Thursday, December 5, 2013

Hunting and Gathering

When I want students to practice gathering historical details and information in a discovery format, I try a Hunting and Gathering activity. Sometimes I modify this activity slightly to suit the course, but the basics are the same.

Audience: Undergraduate or graduate students, any discipline.
Objectives:
  • work with original documents, focus on one document
  • concisely gather important details in an organized fashion
Ingredients:
  • original records related to the subject of the class
  • finding aids that correlate to the records
  • information sheet handout

Method:
Preparation: 20 minutes
Exercise: 30 minutes

1. Explain the exercise. The instructions are for each student to look through the boxes, select one item, examine that item, and then complete an information sheet.

2. Give the students time to explore the contents of the box without having the information sheet. [I found out that circulating the sheet after the students looked through the boxes was best, otherwise, they picked up the first item and worked through the sheet without enjoying the box.]

3. Circulate the information sheet, which asks for:
Title (if none, provide a title that describes the item)
Date of item
Summary of notable information (200 words or less)
People mentioned
Events mentioned
Organizations mentioned
Places mentioned
Other topics mentioned
Is this a primary or secondary source? [definitions of these sources are provided]

4. Open the discussion for each student to share what they found in boxes.

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