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Press Releases
8-30-2004
- "Egypt, Nubia, and Israel in Ancient Times"
excerpted from ASOR Newsletter
Summer 2004, Volume 54, Number 2
On May 1-2, twenty-eight teachers and the members
of the Long Island and Westchester AIA Societies
enjoyed a weekend experience in Boston, MA at the
Harvard Semitic Museum and the Museum of Fine Arts.
As a member of the ASOR and AIA education outreach
committees, I organized the program to provide
teachers with professional development credit while
meeting the curators, seeing the exhibits, and
reviewing the curriculum material of two of the
leading museums in the country. As a special bonus,
the group met the new executive directors, Douglas
Clark and Bonnie Clendenning of ASOR and the AIA
respectively. This meeting provided the opportunity
to exchange views about what types of programs
teachers and non-professional members want to see
and what the archaeological organizations offer.
The program consisted of a series of alternating
activities. Speakers included Dr. Rita Freed, Norma
Jean Calderwood Curator of Ancient Egyptian, Nubian,
and Near Eastern Art at the MFA on "History
of the Egyptian Collection" and "Nubia,"
Adam Aja, Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations,
Harvard U:university on "Using Archaeology
to Understand the History of Israel and the Philistines:
Two Case Studies," Dr. Peter Feinman on "When
Israel and the Arabs Were Allies." Guided
tours were given at the MFA on the Egyptian and
Nubian Collections and by Kimberley Connors at
HSM o the new reconstruction of an Iron II Israelite
home. Special thanks is due Dena Davis for her
assistance in putting the program together. The
pottery session that concluded the program for
the teachers was a highlight according to high
school teacher Carol Giardenelli: "The opportunity
to hold the oil lamps and other pottery from thousands
of years ago was one of the biggest thrills of
my life. I know that sounds corny but to hold something
like that with the knowledge of who might have
made it is astounding to me. Thank you for that
opportunity."
My interest in developing the program was precisely
to offer both teachers and non-professionals a
different experience than they normally receive
when visiting a museum. As high school teacher
Ruth Haukeland said, "the conference's most
salient feature was the variety of activities.
I loved combining lectures, on-site museum visits,
and workshops with hands-on experience. Thanks
so much for a great weekend. Teachers deserve to
be students sometimes!" My hope is that such
experiences can be repeated at the HSM and MFA
and be expanded to include other museums and institutions
that are part of ASOR (and the AIA). One suggestion
from elementary school teacher Melanie Jakway was
"for more hands-on materials that we can take
back to our schools, e.g., pictures, to be able
to share with our kids - activities that can excite
children in the archeological study of ancient
cultures."
If other institutions are interested in developing
a similar weekend or summer program please contact
me at feinman@ihare.org.
ASOR Outreach will hold a workshop for teachers
at the San Antonio Museum of Art. It will include
lectures, a Museum tour, and hands-on activities
taught by Ellen Bedell, Neal Bierling, Beverly
Chiarulli, and myself. For the first time, Beverly,
who is the former SAA (Society of American Archaeology)
Outreach Chairperson and current SAA liaison to
ASOR, will attend an ASOR annual meeting. Please
see the annual meeting program (www.asor.org)
for abstracts describing the wide range of activities
to be presented.
Recently
I attended the Public Education Committee meeting
at the annual conference of the Society of American
Archaeology. Two important decisions were made
there that directly relate to ASOR.
1.
To create an "Archaeology Alley" at teacher
conferences: teacher conferences at the national,
state, and regional levels permit organizations
to set up displays of their education materials.
The SAA intends to develop a portable exhibit that
can be used at these different locations and would
like to do so in conjunction with other archaeology
organizations. This specific task led to a more
general recommendation.
2.
To develop inter-society relations, programs, and
activities among SAA, ASOR, AIA, ARCE and other
organizations to reach out more effectively to
the teachers and the non-professional public.
My
hope is that ASOR will develop a more comprehensive
and inclusive education outreach program that includes
working with other archaeological organizations
and its member institutions.
Peter
Feinman
ASOR Outreach Committee
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