Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Crash Course in Genealogy
View through CrossRef
A basic, how-to book written primarily to prepare librarians to assist genealogy researchers, this guide can also be used by those who wish to discover and document their family histories.
There has been an explosion of interest in genealogy recently, with popular series running on PBS (Faces of America), NBC (Who Do You Think You Are?) and BYU-TV (The Generations Project). Even Lisa Simpson did a genealogy project for school. Part of the popularCrash Courseseries,Crash Course in Genealogywill help librarians feel more comfortable as they work with the increasing number of patrons looking for assistance in researching their family trees.
Beginning with library genealogical services policies, the guide moves on to cover genealogical research principles and most-used sources. It also illustrates how one can perform a search backward in time through American family history. The book includes information on researching people of color, taking research to another country, and adding DNA information to genealogical research. Examples from the author's decades-long experience as a genealogist enrich the text, while illustrations of census records and the like help readers understand the research process.
Title: Crash Course in Genealogy
Description:
A basic, how-to book written primarily to prepare librarians to assist genealogy researchers, this guide can also be used by those who wish to discover and document their family histories.
There has been an explosion of interest in genealogy recently, with popular series running on PBS (Faces of America), NBC (Who Do You Think You Are?) and BYU-TV (The Generations Project).
Even Lisa Simpson did a genealogy project for school.
Part of the popularCrash Courseseries,Crash Course in Genealogywill help librarians feel more comfortable as they work with the increasing number of patrons looking for assistance in researching their family trees.
Beginning with library genealogical services policies, the guide moves on to cover genealogical research principles and most-used sources.
It also illustrates how one can perform a search backward in time through American family history.
The book includes information on researching people of color, taking research to another country, and adding DNA information to genealogical research.
Examples from the author's decades-long experience as a genealogist enrich the text, while illustrations of census records and the like help readers understand the research process.
Related Results
Nietzsche's On the Genealogy of Morals
Nietzsche's On the Genealogy of Morals
This astonishingly rich volume collects the work of an international group of scholars, including some of the best known in academia. Experts in ethics, epistemology, philosophy of...
Crash Course in Strategic Planning
Crash Course in Strategic Planning
For practitioners, this text provides an easy-to-understand approach to strategic planning and execution.
The general recipe for achieving an intended outcome is equal pa...
NextGen Genealogy
NextGen Genealogy
DNA testing can serve as a powerful tool that unlocks the hidden information within our bodies for family history research. This book explains how genetic genealogy works and answe...
Koji Kondo's Super Mario Bros. Soundtrack
Koji Kondo's Super Mario Bros. Soundtrack
Koji Kondo's Super Mario Bros. (1985) score redefined video game music. With under three minutes of music, Kondo put to rest an era of bleeps and bloops—the sterile products of a l...
Guidebook to the Cytoskeletal and Motor Proteins
Guidebook to the Cytoskeletal and Motor Proteins
Abstract
In the final stages of editing this Guidebook, Thomas Kreis lost his life in a tragic airplane crash off the coast of Nova Scotia, in which all passengers p...


