I wanted to add a photo of an engaging learning experience and found several at the Prints & Photographs Online Catalog collection at the Library of Congress. Pictured are women attending a Normal School studying birds. |
Today, I had the pleasure of showing my 92-year-old mother how to access a news podcast on her iPhone—a reminder of how fortunate we are to have so many ways to engage with information. Podcasts about genealogy are a favorite of mine, whether I’m driving or working outside, they provide a steady stream of knowledge and inspiration.
This past weekend, I spent some time watching webinars from RootsTech, gaining fresh insights and ideas. Last night, I read a blog post about upcoming innovations in genealogical research. The sheer volume of learning opportunities available today is incredible, and I find myself continually inspired by the wealth of knowledge at our fingertips.
Here are a few items I read, watched, or listened to recently:
It was nice to find Nicole Elder Dyer's blog post New Features and Apps Announced at RootsTech 2025 at Family Locket. It's not all of the announcements from RootsTech, but I had missed seeing most of them and appreciated finding some of the most exciting in one place.
At RootsTech Robyn N. Smith reminded us to look beyond the names and places on the census records in her webinars Mining the Census, Are You Finding Every Clue? Part 1 and Mining the Census, Are You Finding Every Clue? Part 2. Nice overview of the non-population schedules as well.
Also at RootsTech—I enjoyed seeing Alice Childs' step by step process to identify a client's distant ancestor using both traditional genealogical methods and DNA in her webinar, Intersecting Lines: Pedigree Collapse Helps Identify an Ancestor’s Parents.
At the Family Tree Podcast by Family Tree Magazine, host Lisa Louise Cooke and author Sunny Morton compared the top three genealogy websites: Ancestry.com, FamilySearch.org, and MyHeritage.com. I found the discussion very interesting and followed up by also reading the article in FamilyTree Magazine—I read mine on the Libby app courtesy of my local public library.
This morning I read, Linda Stufflebean's GeneaGem: National Museum of Ireland. I visited the museum in Dublin at the Collins Barracks in 2016, but there are things to see online that are not on display at the museum. The highlight was Linda's link to the Irish Community Archive Network. Through it, I found my husband's grandfather, William Quinn, who participated in the Uprising in County Galway, along with additional details about that time.
If you want to know more about the families I research, click here to like my Facebook page, where you will see each post and other genealogical finds.
Diana
Library of Congress, Young women in Washington, D.C. Normal School classroom studying birds, photograph, 1890-1899, Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress (https://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/95500487/ : accessed 11 March 2025).
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