When I first started homeschooling over 20 years ago, I used a "boxed" curriculum. (That is, all the materials came in a box: textbooks, lesson plans, even pens and pencils.) Since this was a new experience for me and I had no teaching experience, having lessons already planned out for me had its advantages. The disadvantage, though, was that the person planning the lessons did not know my children and did not necessarily have the same teaching style as I did.
After several years of this approach I found myself becoming more and more frustrated with the lesson plans. I was especially frustrated with the curriculum supplier's approach to history. There was a big emphasis on memorizing names and dates. Yes, I know it's important to know when certain events occurred, but I was more concerned that my kids understood what made those events or people important, and how they affected the lives of ordinary people. After all, history is really just a story (hence the title of this blog, emphasizing the "story" in history).
After 3 years of homeschooling, I discontinued the boxed program and put together my own curriculum. For history we read biographies, historical fiction, and the lives of the saints. We looked at how the people lived during a particular time period: the clothes they wore, the foods they ate, the houses they lived in, etc. The kids created beautiful, illustrated timelines to place events and people in context. Instead of taking tests, they applied what they learned by writing historical newspapers. By this method, I hope that I instilled in my children a lifelong love of history.
In the same way, genealogy is not just about names and dates. It is family history, the story of a family. Many genealogists get so caught up in the search for names and dates that they miss out on the most exciting aspect of genealogy; that is, walking in their ancestors' footsteps and getting to "know" them. I'll admit that I get pretty excited when my "sleuthing" leads me to discover a new name or date in my family tree. However, it's even more exciting for me to find a story in a newspaper about a family member, because it gives me another little glimpse into his or her life.
Since I started "doing" genealogy over 10 years ago, I have always wanted to write a fully annotated family history to pass on to future generations. I want my children and their children to know the story of those who came before them.
Many of the published genealogies that can be found at libraries or historical societies are collections of charts with names and dates. They can be of great value to other genealogists, but they are not the types of books you sit down and read.
I wanted my family history to be different, to be a "story" that my family would want to read, but how to do it was the challenge. I am not one of those people who was blessed with a diary or letters written by my ancestors.
In recent years, I came across 2 books that showed me how to write a family history as a story. You Can Write Your Family History and Bringing Your Family History to Life Through Social History both explain how to fill in the gaps in a family history.
So for the past few months I have been reading up on things that would have impacted my ancestors (the Irish potato famine, daily life in the 19th century, etc.). I have visited some of the places where my ancestors lived and worked. I have also done a lot of research in old newspapers. Little by little, I feel like I'm getting a picture of what my ancestors' lives were like.
I hope that within the next year or two I will be able to complete a book about the Hickey family. So far, I have written the first chapter, which is about the Irish potato famine and James Hickey's journey to America. The next chapter will be about Sarah Fox and her family, about life on her father's farm, and about her meeting and falling in love with James Hickey. The rest of the book will be about James and Sarah's life together and about each of their children and their families.
So wish me luck with my project and help me to stay on task.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
More on Eve Dorothy Yingling Dell
I also have some circumstantial evidence to link Eve Dorothy Dell to the family of Christian Yingling, Jr., and Susannah Lehman. First o...
-
About a year ago, I discovered a new collection on Fold3 called, “Bounty-Land Warrant Applications Index”: www.fold3.com/browse/247/h_5UoXzI...
-
I also have some circumstantial evidence to link Eve Dorothy Dell to the family of Christian Yingling, Jr., and Susannah Lehman. First o...
-
I've been out of the loop for a while, due to wedding planning, Christmas, extra hours at work, etc. A few weeks ago, though, I got back...
No comments:
Post a Comment