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C. Olivia Frost Associate Dean and Professor School of
Information University of Michigan Ann Arbor MI 48109-1092 Phone:
313-763-2285 Fax: 313-764-2475 E-mail:
cfrost@umich.edu The
Cultural Heritage Initiative for Community Outreach: Strategies for
Defining and Teaching a New Information ProfessionSIG
13: Multicultural, Ethnic and Humanistic Concerns, Thursday, February 13,
1997, 4:00pm - 5:30pm The School of Information is developing courses
which define new roles for information professionals, as well as new
instructional delivery methods which employ project-based learning and
team-based problem solving.
We describe a project which addresses these new curriculum criteria by
engaging student teams in projects which involve working with information
professionals to define new roles. Students working as part of a project called
CHICO (Cultural Heritage Initiative for Community Outreach) are looking at ways
in which the use of digital and collaboration technology can provide a digital
outreach and new audiences for cultural heritage materials. Pilot projects are
being developed to create multimedia resources with a strong multicultural
focus, and to actively support the delivery of cultural heritage content in ways
that will enrich the educational experience for a variety of audiences.
CHICO projects incorporate visual images, sound, and video to enrich museum
visits, classroom instruction, and extend learning beyond the bounds of the
classroom into other arenas of the community. CHICO students are creating
electronic extensions of primary resources from local museums of art. In
addition to providing electronic access to these collections, CHICO students are
changing the nature of local site visits through heightened interactivity.
Working with partners from the museum, library, and K-12 community, CHICO is
making extensive use of technology tools and information resources to broaden
the reach of cultural heritage materials and to support curriculum development
in the arts and humanities in a few selected area schools.
Project activities include:
- Development of the Musical Heritage Network project, in which students
created a digital presence for an internationally known collection of musical
instruments from diverse cultures and times. This resource celebrates the
diversity and relevance of music in cultures throughout the world. Students also
created virtual tours celebrating the musical heritage cultures in Indonesian
gamelan, Mexican mariachi, Native American pow-wow, and Latin American salsa
music.
- Working with teachers and librarians in area K-12 schools, and assisting
teachers in the use of digital resources to develop learning modules for
classroom teaching. Students also work with teachers to develop learning
modules to enable K-12 students to create and contribute their own art,
literature and music and share it with colleagues on the Web. By using
collaboration technology to allow members of the learning community to
communicate with each other in an anyplace-anytime mode, students interact with
others interested in and involved in similar subjects.
- Working with curators of local museums and collections to develop programs
to encourage K-12 students to visit the collections and gain background and
context to enhance their visit and enable them to continue their appreciation
and learning before and after.
- Working with librarians at the Ann Arbor District Library to provide
viewing site for after school hours so students can view the digital collections
with their parents and friends. Team members and librarians help to identify
materials in the library's collections, and plan library programs, such as an
Internet writing contest which can supplement and enhance the digital resources.
Impact on learning
- In working with clients in real-life settings, students gain practical work
experience and familiarity with work environments and cultures.
- In designing innovative programs for information service, students gain a
working vision of future-oriented roles for information professionals.
- In creating online repositories, students gain technological skills in
identification, digitization, presentation, and organization of Web materials.
- By working in teams, students gain communication, organizational, and
team-building skills needed to work on projects in their professional venues.
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