(Print) Use this randomly generated list as your call list when playing the game. Place some kind of mark (like an X, a checkmark, a dot, tally mark, etc) on each cell as you announce it, to keep track. You can also cut out each item, place them in a bag and pull words from the bag.
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Print a blank family fan chart and see if you can complete it on your own up to 4 generations.
Take the "Ancestor Challenge" Quiz (FamilySearch.org)
Call and ask a
family member
to share a story they remember of one of their
ancestors with you.
Discover your famous relatives with your family (relativefinder.org and sign in with your family search account).
Use the "All About Me" tool on Family Search to learn where your name comes from.
Read a story from two different ancestor's "Memories" on Family Search.
Find an ancestor
who has the same first name as you.
Share a picture or story of one of your ancestors on social media.
Index a batch of names. (Call
a Family History
Consultant if
you want to learn!)
Do the "Compare-A-Face" activity with your family. (FamilySearch.org)
Find a cool story of one of your ancestors and share it with two people.
Plan a Family History activity to do at a family reunion.
Use the "All About Me" tool on Family Search to learn how much a gallon of gas or movie ticket was your birth year.
Read the talk "Family History and Temple Work: Sealing and 'Healing'" by Elder Renlund
Read the talk "Doing Sacred
Work in Quarantine"
by Kaith Ashley Moran.
Set and achieve an indexing goal for a week.
Call a relative
and ask them to
tell you their favorite childhood memory.
Write a card to a family member you haven't seen in a while.
Set and achieve a week-long goal
to get on FamilySearch.org.
Add a written, audio, or photo memory on Family Search.
Find an ancestor with
a first name
longer than 10 letters.
Start a personal journal (daily, weekly, or monthly).
Use the "My Pioneer Ancestors" tool on FamilySearch.org to
see if any of
your ancestors
crossed the plains
with the early
pioneers.
Find a name you can eventually take to the temple.
Call and ask a
friend to share a story they remember
of one of their
ancestors with you.