Several months ago I was talking with my daughter, who was recounting a conversation she'd had with her boyfriend.  She told me that they'd been talking about marriage, off and on, for several weeks, and he had asked her what "being engaged" would mean to her.  She thought for a moment, and said (since they're both avid computer gamers) that it would feel like "leveling up."  The term "boyfriend" just didn't fit any more, and she was ready to reach for the next level.  Just last week he proposed, and so she (and I) have reached a new level.  I'm now the mother of the bride-to-be!  
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     I've thought about that a lot, over the last year, and I've decided that it applies to me, too, in my search for greater expertise in my genealogical research and reporting.  When I decided to intensify my education and try my best to become a "professional", four years ago, I had no idea how much I would learn along the way.  The steps I have taken since have felt just like stairsteps, some of them shallow, soft and carpeted, and some of them more like rugged cement blocks half my height! 
     One of the first things I did was join the National Genealogical Society, and then I took 3 of their online courses.  I hesitated at the title of the course called "Introduction to Genealogy" - I'd been doing research for 30 years; would it teach me anything new?  I was very surprised to learn some basics, in both that course and the ones on census records.  Although I received (and studied) the NGS Quarterly, most of the articles were way above my head.  I joined the APG and started attending meetings.  I created business cards, and became an Expert Provider with Ancestry Expert Connect.  I sent for the NGS Home Study Course on CD's, and began the lessons.  That was two and a half years ago, and in that time I have learned about records I didn't know existed.  I have learned the importance of correct source citations, and I'm still learning how to write them.  I've developed the skill of critical thinking, so that now when I look at a record, I think, "but how do I KNOW this is the person I'm looking for?"  I just finished the final lesson of the Home Study Course: writing a biography of one of my ancestors.  That was a rigorous exercise in footnoting and citations - and it actually looks almost like an NGSQ article.
     There has been a lot of discussion over the last couple of years, online on blogs and Facebook and Twitter and email lists, about the value (or not) of certification.  I've come to the conclusion that it doesn't really matter what anyone else thinks - I'm going for certification purely for myself.  I want the assurance that I'm producing quality work, that will pass stringent standards.  I can look back at the work I was doing six months, a year, or two years ago, and see how far I've come.
     I still have a few more steps ahead of me, but I'm hoping to be able to compile a portfolio and submit it next year.  Here's to "leveling up"!
 
 
     One thing I have learned in my 35+ years of genealogical research, and that is that you have to keep up with the times.  Continuing education is absolutely vital, in order to learn about new records and resources, new ways of writing reports, major archeological finds (such as the Confederate Camp Lawton just discovered near Augusta, Georgia) and other genealogy news.
     Back in the olden days, I used to have to attend a genealogy society meeting or conference in order to hear lectures on subjects that interested me.  Now, I can sit at home in my recliner and watch a webinar (web-based seminar) on just about any subject you can imagine.  In the last two weeks I've watched webinars on organizing my genealogy files, finding my ancestors in historic newspapers, and how to to use Google+.  And I learned something new with each one!
     If you're wondering how you can find out about these webinars, here is the place to go:
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GeneaWebinars is the "gathering place" for genealogy education.  It lists upcoming webinars (free and paid) hosted by Legacy Family Tree, RootsMagic, Thomas MacEntee, DearMyrtle, and many others.  Topics range from how to use DNA, where to find FamilySearch Wikis, finding your Revolutionary War ancestors, and using Second Life.  There's even a webinar on How to Attend a Genealogy Webinar!
     So, whenever you have a few minutes, find a webinar to watch.  You'll learn something new, I guarantee it!