Workshops for the educational program "An Artifact Speaks" presented
through University of Illinois Extension, 4-H Program
Program qualifies for ISBE Professional
Development Hours
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[June 12, 2015]
If
you have ever been to a museum, you understand the attraction of
artifacts. Greek statues reveal the grace and beauty of the human
form; toys from ancient Egyptian tombs show us that all children
love to play; and even the small, everyday pieces from a local
historical society, like a flour sifter or rolling pin can spark
memories of happy holiday meals. The objects that people make and
use immediately connect us to their values and endeavors, their joys
and hardships.
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Beginning in the fall of 2015, University of
Illinois Extension offices throughout Illinois will be offering the
loan of educational materials for a new, object-based program called
An Artifact Speaks. The program examines a variety of ancient
cultures through artifacts, games, folktales, and hands-on
activities. These materials will be available to instructors,
librarians, scout leaders, adult group leaders, and other interested
educators.
The Logan, Sangamon and Menard Unit will be offering a free, 3-hour
workshop to introduce the program and give participants the
opportunity to engage in a selection of program activities. The
workshop will be held at the Sangamon County Extension Office at 700
S. Airport Drive, Springfield, from 8-11 a.m. on Thursday, June
18th. Contact Carissa Akpore, 217-732-8289,
akpore@illinois.edu
for if you have questions. Please register online at
http://web.extension .illinois.edu/lms/ . Illinois K-12
educators are eligible to receive 3 ISBE-approved Professional
Development Hours (PDH) for participation in this workshop.
The statewide expansion of this program is made possible through the
support of a two-year, University of Illinois Extension and Outreach
Initiative Grant. The grant funds a partnership between Extension
and the Spurlock Museum, a world cultures museum in Urbana that is a
department of the U of I’s College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. The
grant’s primary investigator is Kim Sheahan, the Museum’s Assistant
Director of Education. Sheahan will be leading the 3-hour workshops.
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An Artifact Speaks began as a collaboration between the Museum’s Education
Section and Zachary Cain, a 6th grade teacher and Social Studies Building Leader
at Edison Middle School in Champaign. “Zach wanted his students to understand
how museums work and how much can be learned about a culture by just studying
one of its artifacts,” Sheahan states. “We make observations on both modern and
ancient pieces, so the participants understand what artifacts have to tell
us—how they speak—about where and who they came from.”
For general information on the An Artifact Speaks program, the content of the
workshop, or a full list of workshop locations and dates, contact Kim Sheahan at
217-244-3355 or ksheahan@ illinois.edu.
[Carissa Akpore, Logan County
Extension]
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