Teaching Students to Infer Meaning Through Material Culture |
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Authors: | Ernest Andrew Brewer Penelope Fritzer |
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Institution: | 1. Department of Teaching and Learning , Florida Atlantic University , Jupiter, FL;2. Department of Teaching and Learning , Florida Atlantic University , Davie, FL |
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Abstract: | Social studies students can learn to glean historical information from the study of material culture through active engagement as curators. Teachers can guide students through a pre-survey of helpful reading materials and then through selecting items of personal significance to them: creating labels that objectively describe the chosen items as to origin, composition, background, and provenance; exchanging the created sets of file cards; examining the cards received in the exchange; inferring factual information about the owner of the selected items; and sharing deductions with the class. From this exercise, students will have a chance to learn how historians, anthropologists, and other social scientists use critical thinking in their work, how much can be learned from material culture, and how missteps can result from overtheorizing. |
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Keywords: | social studies material culture critical thinking artifacts relics history anthropology |
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