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Overview of Project The Arkansas Memory Project is modeled after the American Memory collections of the Library of Congress. The project is a digital archive of primary source materials designed for use by students and teachers in Arkansas classrooms. It is a collection of official documents, publications, maps, letters, narratives, recordings, photographs, art, and other artifacts from Arkansas. Your assignment is to build an archival collection for your Memory Project. You will find and archive a set of primary documents that capture family, local, or state history. In analyzing the primary sources you collect, you will examine the interplay between national, state, local, and personal history. For examples of Web pages that other students have designed for Arkansas Memory, visit the Arkansas Memory Project at the Web site of the Arkansas School for Mathematics and Sciences, or go to Examples of Project Topics to view a list of topics chosen by students for the Arkansas Memory Project of 1999. During this unit of study, you will demonstrate that you "know key facts and issues" about a given time period, that you can "think like an historian," and that you can become a "producer of useful knowledge." You will use the skills you have learned for conducting professional historical inquiry. You will analyze primary documents, search for related secondary texts, and correlate individual documents with the key facts and issues of a particular time period. You will use your online search skills to survey and critique Web sites on American and your state's history. Choosing Content for Your Collection In building your collection of primary sources you may choose to focus on:
You may find these materials in a number of different places using many different means. Possibilities include:
Use 25 Questions To Ask Your Primary Source to help you observe details, uncover new questions, and draw conclusions about what each primary source reveals about the topic that you are researching. Create a folder for these and other items that you choose for your local history project. Analyzing the Collection You will have to answer these questions in regard to your collection:
The real power of your Memory Project will come from two ingredients. It can personalize a bit of history, showing the connection between larger events in American history and the events in your home state, hometown, or even your family's history. Secondly, it captures some small, but real, pieces of history and lets your viewers see for themselves how people looked, what they said, what they did, and (in some cases) why they did it. Evaluating Your Product This will be an ongoing project and you will be continually assessed. Roundtable discussions are scheduled to help you generate new questions, develop research strategies, better articulate the significance of your collection, and make progress at a steady pace. The unit ends with a written analysis of your archive and a final oral presentation to your class in which you will defend your work as both an historian and as a producer.
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Last updated 09/26/2002 |