FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 5, 2008
Teaching
Web Site Highlights Gifts of Ancient Mesopotamia
Ancient Mesopotamia:
This History, Our History: http://mesopotamia.lib.uchicago.edu
Twelve-year-old students across the country
are digging into the secrets of ancient Mesopotamia through
a teaching Web site that lets them direct virtual archeological
expeditions and curate museum exhibits with the excavated
artifacts. The Web site, Ancient Mesopotamia: This
History, Our History, examines gifts left to the
modern world of the region that includes Iraq. It was
developed by the University of Chicago’s Oriental
Institute Museum in partnership with Chicago Public School
teachers, the University of Chicago’s Chicago Web
Docent, and the eCUIP Digital Library Project and was
funded by a National Leadership Grant from the Institute
of Museum and Library Services.
“We needed to bring Mesopotamia out
of the textbook and into the virtual world in order to
grab kids’ attention,” said Wendy Ennes, project
director and Teacher Services and e-Learning Coordinator
at the Oriental Institute Museum. Most sixth graders nationwide
are required to study ancient civilizations, and the Web
site was built to appeal to and support different learning
styles – online interactions, reading and visual
exploration, as well as searching and browsing strategies.
Students who enjoy gaming love Dig
Into History in the Interactives section of the
Web site, where they lead digs in present-day Iraq to
collect and catalog Mesopotamian artifacts. Students select
a quest statement that relates to a big idea about ancient
Mesopotamia such as the beginning of writing, the development
of certain inventions, or the domestication of plants
and animals. Students then dig for artifacts in an early
village, a city on the plains, or an imperial capital.
Meanwhile, the “dig leader” must solve problems
such as sand storm delays, drooping team morale, and funding
issues. Students must discover at least four artifacts
that support their quest statement, catalog their characteristics,
write labels, and craft an overarching statement. Their
work culminates in the students curating an online museum
exhibit.
“By collecting and curating a museum
exhibit, kids learn how exhibits are structured and what
a curator’s job is like.” Ennes explained.
The interactive section also includes video interviews
with three archeologists and detailed analyses of 13 artifacts.
The site offers three other sections: Life
In Mesopotamia, which presents details on 14 topics
surrounding daily life in ancient Mesopotamia; Teaching
Materials with 16 lesson plans, which synchronize
with the National Council for the Social Studies Curriculum
Standards; and the Learning
Collection of 142 artifacts and photographs of archeological
sites.
The topics covered in Life in Mesopotamia
drive home one of the Web site’s central themes:
that ancient Mesopotamians and their myriad gifts still
affect almost every aspect of our daily lives 5,000 years
later. Among those gifts are:
- Writing: The Sumerians developed one of the earliest
writing systems in about 3,200 B.C.
- Mathematics: Symbols for numbers were found on the
earliest written documents.
- Time: The Mesopotamians were the first to divide
time units into 60 parts, leading to the 60-second minute
and 60-minute hour.
- Urban civilization: One of the world’s earliest
cities was Uruk, which by the year 3,000 B.C. had an
estimated population of 50,000.
- The wheel: The ancient Mesopotamians were using the
wheel by about 3,500 B.C. They used the potter’s
wheel to throw pots and wheels on carts to transport
people and goods.
- The sail: The Mesopotamians made sails to harness
the wind to move boats.
- Astronomy: From a very early time,
the Mesopotamians had charted the movements of the sun,
moon, planets, and stars and were able to predict celestial
events.
In addition, the Teaching Materials section
includes a Symbols
From History (PDF) assignment that asks students to
research the use of ancient symbols in modern Iraq using
newspaper articles, library visits, and the Internet.
As students learn about the ancient past, they also become
more aware of current events in Iraq.
“With all that is going on in the
world today, it is important that American students know
and appreciate the legacies that we have inherited from
this region of the world,” Ennes said.
The Learning Collection allows
kids to “zoomify” in on photos of artifacts
and examine them up close. “Students like looking
at the cracks because the cracks tell them that an artifact
is really old,” said Ennes, noting that the section
also provides opportunities for visual analysis, discussion
questions to get classroom conversations rolling, links
to related artifacts, and maps pinpointing where the objects
were discovered.
For teachers who wish to learn more about
Mesopotamia and earn graduate credit, the museum offers
an in-depth, eight-week Online
Professional Development Course. The online course
is now being disseminated in publications and conferences
so that K-12 teachers nationwide can benefit from the
museum’s offerings.
Ennes and the museum staff learned many
lessons as they developed this rich resource. For example,
they learned that organizing metadata and digitizing collections
takes a very long time.
“This was our first attempt to digitize
and make public a portion of our collection. These particular
artifacts came out of the ground between the early 1900s
and the 1950s, and the metadata didn’t exist in
a manageable form. We had to gather a lot of old archival
information located in card catalogs, Institute publications,
and from other places throughout the Oriental Institute
and museum. There was a lot of research done for each
object. It also took a lot of time to photograph and digitize
the artifacts,” she said. Museum prep staff developed
a portable backdrop and a mobile studio so that Ennes
could shoot the artifacts in situ when the museum was
closed. In addition to writing the grant and shooting
the photos, Ennes also wrote much of the content for the
site – particularly for the Dig Into History
interactive.
Staffing issues cropped up during the project:
the museum lost its museum director and the Web site’s
Flash developer. Fortunately, Geoff Emberling, the new
museum director, threw his support behind the project.
eCUIP’s original programmer, Glen Biggus, and Web
designer Steven Lane collaborated with Sean York, Chicago
Web Docent’s Flash developer who had moved across
the country, to develop a template that helped streamline
the programming process for Dig Into History.
“All museum departments had to support
the project for it to succeed,” Ennes said. “As
an institution we had to find the time to collaborate
on the project and meet challenges we faced along the
way. Now that we know what it takes, we can look forward
to tackling a larger digitization of our collection in
the future. We’re better prepared for what’s
involved,” Ennes said. “It was a labor of
love and I’m happy it’s out there. We couldn’t
have done it without IMLS’s support.”
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About the Institute of Museum
and Library Services
The Institute of Museum and Library Services is the primary
source of federal support for the nation’s 122,000
libraries and 17,500 museums. The Institute's mission
is to create strong libraries and museums that connect
people to information and ideas. The Institute works at
the national level and in coordination with state and
local organizations to sustain heritage, culture, and
knowledge; enhance learning and innovation; and support
professional development. To learn more about the Institute,
please visit www.imls.gov.
About the Oriental Institute
The Oriental Institute is a research division of the University
of Chicago devoted to the study of the languages, history,
culture and archaeology of the ancient Middle East. Its
Museum contains one of the most comprehensive collections
of artifacts from Egypt, Nubia, Turkey, Iraq, Iran, Syria,
Israel and Palestine. The Oriental Institute is located
at 1155 East 58th Street, Chicago IL 60637. For general
information, call 773 702-9514 or on the web at www.oi.uchicago.edu.
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