How To Digitize & Document Your Family History

FREE

Lafayette Library, 3491 Mount Diablo Blvd, Lafayette, December 14, 2024, 10:30 – 12:30

Gilroy Library, 350 W. Sixth Street, Gilroy, CA, February 8, 2025, 1PM-3PM

San Leandro Library, 300 Estudillo Ave, San Leandro, Feb 23, 2025, 1:30 – 3:30

Alameda Main Library, 1550 Oak Street, Alameda, May 3, 2025, 1 – 3PM

Palo Alto Rinconada Library, 1213 Newell Road. Palo Alto, May 10, 2025, 1- 3PM

What You Will Learn

  • Utilize AI for oral history, scanning, photo restoration, and management
  • Explore case studies for weaving family sagas with multimedia
  • Discover free resources and best practices for legacy preservation
  • Learn tools for creating a digital family heritage library

Abstract

How To Digitize & Document Your Family History 
Dive into a realm where physical artifacts meet virtual storytelling. This session immerses you in the art of utilizing artificial intelligence for oral history creation, scanning, photo restoration, photo management, movie making and storytelling. Explore real-life case studies illustrating how to intricately weave your family’s saga using multimedia methodologies. Discover invaluable free resources and best practices to preserve your family’s legacy. By session end, you’ll learn about tools and techniques to create a digital family heritage library, that will be a timeless treasure for generations to come.

About The Speaker: Ron Chan

Ron is a seasoned lecturer on family history documentation best practices,  captivating audiences worldwide at genealogy workshops and libraries across the San Francisco Bay Area. As a published genealogy author, he has a passion for storytelling and teaches innovative technologies to bring ancestral tales to life. Ron is the Founder and Executive Director of the Bay Area Chinese Genealogy Group, dedicated to preserving ancestral stories. He is also a co-founder of the Chinese American GI Project, ensuring that veterans’ legacies are not lost, forgotten, or ignored. Ron shares with you how to capture and share family struggles of the past so future generations can embrace, remember, and learn from those who came before.

Seminar Patron Feedback

4 thoughts on “How To Digitize & Document Your Family History”

  1. I finished my family story! I even included an Author’s Note, Reviews, Table of Contents, changed the font for easier reading. It ended up 7 chapters, over 90 personal photos, and less than 50 pages.

    Reply

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