Ogden FamilySearch Center 2017 Conference Class Descriptions

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Overview[edit | edit source]

This page is primarily for providing brief Class Descriptions for the upcoming 2017 Conference. Many of these descriptions have a link to the syllabus for that specific class. To return to the Conference home page click HERE

Analysis Strategies for Brick Wall Ancestors[edit | edit source]

After you attend this class you will know how to overcome roadblocks in your research. You will enjoy learning how to use some new tech tools for the tenacious researcher. (This is an advanced class).

Click HERE for the Syllabus

Beginning Scandinavian Research[edit | edit source]

Dive into your Scandinavian heritage. This class is an introduction to the records, language, handwriting, and research strategies of Denmark, Sweden, and Norway.

Click HERE for the Syllabus

British Descendant Research: One-name studies and Pre-1837 Research[edit | edit source]

In this British class, you will learn some techniques to searching parish registers and probates as effectively as possible. We will discuss one-name studies as a means of accurately locating one’s family as well as common problems of research. We will focus on pre-1837 resources.

Core MyHeritage Features to Drive Genealogical Discoveries[edit | edit source]

Learn about content, technologies, and services that MyHeritage designed to help you discover new information about your family and to find previously unknown ancestors.

Danish Research on the Internet[edit | edit source]

Researching Danish is difficult, but Annie Strawn's 30 years experience can help point you to those missing record which are actually available today on the internet.

Descendant Research:  Find and Add Distant Cousins to your Tree[edit | edit source]

More than surfing Family Tree for temple opportunities, this class will focus on how to research records to find the descendants of your ancestors using sound genealogical research practices.   A system of keeping track of where you are and what you have completed will be demonstrated.    Examples and the case study involve English research; but the techniques shown could be adapted to research anywhere.   Emphasis is not on finding names already in FamilyTree,  but adding people that have not yet been found. Reserving temple ordinances will be discussed.

Click HERE for the syllabus

DNA is the link to the past; What it is and how you use it[edit | edit source]

We carry with us in our DNA a history of who we are and how we are connected to all the people of the world. This lecture will focus on how we use DNA to discover these connections and how they can be used to reconstruct our unique genealogy.

Doctrinal Support for Family History and Genealogy[edit | edit source]

Doctrinally there is a difference between Family History and Genealogy.  What is that difference and how has the Lord defined the two in the scriptures.   What implications does that difference have on the research for our ancestors and our responsibility to them.

Family History at WSU's Special Collections[edit | edit source]

At Weber State University Special Collections, we document the history of Weber & Davis Counties—their communities, businesses, and people. In this class we’ll discuss the resources we have available to help you not only identify ancestors, but to also discover their individual stories.

Family History Blesses the Living[edit | edit source]

Particular to members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, this session utilizes scriptures, quotes and videos from the Later-day Saint prophets and apostles.

Understand the “WHY” of family history and temple work. Learn the doctrine of redemption and where it is found in the scriptures. Understand the importance of knowing where the spirit world is and the activities that take place there. Recognize your own responsibilities and blessings in family history and temple work. After this session, you will be ready to learn the “HOW” of family history.

Click HERE for the syllabus

FamilySearch for Beginners (offered twice)[edit | edit source]

Offered twice. New to FamilySearch? Do you think you would benefit from a “hands on” experience? We are offering a lab class this year for you. If you have an Church or FamilySearch Account, you are ready to attend. Volunteers in our One-on-One Circle of Service can help you register with FamilySearch during the conference (you would need to be able to access e-mail there to complete the registration), or visit the Ogden Utah FamilySearch Center before the day of the conference.

Click HERE for the syllabus

Find out how to bring your pictures to life using QR code technology.[edit | edit source]

Make slide shows and interact with your T.V. This is an amazing way to share your information and get others interested.

Find, Take, Teach: Using the Consultant Planner[edit | edit source]

Click HERE for the syllabus

Finding German Places of Origin[edit | edit source]

The objective of this class is to understand record types in the United States and Germany that can lead you to your German immigrant ancestor’s hometown.

Click HERE for the Syllabus

Finding Your Relatives that are Ready for Temple Work[edit | edit source]

This class will explore ways to glean relatives from Family Tree using the Descendant view, Family Search and the Hope Chest which are already available for you and your family to request Temple Ordinances.

Click HERE for the syllabus

Five Generations Exercise[edit | edit source]

This class will help you verify and organize your 5-Generations in FamilySearch Family Tree.

Click Here for the Syllabus

From the Alps to the Rhine: Beginning Your Swiss Research[edit | edit source]

Do you have ancestors from Switzerland? Come learn how to find your Swiss family. We’ll be discovering the records available online for Switzerland, and resources that can help you be successful at researching your Swiss roots.

Click HERE for the Syllabus

Genealogy Standards for Beginners, part 1: The Basics[edit | edit source]

Let’s take a detailed look at each of the guidelines and policies that every beginning researcher should know in order to avoid having to “do it all over again” later.  This class will cover data entry standards, research tracking, basic research guidelines, and temple ordinance reservation policies.

Click HERE for the Syllabus

Audience Level:  Beginner.

Genealogy Standards for Beginners, part II: Making the Grade, A Road Map to Accuracy[edit | edit source]

Let’s take a look at the broadly accepted standards and practices that make it possible for us to actually “prove” a relationship, produce credible work, and publish accurate findings.  This class will cover the Genealogical Proof Standard, writing and citation techniques, and standards for working with DNA results.

Click HERE for the syllabus

Audience Level:  Beginner

Germanic Research for Beginners[edit | edit source]

The objective of this class is to learn the basics needed to begin researching ancestors in German speaking areas.

Click HERE for the Syllabus

Googling Around with Google[edit | edit source]

Way more than a search engine! Learn about photos, image search, earth, alerts, gmail, calendar, and more.

Click HERE for syllabus

HOARDER TO ORDER: A step-by-step family Record Rescue[edit | edit source]

Do you know the whereabouts of your precious journals, letters, scrapbooks and photos? Be the superhero in your family organization and conduct a successful “Record Rescue” from start to finish (and then some), and learn how your family’s dusty records can become valuable, searchable, and life-changing with present-day tools.

Click HERE for the syllabus

How Could Grandma Be Wrong? Finding the Pitfalls in Family Records[edit | edit source]

Many of us have inherited records from our ancestors and relatives. But how accurate are they? This class will provide you with tools to help you determine which records are correct---and which ones you might need to look at more closely.

Click HERE for the syllabus

How to Start Your Family History[edit | edit source]

This course is designed for those beginning their family history journey.  We will discuss an organized approach to finding information, including finding records in your own home, interviewing family members, and organizing the information you find into a detective kit.  We will explore how to find the online records and physical records that will help you find your family, use a research log, and record and evaluate your findings and sources.

Click HERE for the syllabus

How to think Logically for Researchers: Work Smarter, not Harder Part 1 AND Part 2[edit | edit source]

You might not be a professional genealogist but that doesn't mean you don't have to research like one. We'll focus on the basic steps of the genealogical research process, showing logical means of solving genealogical problems regardless of locality.

Click HERE for the syllabus

Indexing: Foreign Languages are Fun: Focus on Spanish[edit | edit source]

There is a great need for Indexing documents written in the Spanish Language. This class will teach you the key words and techniques needed to index Spanish documents. The class will be taught in English in a LAB setting so you can practice entering information as you are being taught.

Introduction to the Family History Guide[edit | edit source]

The Family History Guide is a FamilySearch certified program to use as a training aid in the various FamilySearch software programs, The Family History Guide is a website that represents a best-in-class learning environment for family history. Its scope is broad, but its focus is narrow enough to help you achieve your goals, step by step. Whether you're brand new to family history or a seasoned researcher—or somewhere in between—The Family History Guide can be your difference maker.

Is Your British Isles Genealogy Already Compiled?[edit | edit source]

Some remarkable genealogy collections have been compiled by professional and amateur genealogists in the British Isles. The vast majority of these are unknown. And not consulted by the present generation of family researchers. Break your losing streak!

Click HERE for syllabus

Kid Genealogists: Inspiring the Next Generation[edit | edit source]

Engage the children you love with their family history by incorporating it into pastimes that they already enjoy: stories, projects, and playtime. Learn practical tips and project ideas that make family history meaningful for children.

Click HERE for the syllabus

Click HERE for the RootsTech syllabus that has additional information.

Languages in German Genealogical Documents[edit | edit source]

Learn to cope with a variety of languages which can be found in German documents. Decipher handwritten and typed versions of the various languages you may encounter in your research and learn essential genealogical vocabulary.

Click HERE for the syllabus

Merging Your Ancestry Tree with Your FamilySearch Tree[edit | edit source]

This class will discuss how you can merge your Ancestry Tree with your FamilySearch Tree. This class is primarily for members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints who wish to coordinate their Ancestry tree with their FamilySearch Tree.

Meyer's Gazetteer Now Online, Indexed and Fully Searchable![edit | edit source]

Meyer's has long been the standard gazetteer for German genealogy.  It is a valuable tool, but difficult to use.  Fortunately, Meyer's gazetteer has been carefully extracted, indexed, cross-referenced with German Empire maps, and made available for free at Meyersgaz.org.  A working knowledge of this website will facilitate and improve your German genealogical efforts.

Click HERE for the syllabus

Netherlands Research on Line[edit | edit source]

New Browser Based - Web Indexing[edit | edit source]

The indexing software has been changed to a browser based system, which has some significant changes in where the tools are located and how it is used. Come to this LAB to get first hand instruction in how to use the new system.

Click HERE for the syllabus

Northern Utah Genealogy Sources[edit | edit source]

This class will review many on-line and Genealogical (brick and mortar) facilities available to researchers and discuss what information focus they contain.

Click HERE for syllabus

Organize, Find, and Share using Legacy Family Tree software[edit | edit source]

See how Legacy 9 helps you search the web, accurately record your sources, create migration maps, customized walls charts, publish books, get automated research suggestions and much more.

Click HERE for the syllabus

PERSI and Its 8,000 Periodicals[edit | edit source]

After you attend this class you will know about the vast resources available in periodicals. You will know how to access the index to more than 8,000 periodicals and how to read them and how to obtain copies for articles of interest.

Click HERE for the syllabus

Preserving Memories: The EstremeGenes Family History Radio Show[edit | edit source]

This class will discuss methods of preserving your documents, audio, film, slides, photos, using scanning and other digital techniques. Repair methods and techniques will also be discussed by Tom Perry, the "Preservation Authority." www.tcmplace.com

RootsMagic: Your Offline Home for Your Online Research[edit | edit source]

It has never been easier to find and learn about your ancestors through internet records and websites. But collecting and organizing that information can be challenging. RootsMagic genealogy and family tree software can be your "home base" for accessing all these different resources.

Join us and learn how to use the RootsMagic to spot holes and problems in your family tree. See how to easily search online sites such as Ancestry, FamilySearch, Findmypast, MyHeritage, and more. You'll also learn how to easily share your findings with others.

Click HERE for the syllabus

Solutions to your Scanning Dilemma - Shotbox Secrets: Using Shotbox & your cell phone camera to digitize your photographs, documents & heirlooms[edit | edit source]

Is Scanning better than digitizing? File management, cloud storage, FamilySearch memories app and using your own phone camera to capture your memories will be discussed. Greg Stroud of Shotbox will demonstrate the use and advantages of being able to use a controlled environment in Shotbox to copy your treasured photos

Click HERE for the syllabus

Click HERE for the Stroud Family Digitizing Rules

Si, che puoi! Beginning Italian Research[edit | edit source]

Many people who start Italian research feel overwhelmed like they can't do the research. What everyone needs to remember is that "Si, che puoi!" (Yes, you can!). Everyone can do Italian research as long as they understand the beginning steps. This class will give you the starting board that you need to jump into Italian research. Come and learn that "Si, che puoi!"

Click HERE for the Syllabus

Sources of Genealogical Research for Armenians in the Caucasus[edit | edit source]

Unearth a treasure trove of genealogical records for areas in the former Russian Empire including parts of modern Turkey, Armenia, Georgia, and Azerbaijan. Learn the secret of finding records hidden in plain sight.

Click HERE for the Syllabus

Sync FamilySearch Memories and Research with Hinting using Ancestral Quest[edit | edit source]

Have you ever wished your family tree program would do your genealogy for you? Learn about TreeTips, and best techniques for getting all the power out of MyHeritage, FamilySearch and Findmypast Hinting. Learn to easily upload and download scrapbook items between your files and FamilySearch with AQ's new Memories Manager.

Click HERE for the syllabus

The Art of Family Storytelling[edit | edit source]

Wish you could tell the family stories to your children and grandchildren? This class will tell you how and why we should pass down our family stories.

Click HERE for the syllabus

The FamilySearch Wiki: Your Go-To Guide for Research[edit | edit source]

An absolute must-have for genealogists, the Wiki is the top of its kind, with over 80,000 genealogical articles and guides providing knowledge and instruction to help you solve your research problems.

Click HERE for the syllabus

The Five Generations Exercise[edit | edit source]

The Five Generations Exercise is designed to help you become familiar with Family Tree and verify your ancestor’s records and clean up their information. You will go into each ancestor’s person page (for five generations) and their spouse and make corrections and additions so your family record is more accurate and complete. While using Family Tree FamilySearch you will become familiar with the ‘person page’ of your ancestor, how to standardize the names, dates and places associated with your ancestor, how to attach the ‘Hints’ provided for your ancestor, how to combine duplicate records of the same ancestor, see that the ordinances are provided for your ancestor, and finally arrange the ‘sources’ attached to your ancestor’s record in a standard format recommended by FamilySearch.

Click HERE for the Syllabus

The Utah War: The Coming of "Johnston's Army"[edit | edit source]

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The usage of "Mormon" and "LDS" on this page is approved according to current policy.


Among benchmarks in nineteenth-century Latter-day Saint history are such events as the arrival of the first pioneers in the Valley in 1847, crossing the Plains, and the 1890 Manifesto. As people do family history, they often use these happenings as watershed moments and points of reference. Another common event that appears often in family histories is “the coming of Johnston’s Army.” Some ancestors resisted this army during the Echo Canyon War as members of heroic guerrillas under legendary Latter-day Saint leaders such as Porter Rockwell and Lot Smith. Others participated in the “Move South” to evacuate the northern settlements in case the army breached the mountain defenses and the resistance of the Nauvoo Legion. In spite of this, few understand what actually happened during this frightening confrontation with the U.S. government in 1857-58 that historians call the Utah War. This workshop will reveal the basic details and meanings of the arrival in the West of the Utah Expedition under orders from President James Buchanan to quell a so-called “Mormon Rebellion.” It will outline the dangerous potential of this episode and discuss how it ended with the army establishment of Camp Floyd in Cedar Valley west of Utah Lake.

No syllabus is offered for this class.l

Tips for Genealogical Research[edit | edit source]

In this class, you will learn various tips that will increase the quality of your research and efficiency of work. These are a few of the tips that the presenter has gathered in nearly 30 of his own research and as a Research Consultant at the FamilySearch Library in Salt Lake City. You should keep this list of tips handy and review them periodically as you grow as a family history researcher.

Click HERE for the syllabus

Top Tech Tips for the Technologist and the Genealogist[edit | edit source]

Leave this class armed with a new collection of tools to make your genealogy time on the computer more efficient.

Click HERE for the syllabus

Training using the Family History Guide[edit | edit source]

The Family History Guide is a website that represents a best-in-class learning environment for family history. Its scope is broad, but its focus is narrow enough to help you achieve your goals, step by step. Whether you're brand new to family history or a seasoned researcher—or somewhere in between—The Family History Guide can be your difference maker. This session will focus on how to use the Guide in teaching and training others to be more effective with the FamilySearch programs..

Using FamilySearch Family Tree? Do you Also Need Another Family Tree Program? If so, Why?[edit | edit source]

Assuming you use FamilySearch Family Tree, you either use that application exclusively or you use it plus other software to maintain and update your family tree.  Other software or applications can be web-based applications like Ancestry, MyHeritage or Findmypast, etc. or personal computer-based software like Roots Magic, Legacy or Ancestral Quest, etc. The class will provide an overview of the options, benefits and pitfalls to help you make a decision that works for you.

Using The Family History Guide™ for training[edit | edit source]

"Introduction to The Family History Guide" helps you get familiar with the first two sections of the website: Introduction and Projects. You'll learn about how The Family History Guide is organized, how to find resources for beginners, and how to successfully work with the 8 Projects on the site: 1: Family Tree, 2: Memories, 3: Descendants, 4: Discover (Research), 5: Indexing, 6: Help, 7: Technology, and 8: DNA. You'll also learn how to do research in over 60 countries around the world.

Video Stories[edit | edit source]

Click HERE for the syllabus

Visualizing Historical Boundaries[edit | edit source]

After you attend this class you will know how to locate images of historical boundaries and overlay them on Google Earth. You will learn how to use them for detailed research analysis.

Click HERE for the Syllabus

What's New in Legacy 9?[edit | edit source]

Learn about the new hinting, Find a Grave searching, online backup, stories, hashtags, Family Tree Bingo, and more

Click HERE for the syllabus

Why Some People Should NOT Write a Book! 7 Great Reasons Why YOU Must![edit | edit source]

The session presenters will discuss the importance of publishing personal, family and social histories – and the use of related genealogical research publications – to reach a broader audience beyond one’s own immediate family members.  One great reason to publish histories of this kind is to enable researchers (from novice to expert) to search and discover your work and the unique information it contains.  Session topics will include the importance of print and digital versions of your work, ISBNs, registering works with the Library of Congress, making the work available through Family Search Online Book Collection, worldwide distributin/access to your work and other essentials for making your work available to anyone.  Examples of recent publications will be presented and a case study regarding the search and discovery of a “lost” ancestor using a variety of research methods and sources.