What I Wish Everyone in the LDS Church Knew About Family History
1. What I Wish Everyone in the Church Knew About Family History
Ben Baker
2. My Background
•Nearly 5 years as a Software Engineer at FamilySearch
•Currently work on Family Tree, but try to use all our products
•Have previously given several presentations going into more detail on several similar topics. To view/download these presentations go to http://www.slideshare.net/bakers84.
3. 3 Great Myths of Family History
My genealogy is done / There is nothing for me to do
Doing Family History is too hard and time consuming
Family History is for old people
4. Purpose of FamilySearch
The purpose of the Family History Department is to helpChurch members fulfilltheir divinely appointed responsibility to discovertheir families and submittheir names for temple ordinances
5. Key Indicator Reports
Ask your
•Family history consultant(s)
•High priest group leader
•Bishop
•Stake president
about this report for your stake/ward.
6. Share Your Knowledge
As shown from the purpose statement and key indicator report, increasing participation among all members is paramount.
Share what you know with:
•Your family, from immediate family to distant cousins
•Your friends, from ward members to those not of our faith
7. Why Youth Are Needed
Elder Neal L. Anderson challenged the youth at RootsTech 2014 “to set a personal goal to help prepare as many names for the temple as baptisms you perform in the temple.” https://www.lds.org/topics/family-history/temple-challenge
Why?
Because temples shouldn’t have to provide names
when your own family needs your help and
Experiencing “both halves” of the blessing builds faith
NO MORE TEMPLE WELFARE!
8. Critical Paradigm To Understand –Part 1
Where you can help the most
1.Find your relatives in indexed records and link them to persons in Family Tree
2.Upload photos, stories and documents of your relatives and link them to persons in Family Tree
3.Help index historical records
4.Clean up data in Family Tree
5.Reserve temple ordinances for your family
Family Tree
Digitized Images
Indexed Records
Historical Records (Microfilm and original documents)
Living Memory
Photos, Stories, Documents, Audio
Completed LDS Temple Ordinances
9. Critical Paradigm To Understand –Part 2
The best way
to find people who need LDS temple work is to find people who are NOT in the tree yet
The best way
to find people not in the tree yet is
to find them in a historical record with someone who is already in the tree
10. Embrace Change
Embrace change, don’t be afraid of it
Click on new things to see what they do
I don’t think you can mess up anything in a single click, but be sure to read warnings.
11. Keep up to Date
Read the FamilySearch blog at https://familysearch.org/blog/en/for updates on new features and other happenings.
Subscribe to the blog via RSS
Google “how to subscribe to an rssfeed” for helps –I use Outlook and feedly
Use the categories and search for information you’re most interested in
12. Family Tree is “Our Tree”
•Freely available to anyone worldwide
•Reduces duplication of effort
•Increases collaboration to arrive at the best information
•Information added outlives contributors
•Link person profiles to additional information
•More on this topic in my presentation “Finding ‘My Tree’ Within FamilySearch Family Tree’s ‘Our Tree’” on SlideShare
We can all go further faster by working together
13. Record Hints are Awesome!
•Searches indexed records for you
•Will find records based on all information, including maiden and married names
•Often overcomes errors in records
•Only presents high confidence matches
•4x increase in sources attached since rollout
29. Scope of Interest
Internal term used to define those persons who will show up in this section of memories and also in temple opportunities.
The system is showing you persons four generations above you along with their spouses, children and grandchildren.
33. Use Family History Resources on lds.org
View the main lds.org page for family history at http://www.lds.org/topics/family-history
34. Get Help With Family History Callings
For training and resources for Family History callings go to http://www.lds.org/callings/temple-and-family-history
35. Share The “Why” of Family History With Those Not of Our Faith
Share http://mormon.org/family-historywith others
36. Other Useful Tips
•Use more than one tab when doing work to keep context more easily. Using your mouse to middle click will open something in new tab
•Use https://beta.familysearch.orgto try out things and see previews of coming features
•There is now a site map for familysearch.org at https://familysearch.org/site-map. I gave a presentation at the 2013 conference that while getting out of date is also a decent site map. See http://www.slideshare.net/bakers84/a-whirlwind-tour-of- family-search-resources-syllabusand http://www.slideshare.net/bakers84/a-whirlwind-tour-of- family-search-resources-presentationfor the list of URLs and presentation.
•Many more than time allows
37. 3 Great Myths of Family History
My genealogy is done / There is nothing for me to do
Doing Family History is too hard and time consuming
Family History is for old people
39. Images Used
•Slide 5 –Screenshot from Family History Department Priesthood Key Indicator report
•Slides 11, 13-26, 28, 30-32 –Screenshots taken from https://familysearch.org
•Slide 27 –Screenshot taken from https://puzzilla.org
•Slide 33-34 –Screenshots taken from http://lds.org
•Slide 35 –Screenshot taken from http://mormon.org