As a kid, I was obsessed with paleontology and archaeology. I kept a human femur in my bedroom and dug up the dental tools discarded by an ancestor behind my grandparents' hundred-year-old house. I collected road kill skeletons of animals whose lives ended along the busy road in front of my childhood home. I read the Childcraft dinosaur volume over and over again. After my dream of becoming an archaeologist was killed by my mother at the age of 10 (a famous story in our family), I became a teacher. And it's always been an unspoken goal of mine to get students interested in archaeology. Every August when I teach Roman Technology, I begin the year with a unit on archaeology. You can read more about that in this blog post.
When I became a Grosvenor Teacher Fellow with National Geographic and Lindblad Expeditions, I knew I would have a unique opportunity to bump up this effort even more. Thus, this year we are doing a book study of Mark Aronson's If Stones Could Speak: Unlocking the Secrets of Stonehenge, the story of an unlikely pair of archaeologists who make a ground-breaking discovery about this famous UNESCO World Heritage Site. Each time we read a chapter together, the students reflect on what they've learned in their National Geographic Explorer Mindset journal, that I created so that my students can document their learning about travel.
We are also planning a trip to Poverty Point, Louisiana's only UNESCO World Heritage Site. I wanted my students, many of whom have never traveled outside of Louisiana, to explore the world through national parks and UNESCO World Heritage sites. I've also been holding training meetings to get my students ready for travel - how to visit a museum, how to use your phone appropriately, how to travel on a boat or plane, etc. If you've never done these things, you need to learn. I didn't fly on a plane (not counting returning from my dad's military service in Hawaii as a 2-year-old) until I was 22. I want to be sure that my students have the most successful travel experiences so that they will want to continue traveling after this year. Our trips will be happening in March and April so expect more information on our preparation and experiences in a future blog post.
When my students learn new things, they get excited, and I like to harness that excitement by challenging them to act as "presenters" at outreach fairs. These fairs serve two purposes: 1. they validate the knowledge that my students have acquired as they practice sharing it, and 2. they work as outreach initiatives to younger children (and adults) - who wouldn't want to study archaeology or classics when learning how to play an ancient game or excavate a tiny archaeological site? I've done big outreach fairs for the past three years by partnering with our local Louisiana Art and Science Museum in downtown Baton Rouge for All STEM Leads to Rome. My students act as presenters at learning stations that center STEM activities from the ancient Roman world: mini-catapults, ancient ink, Roman tic-tac-toe, bridge designing and arch building, and arranging stone mosaics. The kids really enjoy it, and many use it to add service hours in organizations like Beta Club.
My fellowship with National Geographic asks that we sponsor a student-led outreach event so I thought that adapting this already popular and fun fair into an archaeology outreach one would be a perfect way for my students to show off their knowledge and get the community involved. Planning started in August when I asked our state Division of Archaeology to partner with us. If you're a classics teacher who hasn't already called your local division to visit your classroom, WHY NOT? Sometimes, they even have an archaeologist who is also a classicist. Classics has so much to learn from archaeology. Ask me for more info if you need it.
I also applied for an archaeology outreach grant from the Archaeological Institute of America. We received $500 from this organization which will pay for all our expenses. We'll also be able to reuse many of these items for our next event coming up in April. I thank them MIGHTILY for their support!
After getting our local archaeologists on board, my students requested what they wanted to showcase at the event. I wanted the activities to reflect the skills and jobs of archaeologists. So, In addition to tried and true hands-on history activities such as arch building, mosaics, oak gall ink and papyrus, and rota game boards, they added the following:
1. WHAT IS THIS THING? One of my students has a 3-D printer and printed dodecahedrons for visitors to handle. After giving them a little archaeological information about these mysterious objects, visitors were asked to guess what they were used for, write down their answer and phone number on a card, and put them in a box. We drew from the box for prize winners during the event. Visitors LOVED this activity.
2. POTTERY RECONSTRUCTION The students decorated little terracotta flower pots with black sharpie markers to mimic ancient pottery. We then broke them into sherds. The students helped visitors put them back together using tape.
3. UNESCO WORLD HERITAGE SITE MATCH The students picked famous sites that most visitors would recognize. We created a board for them to match up the pictures to the countries where the sites were located. Anyone who matched them up correctly got their names put in a box for a prize pick. Simple but effective!
Add to these activities the amazing booth that the Divison of Archaeology arranged. The education outreach director, Mrs. Josetta LeBoeuf, and her assistant developed two activities for this event. One invited visitors to create sand art to learn about archaeological stratigraphy - BRILLIANT, and very popular with the kids. In the other, they adapted the tried and true "dig box" excavation by using tiny boxes preloaded with "artifacts" (tiny objects) hidden in dirt and mulch. They spread plastic tablecloths on the floor so that messes were easily cleaned up afterward. It was AMAZING! They also brought along lots of free archaeology merch like pins that said "Future Archaeologist," coloring books, and fold-up meter sticks.
The final prize, an arch block-building kit, was given to a child who had completed our passport system. The students helped me design and fold special little book passports which you can see a video of here. This system incentivized attending all the stations. Each station had a spot in the passport book to get stamped. These also gave us a way to contact families who attended so we could get feedback from them about the event.
On the day after the event, my students and I spent time talking about how to improve it, whether we wanted to do it again, and what other themes we might incorporate in the future. They immediately seized on the idea of having a mythology outreach fair with a table for each Greek god and an activity related to that god. Students really do enjoy sharing what they learn. I was so touched to have a parent reach out and say that she was proud of her son for being Zeus and that this meant she was a queen now. LOL. A school board member attended with her children and raved about how impressed she was by the students. Feedback was very positive - all attendees gave us 5 stars. One said, "The stations all appealed to a wide age range of kids. There were lots of activities and the presenters were engaging and informative." Another said, "I feel like this is exactly the kind of event schools should be offering to the community: a variety of activities, accessible to all ages, learning while having fun, all of it hands-on and interactive. The presenters took their roles so seriously and were so impressive! The enthusiasm for the subject was palpable, and everyone seemed to have a great time." Here's to many more!
Kids love putting together a Roman arch! |
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