Artifacts in the Elementary School Classroom

What are artifacts?

“Artifacts are commonly referred to as manmade objects or realia. . . . objects from the material, educational, or artistic culture of a society” (Field 141).

Why use artifacts in teaching?

What are some examples of artifacts?

  Sources of Artifacts:

  References

Dowd, Frances Smardo.  “What’s a Jackdaw Doing in Our Classroom?”  Childhood Education 66.4 (1990): 228-31.

Field, Sherry, Linda D. Labbo, Ron W. Wilhelm, and Alan W. Garrett.  “To Touch, to Feel, to See: Artifact Inquiry in the Social Studies Classroom.”  Social Education 60.3 (1996): 141-43.

Hatcher, Barbara A.  “History in My Hand—Making Artifact Kids in the Intermediate Grades.”  Social Studies 83 (1992): 267-271.

Labbo, Linda D., and Sherry L. Field.  “Journey Boxes: Telling the Story of Place, Time, and Culture with Photographs, Literature, and Artifacts.”  Social Studies 90.4 (1999): 177-82.

Morris, Ronald Vaughan.  “Teaching Social Studies with Artifacts.”  Social Studies 91.1 (2000): 32-37.

---.  “Using Artifacts as a Springboard to Literacy.”  Social Studies and the Young Learner 10.4 (1998): 14-17.

 

Compiled by Carol H. Sibley, Curriculum Librarian, Minnesota State University Moorhead, Moorhead, Minnesota, 10/03.

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