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by Chris Durst Aug. 4, 2025
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Boring resume? Perhaps adding transcribing the JFK Assassination Records would be the attention-grabber you need for your resume and/or cover letter!
Or… how about transcribing the Unidentified Aerial Phenomena Records is more your thing!
The US National Archives and Record Administration (NARA) is the federal agency that preserves and shares records about the United States government and people.
In addition to well-known documents like the Declaration of Independence, The Constitution, The Bill of Rights, The Emancipation Proclamation, etc., you can also find other historically important and lesser known documents.
For example, Case Files of Pension and Bounty-Land Warrant Applications Based on Revolutionary War Service, ca. 1800 – ca. 1912. These Revolutionary War Pension Files consist of applications and other records pertaining to claims for pensions and bounty land warrants. Also within these records, you may find copies of marriage or other family records, information pertaining to military activities or details about soldier’s lives, along with letters, diaries, or family trees.
NARA is looking for unpaid volunteers — Citizen Archivists — to help transcribe exactly these kinds of files right now!
The JFK Assassination Records project:
Page Proofs of the Report and Hearings, 1964
Help transcribe the printer’s page proofs of the report and hearings, including certain exhibits. The page proofs contain some revisions as well as stylistic changes of words or phrasing.
Here’s a small bit of the files:

The Unidentified Aerial Phenomena Records project:
Sanitized Version of Project Blue Book Case Files on Sightings of Unidentified Flying Objects, 1947–1969
Help us transcribe case files on sightings of unidentified flying objects (UFOs) of Project Blue Book, the U.S. Air Force investigation into UFOs that were sighted between June 1947 and December 1969.

Following are some excerpts from the Citizen Archivist posting:
About the program
What is the benefit of tagging and transcribing National Archives Records?
As we add tags or transcriptions to records – all of those words are added to our Catalog and it helps improve search results. The added benefit is that we’re unlocking the sometimes difficult to read text for all to understand. By adding this metadata to our Catalog, it also becomes searchable in Google or other search engines, which helps to make our records more discoverable online. We like to say that as we tag and transcribe, we are unlocking history.
Do I have to come to your office?
No. This is a 100% online volunteer program.
I’m not a US Citizen, can I still volunteer?
Yes! The program is open to anyone in the world. If you reside outside the United States, you may have to select Back Up codes as your authentication method with login.gov.
Is this a paid position?
No. This is a volunteer, 100% online project.
Do you make assignments?
We do not make assignments or have deadlines. You simply sign in to your account in the Catalog and tag, transcribe or make comments on the records. Do as little or as much as you want. Everything helps us.
Does the National Archives review my work?
We do not review every transcription, and there is no formal review process. The National Archives Catalog staff does not provide feedback, mark individual pages as complete, or consider them closed to further editing. We use a collaborative model for contributions and editing, and no transcription is ever considered final.
Why do you want us to transcribe a typed record?
The National Archives Catalog contains millions of digitized pages of records. Transcription is an important way for us to improve search results and increase accessibility to our historical records. Since many of the documents at the National Archives are handwritten records such as letters, memos, and reports, many of the words within those documents are not picked up by a search in our Catalog. When available, we apply OCR (Optical Character Recognition) and Artificial Intelligence to the records, but this extracted text is seldom as accurate as manual transcription, especially when ink bleeds through from the other side of the page, there are stamps and markings, and in many cases a mix of cursive and type written records. When you transcribe (or type out) exactly what you see in the document, that text becomes searchable in the National Archives Catalog for all users.
How many pages am I obligated to transcribe?
We do not have a number of pages you are required to transcribe. We ask that you transcribe one page at a time, everything helps.
Adding This Volunteer Role to Your Resume
Adding this role to your resume is easy!
Simply follow the format you’ve used for your other positions on your resume (If you don’t have a resume, be sure to check out our free course module on how to create one — it includes free downloadable templates)
For example: (Yes, we know the bullets are redundant, but they are just intended to be examples.)
HOW TO APPLY
(Friendly reminder, Rat Race Rebellion doesn’t play a role in the applications or hiring processes for jobs we’ve posted to our site. We’re a job board and blog.)
CLICK HERE to Register and Get Started as a National Archives Citizen Archivist. For more jobs like this, check our Newest Jobs & Gigs page. To be the first to hear about jobs like these, join our free Telegram channel. Good luck as you make your work from home plans a reality!
The post Help Transcribe JFK Assassination Records (Or UFO Sighting Reports) – Amp Up Your Resume with this Volunteer Gig! appeared first on Rat Race Rebellion.
* This article was originally published here

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