Monday, May 21, 2012

Websites

As anyone that has read my blog will anticpate, my links pertain to genealogy. My favorite is Family Search which is the free site similar to Ancestry, but very easy to access from home and lots of information. Check it out at:

https://familysearch.org/

The other site is made available through the South Dakota Genealogy Society and it is GenWeb. It gives more reference type information, as to how to access genealogy information in a certain area and most of those areas have Message boards to request help with an ancester. This site is:

http://usgenweb.org/

I recently went to the Pierre-Ft. Pierre Genealogy Society meeting and they presented information on a lot of sites that could be used in a persons search for a family member. If anyone is interested, please send me a comment and I can get some of those links to you.

Thursday, May 17, 2012

10) Discovery

1) I think my bigest discovery is the amount of information at one's fingertips, and also what the libraries have to offer. There should be no reason a school student today should not be able to find information on any topic he or she is interested in. AMAZING!

2)I have been thinking of way to spread the word in my genealogy group i belong to. We just a a presentation on other site that are available besides these here and I would love to get some of these links tied into our website here at the state library.

Thanks again for this great opportunity!
Ancestry

1) When I search for my name it came up with 20 possible entries, but only one was actually mine and it was the U. S. Public Records Index, Volume 1. I was really amozed at how many of me are out there. I didn't think my name was that familiar.

2) I have researched numerous relatives on Ancestry over the last ten years and I'm still having trouble with one, my great-great grandfather, David Davis (I think). I have not found an actual record that supports that David Davis is my great-great grandfather, as yet, but I'm still looking. I have found six or seven census records for my great-grandfather James Franklin Davis through Ancestry, but what I found when doing these searches, the name can be registered differently, such as James F. Davis, Frank Davis, Franklin Davis, etc. When searching for these records you really need to go beyond the normal. The census records can be very interesting as you can find what their occupation was at that time, how much they were worth, how many children there are living in the household, and even if the have a hired man or a servant. This is all interesting information if you are doing a family tree.

3) There were several photos of baseball cards of players born in South Dakota, which I found very interesting. Then I clicked on just postcards to narrow the search a bit (there were thousands of pictures the first time) and this did narrow done the choices to 1, 136 choices and upon scrolling down the list I ran across a postcard of the 'DeSmet City School" which I have inserted here.




































The reason this intrigued me was the fact that we have four generations graduating from the DeSmet school system and this would be a great find to add to the genealogy of our family. This is a resource I did not know existed. Thanks!!!


Heritage Quest

4) Upon searching for several different items, I finally searched for Davis City, Iowa and added James Davis also and it came up with 22 results, of which I picked "History of Decatur County, Iowa, and its people" Chicago: S.J. Clarke Pub. Co., 1915, 727 pgs. and when I started to read I was amazed to find out a few things about Iowa that I was not aware of. Things like it was a part of Louisiana purchase, then was a part of Louisiana Territory, then no governmant for several years of which there was a lot of lawlessness. It then was a part of the Territory of Missouri, then a part of Territory of Michigan, Then a part of Territory of Iowa and then the State of Iowa. That is quite a progression. I have not done a lot of searching in this area for information in my genealogy but can truly see you can find things that can inhance the story of your family.

Sanborn Maps

5) Well, I went to South Dakota, Then to DeSmet and then clicked on the Nov. 1925 - Oct. 1934 link and looked at the first page, which did include a small map showing where DeSmet was located in South Dakota, A key which included information on Fire codes, and another area which inferred to correction line (I'm not sure what that was about). I then went immediately to Sheet two as I could tell where the railroad lines were and that my grandparents lived just beyond them right on the main street which was called Calumet Avenue. It did show a house there on the corner, but not my family home which was built right beside my grandparents place. A very interesting map and also could be used in my family story. Thanks again for the find. I will see if I can include the map I'm relating to.



The house I was refering to is the one on the left side of Calumet and just north of Fourth Street.
This is Great!
ArchiveGrid

1) I learned that Sitting Bull fought at the Little Big Horn, then went to Canada to hide from the US troops. He also was touring with the Buffalo Bill Cody Show and was killed resisting arrest.

2) I started with a search for "L. M. Stanton" and had no results, then I did a search for "David Davis" and numerous records came up but I soon realized that most of them were on other David Davises, one being a Doctor out of Illinois. I then did a search for "James Franklin Davis - born 1859" (my great grandfather) and no results came up so I dropped the born in 1859 part and still had not results. So I moved on to genealogy - Davis and so many results (17950) I did not even want to try to search through them, so I added the quotes "genealogy - Davis" and this narrowed down the entries (38) with genealogy information for just the name of Davis. Just about all the records that came up were from Historical Societies in the United States. If I try to narrow down the search with more of a name, I get no results. It would still be a very good resource for genealogy information.


Camio

1) After searching for Paul Revere and having a total of 35 works come up, I could see that he must have been a very good silver smith, as most of the items were of that nature. Teaspoons, coffee creamer, sugar bowl, tea set, etc.

2) After searching for "Sioux" there were 63 items and of those most were clothing or artifacts pertaining to the Sioux Indians and their culture.

3) I first searched for "Terry Redlin" which came up with no results, then I searched for "John Moison" of which there were still no results, so then I searched for "Monet" of which there were 115 works, of which he either did or someone else did of him. My first love of art is still Terry Redlin!

4) It is a very good site for anyone wanting to see works of art, wether it be painting, photographer, or of other mediums. It would also unhance flyers and webpages.

5) I searched for quilts and it came up with 13 results of which were all very outstanding. I choose the two crazy quilts, the friendship quilt, the botanical quilt and the album quilt and put these into my favorites page. I tried to do the slideshow, but it seemed to get hung up after the first quilt and I could not compare the two quilts I would have liked to compare. When you click on the button to open the first quilt, I did notice that only two of the quilts were dark numbered and the other three were light numbers. I'm not sure what that means but it was the dark numbers that would work here. I then preceded to move a couple of the quilts around and that was quite easy.

The quilt I'm displaying here is the one I like the best with this one as a close second.

This was a lot of fun and very interesting.



Tuesday, May 15, 2012

WorldCat

1) What a large selection of choices, from title, author, and ISBN number, to material type and musical composition.

2)There were 178 results and there are 2094 libraries that have the #1 result. When I click on the Libraries button, the first library that is listed is the Brookings Public library (SBL).

3) The call number is LC: PS3555.V2126; Dewey: 813/.54 . When I click on the authors name it shows me 3089 records for her with numerous titles. There are 461 results for women dectectives which is broken down by books-250, sound-177, internet-33 and scores-1. There were 1132 results for Stephanie Plum, broken down by books-601, sound-462, internet-67, scores-1 and computer disk-1. There are also some buttons at the top of this record of which one of them is a related subject button, which I clicked on and found a whole list of subjects with a percentage of how they relate to the original result. Very interesting.

The 'Database' gives the researcher a list of 13 other databases, including ERIC, MEDLINE, PAPERSFIRST AND E-BOOKS.

Within the South Dakota results, I clicked on 'Birdseye view of a canyon at Wounded Knee, South Dakota, January 1, 1891' and when I accessed it, it turned out to be a picture showing a horse-drawn wagon in a gulch at Wounded Knee. It also showed several (I'm assuming) dead people lying about and others walking about with other horses. Quite interesting! This is part of a collection of photos from an insurance company that is held at the University of California.
E-books--Ebsco

1) I did my usual search for genealogy and my choices numbered 102. Upon looking at the first part of the list, there were several books on research helps, several on writing a family history or story and numerous 'Idiot Guides'. As I scrolled down further there were books on History, which I guess is what genealogy is--the history of a family. I then went back and revised my search for only downloadable books and it still came up with 96 books. Most of these were similar to what was found the first time. I then went back and revised one more time and limited the Time span from 1979-2005 to 2000-2005. This time the amount of books went down to 38, so as you can see if you want to limit your results, you can do this here.

I then click on the "Complete Idiot's Guide to Writing Your Family History" and found it was very easy to download, and I believe I could have save it to a Reader (kindle, laptop, etc.) also. This would be quite handy if you wanted to take it home.


2) I would recommend the books "Bill of Rights" by Thomas T. Lewis; "United States Government Information : Policies and Sources" by Peter Hernon; and maybe "Civil Rights Movement" In Magill's Choice, Salem Press, 2000.

3) There were 88 books available, and after skimming the top of the list, the topics were Indians, Baseball, and some History.

Sunday, May 13, 2012

GVRL--

1) I click on the Title List and approximately 375 to 400 books were listed. I looked through the list and chose 'World's Religions Reference Library' and clicked on the Contents page. The contents showed me that Christianity was in Chapter 6, so I went back to the book and then clicked on Chapter six. I read a short pieceof this and then clicked on the PDF and the two page spread and read a little more. It was very informative. This was more like reading a book. The title I chose could be used for essays on religion, christianity, or one of the other religions that was listed there, such as: Buddhism, Daoism, or Ancient religions of Egypt and Mesopotamia. It covered the topics quite well.

2) My research topic was 'genealogy' which it then gave me the options and I chose 'genealogies'. It came up with 39 choices for me to choose and the first one was "Roots" a Dictionary of American History, which we all probably remember the movie that was made from this book. The book I choose to look into further was the "Genealogy Dictionary of American History" which was telling the background of how genealogy has become a certified professional field. I then click on the listen button and listened to a couple of pages of the book. Being it is a subject I like, I could have listened to the whole thing, which I may do at a later date, but do to the lateness of my entries for the class I will conclude that the reading was very good except for a little hesitation on the periods in initials, which I'm sure it was picking up as end of sentences. It was very easy to understand, esp. if you were following along as it was being read. A very handy tool for those patrons with visual handicaps.

3) Now here is the lack of knowledge of the blogging thing for me. I went into several sites and either they didn't list the lessons, didn't do all the lessons, or I just didn't understand how to get around in their sites (which is the most logical).
Proquest--

1) I searched for 'genealogy' first and then picked the subject listed as suggestions of 'tree and genealogy and genealogy' and found 8615 articles listed for this topic. I glanced through the first list of 20, and clicked on one for genealogy for kids which was very intriguing for me. As i moved down the list there were references to DNA in genealogy, software in genealogy, several guides to researching genealogy in different countries, and then I clicked on the link for "Providing Genealogy Research Services in Public Libraries: Guidelines and Ethics" and read several pages of this article. I then went back and used the advanced search feature to narrow down the long list, so I entered in genealogy and then kids and came up with a list of 2080 articles which is alot less, but still overwhelming. I did look through the initial list and clicked on one article "Fun with genealogy" and was very impressed with the first few paragraghs. They read:

"How to teach your child the joys of exploring family history.

Timeworn and slightly yellowed, the hauntingly beautiful photo was in itself a sight to behold. But it was the story behind the image-a proud Black woman in a lace dress-that 14-year-old Sara Saunders of Milwaukee will always remember. Her grandmother, Julia Saunders, a genealogy buff, explained that the woman was a slave and Sara's great-great-great-great-grand mother.

"She had a hard life," says Sara. "When I think about her and my other ancestors, and what they went through to make it, I'm even more determined to become a surgeon or an inventor, something positive."

Experts say Sara's pride and resolve are not uncommon among children who know their ancestry. "A family tree is a way of saying 'This is who I am.' For a child, that's powerful," says Richard Newman, Ph.D., director of the W.E.B. DuBois Institute for Afro-- American Research. "

It seemed to sum up the constant search for our forefathers.

1a) I looked at three different blogs and was first amazed that I was not the only one that is behind! Then I was intrigued with the different ways other people are blogging and I'm thinking it has to do with the persons background. The one blog seemed to be looking totally at the way the search system worked and the other one seemed to be more like me, looking at the ease of use as a general person with no library searching ability, and the third was a combination of both. This was very interesting and shows that there are all kinds using these databases.

2) I first searched for Librarian and only two items came up, 'The Distant Librarian' and 'Teacher Librarian'. I then switched the search to Library and had twenty items come up ranging from library issues with technilogy and computing, to library research journals, to different types of libraries such as Medical and/or Music. Quite an aray of topics. The options box on the right could help you narrow down the choices through several ways, such as the publisher or source type.

I was very impressed with the number of articles that came up in the initial search, which just shows us how much information is out there and how much there is to wade through to get to the facts or the right information for your topic or essay.

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

SIRS Discoverer-
1) I again looked up Manatee to be able to compare information. The articles were identified quite easily with the different colored books indicating the reading level and the short descriptive sentence told you what the article was about. Most of the articles had pictures or graphics and that also was indicated in the article listings with a camera icon. The activities at the end were very interesting and could easily be used in a classroom. I also found these articles a little more interesting than the world book ones, but they both had a lot of the same information. Again--quite easy to navigate.

2) I picked the United States and was amazed at all the information available before you even looked at the articles. The facts are listed in a very orderly way with the basic information first, a little more indepth information next and then the timeline history of the United States was very impressive.

I then picked Russia and there was a list of 25 maps and photos dealing with this country. I picked one in the timeframe of my relatives that came from there and it was a map of the invasion of Russia by Germany---could be very useful in a history class.

I then picked "Kennedy" in the Biography section and a list came up containing four choices---Edward Kennedy, Jacqueline Kennedy, John (Jack) Fitzgerald Kennedy, and John F. Kennedy Jr. I then choose Jacqueline and only one article came up--"Unforgettable First Ladies" The article contained information on several of our first ladies and stated how some were very public and others were not. This would be great information if someone was writing an essay on 'First Ladies'.

Sirs Researcher-
1) I searched the topic of 'library funding' and it came up with "No exact subject match found, keyword search results below" which was 173 news articles, 330 magazine articles, 22 reference articles, and 1 graphic/media article. The list of newspaper articles were listed and glancing at them, they mostly had to do with library issues, but some were more on library policy. I then clicked on the one media site and it was a photo on the U. S. Women's Soccer team wins 1999 World Cup. Not sure what that had to do with my topic. I then clicked back on the newspaper articles and the first two articles listed refered to 'Stopping Smut on the Web' and 'Porn at the Library'. I'm not sure how to take that. Not the way I would want my young child to be presented with information. Maybe the articles were better than I thought, but I didn't go into them to see. Moving on----

2) The curriculum pathfinder page list several course subjects across the top including Math, Science, Social Studies, Language Arts, Fine Arts, and Health. As you glide over each of these the my courses box items change according to the subject. As I clicked on Social Studies the list included a topic of letters, which sounded interesting to me, so I clicked on it. A whole list of letters that are found on line or reference to tablets, papyrus papers, and other media was found. A wealth of information available to our children that we as students in South Dakota in the 1960s only read stories about in the encyclopedia. I'm really impressed our children and students have this kind of information at their fingertips. I delved a little more into the letter category and there were letter from George Washington, Abraham Lincoln and others. Unbelievable. I also clicked on Manauscripts and there again is a multitude of documents written by our presidents and others of significant prestige. Amazing stuff.

The only thing other than the articles that came up that I personally didn't feel appropriate, was the fact that the loading time seemed a little slow. It seemed I waited longer for the information to load than I have on any of the other databases. Still, alot of good education information there. I would recommend usage with parents guidance.
2) As I was taking the practice test for Biology, I was very intimadated by the questions as I thought I was pretty knowledgeable in biology, but boy was I wrong. The taking of the test was easy and the answers and explanations were very good. Overall--the experience was very worthwhile.

The course on Resumes, seem very straight forward, easy to follow through with the next buttons, and has very good content.

I searched "library" and it came up with 3 e-books of which I picked "Research & Writing Skills Success in 20 Minutes a Day".
The book seemed very informational about the research process and the writing of an essay, step by step. I actually downloaded the book as I would like to completely read through it. I think it could help me with the writing of a Family Tree book I would like to put together.

This whole process in Library Express was easy and full of information. I would recommend this to anyone and would definitely point patrons in this direction for anything on work skills, testing or further education.
1c) Not having taken any other language in school and having no one around that speaks another language, this area was hard for me. I did find my way around the spanish world book by the pictures and found the article for an Alpaca. I had the computer read the article to me, but did not understand it as it was read in Spanish. It would be helpful if you had a patron come in that spoke only spanish, as he could get around in the site quite easily and then the librarian could compare the page he is on to the English version, and maybe able to communicate that way. In the french world book I could get around like in the spanish world book by the pictures, but that was about it.

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Here goes---After being on the World Book sites for two hours last night, and then attempting to get into my blog from home and not being able to figure it out, I'm here putting the first blog note on my site since I started this.



1) The world cat for kids was easy to get around in and also to find things easily. My animal was the manatee(I picked this as I had went snorkling in Florida looking for one of these and never did see one) and the picture was wonderful.

Manatees are large water animals. A manatee has gray skin with bristly hairs. Its front legs are shaped like paddles, and its tail is rounded. It has no back legs. Manatees grow up to 13 feet (4 meters) long. The manatee feeds on water plants. Its upper lip is divided into halves. The halves give the manatee a good grip on the plants as it eats.

Manatees live in the Amazon River and Caribbean Sea and along the coasts of northeastern South America, southeastern United States, and western Africa.



As a child, pictures mean so much more than the printed word. Also the opportunity to change the text to a different language and have it read to you were wonderful features that our varied population would and should appreciate.

2)As I wondered through the Student version, I could see the improvements with more information to read and the video. The options on the first page were very nicely done, covering the main areas of interest most middle school children have- geography, biography, current events, etc. The Tools section was easy to navigate and I could see children going to that initially for help.

As for the Manatee information it was much more detailed and gave other options for futher research such as magazine articles, other encyclopedia articles and Special reports.

3) When I went into the the advanced area and watched the tutorial for this website, I was overwhelmed by the amount of information that is there that I did not see upon looking at the home page. The research function is a hit in my book, as keeping track of what you have research and keeping it in an organized manner is priceless.

I researched Prussia (my ancesters came from there) and there is a multitude of articles, e-books, maps, primary sources, special resports and research quides. There is so much information, but with the pictures and leading sentences of each article, the patron can easily find the articles that they are interested in learning more about.

4) World book Discover would be a great help to any librarian that has patrons with special needs. There is also a lot of helps for researching techniques and writing research papers. The life skill section is for anyone who is not familar with our way of doing things or needing help with employment, finance information, health issues, and working on your own car. It had a wonderful aray of information.

Using the browse box and clicking on History and government, then into government; it came up with an article on government in general and then at the bottom it gave you options of different types of government for further research. It also would allow the patron to change the information into another language if needed or it could be read to them or if they were having trouble with understanding a word, they can click on it for a defination.

In conclusion I would have to say they are all wonderful sites and any age or nationality should be able to do research on any subject they wish. Isn't the tech age wonderful!

Monday, April 2, 2012

This is something I'm not very good at---and that is writing about myself---actually I'm not too good at writing, period. Anyway, here is the first posting to this new blog I created (I did create one in 2008, and I believe it is still out there and exactly like I left it---with not much information on it) and I'm in hopes to learn more about this avenue of information. Anyway---here we go!