Thomas W. Jones (1) (1947–)
Auteur de Mastering Genealogical Proof
Pour les autres auteurs qui s'appellent Thomas W. Jones, voyez la page de désambigüisation.
Séries
Œuvres de Thomas W. Jones
Planning 'Reasonably Exhaustive' Research 3 exemplaires
Solving the Mystery of the Disappearing Ancestor 2 exemplaires
Solutions for Missing or Scarce Records 2 exemplaires
Strategies For Finding "Unfindable" Ancestors 2 exemplaires
Converting a bunch of information into a credible conclusion : a BCG skillbuilding track lecture 2 exemplaires
A Conceptual Model of Genealogical Evidence: Linkages between Present-Day Sources and Past Facts 2 exemplaires
Inferential Genealogy 2 exemplaires
BCG Certification Seminar 1 (NGS Conference 2008) 1 exemplaire
Complex Case Solving AGS 2019 Symposium 1 exemplaire
Research methods for family historians 1 exemplaire
Mastering the Art of Genealogical Documentation 1 exemplaire
NGS Magazine Vol. 41 #4 1 exemplaire
NGS Magazine Vol. 43 #1 1 exemplaire
National Genealogical Society Quarterly, Volume 9, No. 2 — Directeur de publication — 1 exemplaire
Seeing the Forest AND the Trees (and their Leaves) Mastering the Craft of Genealogical Documentation 1 exemplaire
BCG Certification Seminar 2 (NGS Conference 2008) 1 exemplaire
Documentation: The What , Why and Where 1 exemplaire
CD-F-341 - Maximizing Your Use of Evidence 1 exemplaire
GRIP: Mastering Documentation 1 exemplaire
Kinship Determination 1 exemplaire
NGS Magazine, Vol. 37, No. 4 1 exemplaire
Kinship: Proving Your Point 1 exemplaire
Solving Problems with Original Sources T-109 1 exemplaire
When Sources Don't Agree, Then What? 1 exemplaire
Five Ways to Prove Who Your Ancestor Was 1 exemplaire
NGS Magazine, Vol. 37, No. 2 1 exemplaire
NGS Magazine, Vol. 37, No. 3 1 exemplaire
IGHR Writing and Publishing for Genealogists 1 exemplaire
SLIG: Advanced Genealogical Methods 1 exemplaire
Deafness-focused Records for Genealogical Research 1 exemplaire
Client Reports Dos Don'ts and Maybes 1 exemplaire
Genealogy > Citations > Waypoints An Option for Locating and Citing Unindexed Numbered Online Images 1 exemplaire
Making your citation clear, complete, and accurate 1 exemplaire
Problem solving with probate 1 exemplaire
Finding 'unfindable' ancestors 1 exemplaire
Oeuvres associées
Étiqueté
Partage des connaissances
- Nom légal
- Jones, Thomas Wright
- Date de naissance
- 1947
- Sexe
- male
- Nationalité
- United States of America
- Lieux de résidence
- Ithaca, New York, USA
Fairfax, Virginia, USA
Cocoa, Florida, USA
Bradenton, Florida, USA - Études
- University of South Florida (BA | 1969)
Vanderbilt University (MA | 1973)
University of Pittsburgh (PhD | Education 1978) - Professions
- professor emeritus
co-editor
educator
genealogical researcher
writer
lecturer (tout afficher 7)
certified genealogist - Organisations
- Gallaudet University, Washington D.C.
National Genealogical Society
Association of Professional Genealogists
Board for Certification of Genealogists - Prix et distinctions
- Professional Achievement Award, Association of Professional Genealogists (2011)
Silver Tray Award (Scholarly Contributions to the Field of Genealogy, 2011)
Fellow, National Genealogical Society (2009)
Fellow, Utah Genealogical Society (2009)
Fellow, American Society of Genealogists (2007)
Grahame Thomas Smallwood Jr. Award of Merit (2004)
Membres
Critiques
Listes
Genealogy (1)
Vous aimerez peut-être aussi
Auteurs associés
Statistiques
- Œuvres
- 79
- Aussi par
- 1
- Membres
- 1,314
- Popularité
- #19,548
- Évaluation
- 4.6
- Critiques
- 6
- ISBN
- 8
- Favoris
- 1
Despite having read Genealogy Standards a few times, I've clearly missed some important points. That's mostly because Genealogy Standards does not include discussion of the standards. I read a lot of technical standards for a living. BCG's Genealogy Standards leave a lot to be desired for explanation.
That's a preface to the first really good point about Mastering Genealogical Documentation: it's an extensive discussion and breakdown of BCG standard 5, which lays out the 5 facets/elements/components of a citation: who, what, where, when, and wherein. What satisfies as good information for each element? Thomas W. Jones answers that. (Evidence Explained really does not.)
The second really good thing about Mastering Genealogical Documentation is that Jones has multiple chapters devoted to the really common situation of having images of another source. He breaks that down into a few situations: published images of published sources, published images of unpublished sources, unpublished images of unpublished sources, and unpublished images of unknown or lost sources. For each of those scenarios, the book lays out 4-5 options for how to construct citations. More importantly, the author explains why he recommend or does not recommend each method. Jones was editor of NGS Quarterly from 2003 to 2018, so he's certainly influential, but I'd prefer he didn't use passive voice as if his views are universal, using passive voice ("this option is not recommended").
The third really good thing about Mastering Genealogical Documentation is that Jones presents an actual process. Chapter 17 presents "Ten steps to cite any source". Boy howdy is that really useful! I do wish he didn't wait until the last chapter because that process would have been useful to work through the exercises in each chapter, particularly the exercises based on "using your own sources, apply this chapter".
Two related parts worth criticism though. One, Jones presents everything through a lens of format rather than function. Capitalize this way, not that way! Use periods here! I think people would learn & understand better with a focus on the what, and *then* applying that into how to format it into a citation. The second is that Jones focuses on publication of citations (Elizabeth Shown Mills does this as well in Evidence Explained). Jones is both a publication editor, as well as a frequently published writer. But there's a vast swath of "intermediate" genealogists who are trying to build family trees accurately and to high standards rather than publish articles. We don't work primarily with word processing software, and formal citations are a hindrance to smooth work flow. For instance, when I am documenting a source of published images of unpublished records, combining the documentation into one sentence like citation makes it *harder* for me to pick out each source as I review my notes. When I initially wrote this criticism on social media, one person responded to me with "just do what you want, use the parts you find useful." Which is absolutely true, but not useful. What I am saying is this work is tailored to budding genealogy writers or transitional professionals, not intermediate genealogists who want more solid trees. But it is extremely useful to those of us in that category; we just have to dig out the useful parts.… (plus d'informations)