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Artifact Inquiry Goal: Working in groups, students will identify the functions of previously unknown objects by their appearances and/or structures.

Artifact Inquiry Goal: Working in groups, students will identify the functions of previously unknown objects by their appearances and/or structures

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Page 1: Artifact Inquiry Goal: Working in groups, students will identify the functions of previously unknown objects by their appearances and/or structures

Artifact Inquiry

Goal:Working in groups, students will identify the functions of previously unknown objects by their appearances and/or structures.

Page 2: Artifact Inquiry Goal: Working in groups, students will identify the functions of previously unknown objects by their appearances and/or structures

Background:When archaeologists dig up artifacts, many times they are unearthing certain objects for the first time and must guess the function based on appearance.

Page 3: Artifact Inquiry Goal: Working in groups, students will identify the functions of previously unknown objects by their appearances and/or structures

Further digs in similar locales may shed more light on these objects and give greater credence to a researcher's proposed identification.

Page 4: Artifact Inquiry Goal: Working in groups, students will identify the functions of previously unknown objects by their appearances and/or structures

“Artifact Inquiry” simulates part of the process that “real” archaeologists use in their work.

It is an excellent activity for beginning the year in history since archaeology is a fundamental source of our information on many past events and cultures!

Page 5: Artifact Inquiry Goal: Working in groups, students will identify the functions of previously unknown objects by their appearances and/or structures

Check out a Web site with an interactive dig!

Main page

Mystery items(Help identify an artifact and post your ideas on the bulletin board)

Page 6: Artifact Inquiry Goal: Working in groups, students will identify the functions of previously unknown objects by their appearances and/or structures

What’s the procedure?

Page 7: Artifact Inquiry Goal: Working in groups, students will identify the functions of previously unknown objects by their appearances and/or structures

Step #1

Each student will be put into a team of 3-4 people. You need to work together with each other step-by-step!

Page 8: Artifact Inquiry Goal: Working in groups, students will identify the functions of previously unknown objects by their appearances and/or structures

Step #2

Each team will be given an initial object to examine.

Page 9: Artifact Inquiry Goal: Working in groups, students will identify the functions of previously unknown objects by their appearances and/or structures

Step # 3Working as a team… Examine the object Brainstorm ideas for

what the object was used for

Read the directions on the “Brainstorming Web” sheet and choose a scribe to fill in the sheet(4 minutes)

Page 10: Artifact Inquiry Goal: Working in groups, students will identify the functions of previously unknown objects by their appearances and/or structures

Step #4

In BIG letters, write on the back of the “Brainstorming Web” sheet what your team would name this object …try and make the name appropriate to the object’s use(s) (2 minutes)

Page 11: Artifact Inquiry Goal: Working in groups, students will identify the functions of previously unknown objects by their appearances and/or structures

Final Steps! Rotate the objects clockwise, so that each

group examines each object Repeat steps 2-4 for each object that your

group examines Once all teams have examined all objects,

teams will be paired to share their ideas for usage and their names for each object

Page 12: Artifact Inquiry Goal: Working in groups, students will identify the functions of previously unknown objects by their appearances and/or structures

Closure

On a clean sheet of paper, students will write the answers to the following questions in their notebooks.

Page 13: Artifact Inquiry Goal: Working in groups, students will identify the functions of previously unknown objects by their appearances and/or structures

Reflections on“Artifact Inquiry”

1. Did your team identify the correct name and use(s) of any of the objects? If so, which objects?

2. List three things that you learned from doing this simulation.

3. When working in your team, what is one thing that you did well? What is one thing that you would do differently next time you work in a team?

Page 14: Artifact Inquiry Goal: Working in groups, students will identify the functions of previously unknown objects by their appearances and/or structures

I will use this technology in my classroom in two fundamental ways. The first way is as a media for delivering instruction. In this project I introduced a simulation, gave directions for completing the simulation, and provided closingquestions for the students to reflect on the simulation. When using the PowerPoint technology in this fashion, I would also give students handouts of each slide to greater facilitate understanding. Although Jonassen et. al. criticizes thistype of technology use, I believe that it is appropriate for the delivering of instructions to the whole class. Today’s students are more interested in looking ata PowerPoint presentation of directions, versus a plain black-and-white overhead.The second way that I could use this technology would be to have the students interact with it. I could definitely design a PowerPoint presentation that takes the students from slide-to-slide and to different Web sites. Also, I could have studentspick which slides or Web sites to visit.

Students are able to use PowerPoint as a way of “receiving” instruction(see above) or as a way of “constructing” their own instruction. “The people wholearn the most from designing instructional materials are the designers, not the learners for whom the materials are intended” (Jonassen et. al.). When studentscreate their own PowerPoint presentations, they truly are constructing their own knowledge. Student construction of presentations would give students the greatestbenefit because they are teaching the computer, versus the computer teaching them.Another way to involve students in the constructing of their own knowledge would be to create a presentation and have students add appropriate material to it(e.g. answer questions, link to Web sites).