Presenting a Pluralized Past: Assessing the Efficacy of Multivocal, Bison-Themed Lesson Units as a Public Education and Outreach Strategy for Archaeology

Archaeological education and outreach have become priorities in a discipline that struggles to make its research accessible and relevant to the diverse public. In recent years, researchers have begun to address this issue through the design and implementation of grade school lesson modules on variou...

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Main Author: Battaglia, Mario Kasimir
Other Authors: Zedeño, Maria Nieves.
Language:en_US
Published: The University of Arizona. 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/556237
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-5562372015-10-23T05:43:18Z Presenting a Pluralized Past: Assessing the Efficacy of Multivocal, Bison-Themed Lesson Units as a Public Education and Outreach Strategy for Archaeology Battaglia, Mario Kasimir Zedeño, Maria Nieves. Zedeño, Maria Nieves. Ferguson, T.J. Chavarria, Sara Bison Curriculum Education Multivocality Pedagogy Anthropology Archaeology Archaeological education and outreach have become priorities in a discipline that struggles to make its research accessible and relevant to the diverse public. In recent years, researchers have begun to address this issue through the design and implementation of grade school lesson modules on various archaeological topics. Although these lesson modules are readily available, little has been done to assess the efficacy of such public education and outreach agendas. With stimulus and funding from the Blackfeet Tribe and the Montana Department of Transportation, respectively, this thesis addresses this gap by (1) designing archaeological lesson modules for middle school students, and (2) assessing the general efficacy of the lessons. Specifically, the study systematically analyzes four science units for their overall efficacy, general impact, and utility through pre-and-post assessments that measure student understanding and interest. The quantified analyses are then combined to attain an overall percentage of curriculum efficacy. As a public outreach strategy for archaeology, these modules emphasize a pluralistic, multivocal, inclusive, and pragmatic perspective of the past that both connects with a multifaceted, diverse public and avoids educational marginalization of a shared, collective past. Thus, Native perspectives are interwoven with scientific archaeological knowledge to, in essence, pluralize the past. The topical focus of the lessons is bison - a uniquely North American past and present species with which humans have interacted intimately at a multitude of levels but, also, a species that is not always accepted among contemporary ranchers and land users. The curriculum is aimed at middle school students, recognizing that these students, as the future decision-makers, are a key demographic to target. It is hypothesized that (1) the respectful incorporation of archaeological education in a pluralized, inclusive fashion allows the interdisciplinary potential of archaeology to be more fully realized, and (2) such a strategy allows the significance of bison to be better understood and more widely appreciated. 2015 text Electronic Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10150/556237 en_US Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Bison
Curriculum
Education
Multivocality
Pedagogy
Anthropology
Archaeology
spellingShingle Bison
Curriculum
Education
Multivocality
Pedagogy
Anthropology
Archaeology
Battaglia, Mario Kasimir
Presenting a Pluralized Past: Assessing the Efficacy of Multivocal, Bison-Themed Lesson Units as a Public Education and Outreach Strategy for Archaeology
description Archaeological education and outreach have become priorities in a discipline that struggles to make its research accessible and relevant to the diverse public. In recent years, researchers have begun to address this issue through the design and implementation of grade school lesson modules on various archaeological topics. Although these lesson modules are readily available, little has been done to assess the efficacy of such public education and outreach agendas. With stimulus and funding from the Blackfeet Tribe and the Montana Department of Transportation, respectively, this thesis addresses this gap by (1) designing archaeological lesson modules for middle school students, and (2) assessing the general efficacy of the lessons. Specifically, the study systematically analyzes four science units for their overall efficacy, general impact, and utility through pre-and-post assessments that measure student understanding and interest. The quantified analyses are then combined to attain an overall percentage of curriculum efficacy. As a public outreach strategy for archaeology, these modules emphasize a pluralistic, multivocal, inclusive, and pragmatic perspective of the past that both connects with a multifaceted, diverse public and avoids educational marginalization of a shared, collective past. Thus, Native perspectives are interwoven with scientific archaeological knowledge to, in essence, pluralize the past. The topical focus of the lessons is bison - a uniquely North American past and present species with which humans have interacted intimately at a multitude of levels but, also, a species that is not always accepted among contemporary ranchers and land users. The curriculum is aimed at middle school students, recognizing that these students, as the future decision-makers, are a key demographic to target. It is hypothesized that (1) the respectful incorporation of archaeological education in a pluralized, inclusive fashion allows the interdisciplinary potential of archaeology to be more fully realized, and (2) such a strategy allows the significance of bison to be better understood and more widely appreciated.
author2 Zedeño, Maria Nieves.
author_facet Zedeño, Maria Nieves.
Battaglia, Mario Kasimir
author Battaglia, Mario Kasimir
author_sort Battaglia, Mario Kasimir
title Presenting a Pluralized Past: Assessing the Efficacy of Multivocal, Bison-Themed Lesson Units as a Public Education and Outreach Strategy for Archaeology
title_short Presenting a Pluralized Past: Assessing the Efficacy of Multivocal, Bison-Themed Lesson Units as a Public Education and Outreach Strategy for Archaeology
title_full Presenting a Pluralized Past: Assessing the Efficacy of Multivocal, Bison-Themed Lesson Units as a Public Education and Outreach Strategy for Archaeology
title_fullStr Presenting a Pluralized Past: Assessing the Efficacy of Multivocal, Bison-Themed Lesson Units as a Public Education and Outreach Strategy for Archaeology
title_full_unstemmed Presenting a Pluralized Past: Assessing the Efficacy of Multivocal, Bison-Themed Lesson Units as a Public Education and Outreach Strategy for Archaeology
title_sort presenting a pluralized past: assessing the efficacy of multivocal, bison-themed lesson units as a public education and outreach strategy for archaeology
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/556237
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