Rural teachers tap into digital archive
"Whether it is a reading or a typing class, I try to incorporate art into my lessons whenever I can," says Greeley, a 7th and 8th grade teacher at Fort Greely Middle School in Delta Junction. "I think it gives the students alternate perspectives on the world and enhances their understanding of different concepts." Greeley, who is also working on a master's degree in education at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, is using Alaska's Digital Archive through the University of Alaska Museum of the North to do just that for her students. Funded through a congressional award from the U.S. Department of Education and launched over the summer, the archive brings together more than 8,500 maps, oral histories, photographs, film and other historical documents from libraries and museums in Alaska into one online database, available to anyone via the Internet. The digital archive also includes video and animation, as well as images of paintings and sculptures, Alaska Native clothing, tools and artwork from the University of Alaska Museum of the North. For her first classroom assignment using the archive, Greeley is having her students answer the question "What's so cool about Alaska?" in multimedia computer presentations. The students must use images or video from the digital archive to illustrate their projects.
Over the coming months, Greeley will develop additional classroom lessons using the digital archive as part of a pilot program organized by the University of Alaska Museum of the North with funding from the U.S. Department of Commerce's Technology Opportunities Program and the Institute of Museum and Library Services.
Along with Greeley, 15 other teachers from Alaska's Delta-Greely and Yukon-Koyukuk school districts are working with the museum this school year to develop educational tours and classroom lessons using the digital archive.
Davis has been involved in the museum's online education efforts since 1999. As a second grade teacher at Fairbanks' Denali Elementary School, she was part of the teacher advisory team working with the museum to develop Northern Journeys, an online curriculum using objects from the museum's archaeology, ethnology and fine arts collections. The museum developed two "journeys"--Dogs in Alaska and Sea Migrations--to teach elementary school students about geography, math, history, culture and science.
That material includes a growing collection of videos of Alaska's communities, wildlife and artists at work, many of them produced in partnership with rural museums, schools and cultural centers like the Pratt Museum in Homer, the Sheldon Jackson Museum in Sitka and the Tanadgusix Native Corp. on St. Paul Island. "It's a great urban-rural partnership, and the video footage is the perfect complement to our collections," says Dickey. "Having video that shows how a basket is made and hearing the artist talk about the process of creating art adds a new dimension to the student's understanding and appreciation." |
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