Painted
Buffalo Robe (Mandan), Accession number
PM#99-12-10/53212. Courtesy, Peabody Museum
of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard
University.
CONTENTS
Recreating
Jefferson's Entrance Hall
Internet
Resources for Lewis and Clark and the
Corps of Discovery
Lewis
& Clark Posters
Primary
Source Quote
Technology
Tip
Colonial
Williamsburg Teaching Resources
Teaching
News
Quote of
the Month
The
March
Electronic Field Trip is
"Jefferson's
West"
March 6, 2003
New!
Just
in time for
Women's History Month
(March)
Video: "Our
Common Passage"
We
Also Recommend
Hands-On
History:
Soldier's Haversack
|
TOP STORIES
Recreating
Jefferson's Entrance Hall
The
centerpiece of the bicentennial observance
at Monticello is Framing the West at
Monticello: Thomas Jefferson and the Lewis
and Clark Expedition, a major installation
in the Entrance Hall of Jefferson's home.
The exhibition approximates the appearance
of Jefferson's "Indian Hall" circa 1807-09,
when he displayed natural history specimens
and Native American objects sent or brought
back by members of the expedition alongside
other items reflecting his encyclopedic
interests. Read
the rest of the story.
Internet
Resources for Lewis and Clark and the Corps
of Discovery
2003
marks the bicentennial of the beginning
of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, Not
surprisingly, such a remarkable occasion
has generated a remarkable number of related
web sites. Finding the most useful Lewis
and Clark related sites could be daunting,
indeed! Join Charles Coon as he shares
the results of his search for the most
useful sites for social studies teachers.
Lewis & Clark Posters
To
commemorate the bicentennial of the Lewis
& Clark Expedition, the Monticello (Thomas
Jefferson Foundation) Education Department
has produced a poster exhibition entitled
Jefferson's America: Lewis & Clark and
Western Exploration. The posters trace
the Expedition from Jefferson's vision
and Meriwether Lewis' preparations in
Philadelphia to the explorers' travels
across the country to the Pacific Ocean.
Learn
More!
Primary
Source Quote
Primary
sources can be extremely provocative and
useful in a classroom setting. Few things
speak more eloquently about the past or
a person's experiences than their own
words. This month's selection features
an excerpt from the journal
of William Clark.
Technology
Tip
Creating Museum Movies
“Lights!
Camera! Action!” Bring the museum experience
to life in your classroom with some easy
movie magic! Discover how to create educational
“home movies" that will inspire and
reinforce learning. In the words of Rod
Serling, “Imagine
if you will….”
Colonial
Williamsburg Teaching Resources for Your
Classroom
Colonial
Williamsburg offers a variety of quality
instructional materials dealing with Lewis
and Clark, 18th-century life, and how
historians and archaeologists learn about
the past, including:
Hands-On History: Soldier's Haversack
(object kit)
Nature, Art, and Science
(videotape and web content)
The Eye of the Beholder: Looking
at Primary Sources (lesson unit)
Discovering
the Past Through Archaeology
(classroom simulation)
Archaelogy:
Revealing Our History (videotape and
web content)
Archaeology
for Young Explorers (book)
Learn
More!
Teaching
News
Are
you familiar with the National History
Day program? It's a year-long education
program that engages students in grades
6 through 12 in the process of discovery,
research, and interpretation of historical
topics. Students produce dramatic performances,
imaginative exhibits, multimedia documentaries
and research papers based on research
related to an annual theme. This year's
theme is Rights and Responsibilities in
History. All projects are evaluated at
local, state, and national competitions
held each spring and early summer. For
more information and specific competition
dates, visit the National
History Day site.
Quote
of the Month
The
American experience stirred mankind from
discovery to exploration. From the cautious
quest for what they knew (or thought they
knew) was out there, into an enthusiastic
reaching to the unknown.
Daniel
J. Boorstin, Historian
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