Archaeology lessons for elementary schoolteachers

Author: Carol C. Bradley

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What would your garbage tell us about you?asks Indiana State Museum education program coordinator Gail Brown.

Five elementary schoolteachers from around the region sort through accumulations of trashfast food wrappers, empty yogurt cartons, dog food cansin a classroom in the University of Notre Dame Department of Anthropologys Reyniers Laboratory on the north end of campus.

Dog food cancan we infer a pet owner?

Its all part of Project Archaeology, a workshop cosponsored by the anthropology department and the museum.

Earlier this summer, the teachers spent three days on campus learning the fundamentals of archaeology. They participated in an archaeological dig on a property in theSorinsvilleneighborhood south of campus, led by Deb Rotman, assistant professional specialist in anthropology. They then returned to the lab to process and analyze their finds.

The teachers also had time to try a few other activities, like throwing spears with an atlatl, an ancient tool that increases the range and velocity of a throw.

The goal of the program is to teach elementary educators how to use archaeology in the classroom. But the larger goal is to teach the public to respect, protect and conserve archaeological sites.

The way archaeology is done in real life isnt likeIndiana Jones,Brown said.Its not just collecting things; its about collecting data.

Why a lesson on garbage? Archaeologists often study garbage heaps, or middens, he points out. Its a way for kids to understand how objects relate to people and their activities3,000-year-old objects kids wouldnt know how to interpret, Brown says.

This fall, the teachers will incorporate what they learned in the workshop into their lesson plans. Their fourth-through seventh-grade students will use observation, inference and hypothesis to understand what garbageor tools, or artifactscan tell us about a culture.

In the process of learning archaeological methods, students also will be developing other skillsgridding a site requires math and measuring skills, tree-ring dating and pollen analysis offer hands-on science lessons and discussion about climate change.

Its been a good experience,says Cindy Young, a teacher at Prairie Vista Elementary School in Granger.I liked the field excavation with Deb, going out and actually doing what we were talking about. And I thought it was neat how many math, science and reading connections there were with archaeology.

Observation and inference apply to many subjects, she notes.

Ive gotten a lot of stuff I can take back to the classroom,she says.Lessons and real-life experience.

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