Educational Programs: Innovative Practices for Archives and Special Collections

Educational Programs: Innovative Practices for Archives and Special Collections

Educational Programs: Innovative Practices for Archives and Special Collections

Educational Programs: Innovative Practices for Archives and Special Collections

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Overview

Educational Programs: Innovative Practices for Archives and Special Collections explores how archivists and special collections librarians in organizations of different sizes and types have approached the challenges in creating effective educational programs to prepare the next generation of researchers and advocates for archives.

The case studies featured are:
  1. Tablet and Codex, Side by Side: Pairing Rare Books and E-Books in the Special Collections Classroom
  2. Fells, Fans and Fame: Acquiring a Collection of Personal Papers with the Goal of Engaging Primary School Children
  3. Student Curators in the Archives: Class-Curated Exhibits in Academic Special Collections
  4. A Win for All: Cultural Organizations Working With Colleges of Education
  5. The Archive as Theory and Reality: Engaging with Students in Cultural and Critical Studies
  6. Make Way for Learning: Using Literary Papers to Engage Elementary School Students
  7. Archivists Teaching Teachers: The Archives Education Institute and K-12 Outreach
  8. Animating Archives: Embedding Archival Materials (and Archivists) into Digital History Projects
  9. “A Certain Kind of Seduction”: Integrating Archival Research into a First-Year Writing Curriculum
  10. Not Just for Students: An Archives Workshop for Faculty
  11. Web Archiving as Gateway: Teaching K-12 Students about Archival Concepts
  12. Evocative Objects: Inspiring Art Students with Archives
  13. Documenting and Sharing Instruction Practices: The story of TeachArchives.org

These case studies show a range of audiences and strategies, but all were selected because they demonstrate ideas that could be transferred into many other settings. They can serve as models, sources of inspiration, or starting points for new discussions. This volume will be useful to those working in archives and special collections as well as other cultural heritage organizations, and provides ideas ranging from those that require long-term planning and coordination to ones that could be more quickly implemented. The chapters also provide students and educators in archives, library, and public history graduate programs a resource for understanding the varieties of issues related to creating and implementing educational programs and how they can be addressed.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781442238534
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Publication date: 05/07/2015
Series: Innovative Practices for Archives and Special Collections
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 208
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Kate Theimer is the author of the popular blog ArchivesNext and a frequent writer, speaker and commentator on issues related to the future of archives. She is the editor of the Rowman & Littlefield series, Innovative Practices for Archives & Special Collections, in which volumes on management, description, outreach, and reference and access were published in 2014. She is also the author of Web 2.0 Tools and Strategies for Archives and Local History Collections and the editor of A Different Kind of Web: New Connections between Archives and Our Users, as well having contributed chapters to Many Happy Returns: Advocacy for Archives and Archivists, The Future of Archives and Recordkeeping, and the Encyclopedia of Archival Science. She has published articles in the American Archivist and the Journal of Digital Humanities.

Kate served on the Council of the Society of American Archivists from 2010 to 2013. Before starting her career as an independent writer and editor, she worked in the policy division of the National Archives and Records Administration in College Park, Maryland. She holds an MSI with a specialization in archives and records management from the University of Michigan and an MA in art history from the University of Maryland.


Table of Contents

Introduction

1. Tablet and Codex, Side by Side: Pairing Rare Books and E-Books in the Special Collections Classroom
Greta Reisel Browning, Appalachian State University

2. Fells, Fans and Fame: Acquiring a Collection of Personal Papers with the Goal of Engaging Primary School Children
Jane Davies and Janice Tullock, Cumbria Archive Service

3. Student Curators in the Archives: Class-Curated Exhibits in Academic Special Collections
Jennie Davy and Amy C. Schindler, College of William & Mary

4. A Win for All: Cultural Organizations Working With Colleges of Education
Andrea Reidell and Beth Twiss-Houting, Cultural Fieldwork Initiative

5. The Archive as Theory and Reality: Engaging with Students in Cultural and Critical Studies
Anna McNally, University of Westminster

6. Make Way for Learning: Using Literary Papers to Engage Elementary School Students
Ashley Todd-Diaz, Terri Summey, Shari Scribner, and Michelle Franklin, Emporia State University

7. Archivists Teaching Teachers: The Archives Education Institute and K-12 Outreach
Janet Bunde, Melanie Meyers, Charlotte Priddle, and Andy Steinitz, Archivists Round Table of Metropolitan New York

8. Animating Archives: Embedding Archival Materials (and Archivists) into Digital History Projects
Lisa M. Sjoberg and Joy K. Lintelman, Concordia College

9. “A Certain Kind of Seduction”: Integrating Archival Research into a First-Year Writing Curriculum
Brooke Champagne and Amy Hildreth Chen, University of Alabama

10. Not Just for Students: An Archives Workshop for Faculty
Rachel Grove Rohrbaugh, Chatham University

11. Web Archiving as Gateway: Teaching K-12 Students about Archival Concepts
Tanya Zanish-Belcher, Wake Forest University

12. Evocative Objects: Inspiring Art Students with Archives
Yuki Hibben and Wesley Chenault, Virginia Commonwealth University
13. Documenting and Sharing Instruction Practices: The story of TeachArchives.org
Robin M. Katz, Brooklyn Historical Society

About the Author

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