to know what a URL is, just as they seemed incapable of doing the search I had explained how to do. So, since they couldn't figure it out themselves, I sent them the URL in my reply.





From: Jo [mailto:strflwr213@yahoo.com]
Sent: Wednesday, March 21, 2012 10:22 PM
To: Ancestry.com Customer Service
Subject: Re: 1870 census mistake affecting hundreds of indexed names
This is the hit list for the search for born in Washington and living in West Virginia. The problem is in the index and so it shows up in the hit list. The actual images correctly note the birthplace which is not Washington state. After the first 2 on this hit list, you will find 300 or so in Ritchie County WV. In these, the birthplace on the image is "Virginia now WVa". Your index should list all of these as born in Virginia, not Washington which wasn't even a state when the people were born.
In my first email, I explained how to search for these mis-indexed entries. I don't understand why I need to send you the URL but here it is. -------Jo

End of 3rd email.
Their reply:





March 23, 2012
Dear Jo:
Thank you for contacting Ancestry.com. We appreciate your feedback and are committed to providing excellent customer service.
We apologize for the frustration you’ve experienced regarding errors in 1870 U.S. Federal Census. Thank you for bringing this to our attention. We have reported this error to our content team. Feedback from you, our valued customer, helps us correct errors and improve the website. Your patience and efforts to assist us in this matter are appreciated.
Please understand that while we receive a large volume of error submissions to our queue, they represent a very small percentage of the total number of records on Ancestry. Due to the volume of error submissions, fixes to errors on Ancestry are posted firstly in the order of those which affect the greatest number of users, and thereafter in the order in which they are reported. This also depends on employee resources. For this reason, there is no foreseeable timeframe as to when these changes will be made. We appreciate your patience.
There is an option that you can take as a member to receive the most immediate results. You can add a comment to the record online, or indicate a correction. These generally post much faster than those errors we report manually to our content team. The following help article contains instructions for you to do so if you wish:
Answer Title: How to add comments or indicate corrections
If you have any questions regarding this or any other matters pertaining to Ancestry.com, please do not hesitate to contact us by either responding to this email or calling us at: 1-800-262-3787, M-F, 8-8 (MST).
Sincerely,
Josh
Executive Office
P
800.262.3787
360 West 4800 North
Provo, UT 84604
End of 4th email.
There is no way I am going to go through 350 hits and correct the birth place. Actually, I tried to correct some of them and failed. Their correction box wouldn't give me the birth place spot to correct. Maybe it was having a bad day.
As of just a minute ago (12:21 AM EDT, 18 Jun 2012), Ancestry has not fixed the 1870 census index. I guess 350 people with heaven knows how many descendants is not enough people to warrant any effort from their correction team. One wonders what the correction team does if it doesn't do corrections. This is one problem they've known about for 8 years (at least). I think I could have done it manually with paper and pencil in a week or so. With a word processing program and find and replace, well you get the idea. We hear all of the time that actions speak louder than words. If this is true, I think we can say that Ancestry.com doesn't care much about accuracy which means they don't care much about genealogy and the people who do it. -------Jo 

Monday, April 16, 2012

Introduction

This may be the hardest post to write. I set up this blog a few weeks ago but haven’t been able to get over this hurdle, so I’m just going to plunge in and see what happens.

I know these things usually start with the blogger telling a bit about her/him self. I’m going to do less of this than usual. I won’t list all of my credentials partly because I haven’t got a long list of them. In my life experience, I have encountered folks with a lot of degrees and such who rarely ever thought anything through themselves. They knew what the books and experts said and repeated that. I’ve also met people with little formal learning who had active minds, abundant curiosity and observational powers and thought very deeply. Of course, this isn’t always true. Some well educated people are very deep thinkers and some uneducated people seem to have forgotten how to turn their brains on. I think it best to leave you to read my blogs and decide for yourselves how much of a thinker I am.

I will say that I am getting old. I am female. I have been doing genealogy for over 20 years and have actually learned a little bit about how to do it. I have also paid my dues on message boards and lists/groups answering queries. Very occasionally, I have asked questions and in a few instances have even received useful replies.

I had thought I would do a blog with an emphasis on teaching others. I figured this would lessen the number of times I repeat the same info on the boards and lists. Instead, I could just point people to the blog posts. In reading about the new blogs on Geneabloggers.com, I have noticed how many others are doing or wanting to do blogs which teach beginners about genealogical research. I decided that if all of those other people are doing that, I should do something else.

All of my life I have been one to speak out bluntly. One of my favorite fictional people as a child was the little boy who pointed out the Emperor wasn’t wearing anything. I remember not understanding why he was the only one to speak up. I still don’t understand why so many stand by meekly. In genealogy, we need the facts, the truth. We need people who will speak up and point out the flaws and errors so we will make fewer mistakes ourselves.

I’ve been told one can catch more flies with honey than with vinegar. Actually, I think one can catch more flies with carrion or rotting meat than with anything else. All of this is irrelevant for me as I do not have any interest in catching flies or indeed in catching anyone or anything else. What I plan to do is point out some problems and mistakes and irritations in the hope that somebody might actually fix them. If these flaws and errors don’t get fixed (which I expect), then the few people who read my blog posts will be informed and might find some ways to work around these problems, mistakes and irritations when they do their own research. At least, the info will be out there.

I’m not as nice and polite as Dear Myrtle. I’m not as techie as Dick Eastman. You should all read those people and a bunch of others. What I am is blunt and reasonably honest and fearless. I can deduce if the Emperor isn’t wearing any clothes and I think I will be able to speak up and say so.  -------Jo