Nashville, Tennessee Brooklyn, NY Greensboro, NC Charlotte, NC Washington DC Atlanta, GA
Work:
Knowledge Management @ Vanderbilt University Medical Center - Associate Director for Research Environmental Protection Agency National Library of Medicine Vanderbilt University Medical Center USGenWeb - Volunteer for TNGenWeb, NCGenWeb, FLGenWeb & KYGenWeb
Education:
Emory University - Biology & Religion, UNC-Chapel Hill - Library Science, North Carolina School of Science & Math - High School, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine - MPH
Relationship:
Married
About:
What is there to know about me? Well, I love information and I love to promote access to information. I have 5 kids - one daughter and four stepsons. My kids keep me runnin' and my husband keeps m...
Tagline:
Information Seeker Extraordinairess, Genealogically Obsessed, Tech Junkie, WordPress Fan Gal! Homeschooling Parent.
Taneya Koonce
About:
I am the webmaster for the North Carolina NCGenWeb Project. If you have genealogy interests in North Carolina, we very much welcome you to visit us at http://www.ncgenweb.us
Youtube
Notion for Genealogy: A Conversation with Tan...
Last month I started to talk about ways I use Notion for genealogy, as...
Duration:
55m 25s
Taneya Koonce - Deploying Collaborative Techn...
Vanderbilt Institute for Digital Learning Grant Recipients Presentatio...
Duration:
7m 27s
GenFriends: The Historical Newspapers Indexin...
Cheri and the panel Melissa Barker, Bernice Bennette, and Shelley Murp...
Duration:
36m 5s
In Those Genes (with Taneya Koonce)
Genealogist Taneya Koonce tells us about the importance of researching...
Duration:
8m 5s
FNDP: Are you a descendant of Fort Negley (Pa...
The Fort Negley Descendants Project (FNDP) is an oral history digital ...
Duration:
19m 43s
FNDP: Are you a descendant of Fort Negley (Pa...
The Fort Negley Descendants Project (FNDP) is an oral history digital ...
Duration:
21m 52s
News
Seven Decades Later, the 1950 Census Bares Its Secrets
Taneya Koonce, president of the Nashville chapter of the Afro-American Historical & Genealogical Society, said she would be online early Friday looking for records of her grandparents, who lived in North Carolina. But she said the 1950 records are likely to be of special interest to many African