Content area

Abstract

Despite promoting K-12 education initiatives for decades, public archaeologists struggle to reach precollegiate audiences due to archaeology’s absence in curriculum standards, a lack of qualified archaeology educators, and barriers within the school system. To investigate replicable and accessible methods of archaeology education and to better understand teacher needs and motivations, I created lesson plans which engage high school students in recording and researching historic cemeteries. Hands-on efforts are often excavation-based and limited by access to professional archaeologists; however, cemetery recording is nondestructive and offers students a chance to participate in project-based learning. Four educators from Santa Rosa County taught the materials to nine classes in Fall 2019 while I evaluated the lessons through surveys, guided observations, and summative interviews. The materials were revised based on results to ensure they are useful and useable. Every participant indicated the lessons are user-friendly, relevant, and meaningful. Administrative support, passionate teachers, and carefully crafted lessons contributed to programmatic success, indicating collaborative efforts from archaeological and educational professionals can produce hands-on archaeology programming that is mutually rewarding.

Details

Title
Cemeteries as Classrooms: Making Archaeology Education Relevant, Accessible, and Sustainable
Author
Hines, Rachel Louise
Publication year
2020
Publisher
ProQuest Dissertations & Theses
ISBN
9798643174806
Source type
Dissertation or Thesis
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2404395105
Copyright
Database copyright ProQuest LLC; ProQuest does not claim copyright in the individual underlying works.