|
How to Find a Job, Internship, or Create Your Own Business
|
||||||||||||||
Book Description
Here are 102+ ways to use training in family history and genealogy when applied to real-world careers in education, business, or government, including creative entrepreneurial start-ups. With the future marriage of genealogy to smart cards, online databases, or similar authentication technology for family history, population registration (census), and library research, it may be easier to research family lines, not only by DNA matches through DNA testing for deep ancestry, but also with smart, electronic cards designed for electronic identity. It's also a way to track military records as another way to trace family history. Careers and research may focus on various state libraries or historical associations. History and family studies are part of an interdisciplinary liberal arts program that emphasizes research and writing. Journalism courses help round out your ability to express in plain language the results of your reading, explorations, and interpretations. Obtaining a degree or even taking one course or self-study in Family History can lead to broad, interdisciplinary careers. Graduate work in library science, law, journalism, public history, or genetics counseling (with a double major in the life sciences and social work) also lead to careers in which an historical education may be used. Public history is a field where you can pursue graduate degrees, including a doctorate. A degree in family history and/or public history can lead to entrepreneurship or becoming a corporate executive. Most jobs don't require a specific major, but rather analytical training and training in writing. If you're interested in taking courses or obtaining a degree or doing graduate work in history, family, home, social science, or area studies, focus on obtaining those analytical skills and good journalism skills for expressing in plain language for the public what you learned in your history and genealogy courses. See the personal history course link at http://www.newswriting.net. |
||||||||||||||
|
You can customize or collect vintage maps from land, railroads, or
houses in any part of the world. Help people find streets that had no names and homes with no addresses. Learn about plat
and panorama maps or teach others about how to create family atlases or time capsules.
Family history training and genealogy research is the second most popular
hobby in the nation with more than 113 million people interested in ancestry. Whether you supply hobbyists or choose a career
in social, personal, oral, or family history, there's a niche for you as a business or as a hobby in research or craft from
digital scrapbooking and customized heirloom album creations to publishing gift books or producing documentaries.
Here's how to use your training or hobby of family history and genealogy
to create a business or find a career, whether it be in developing a genealogy-related television program online or for niche
and cable TV access or for building time capsules or creating maps, DNA-driven genealogy reports, or newsletters. It's fun.
It's applied history. And it can be artistic, multimedia, or book-wise.
Creative Genealogy and Personal History Writing Techniques Web Site and Links to Blogs and Video. |
||||||||||||||