CHICO: Cultural Heritage Initiative for Community Outreach
 

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Educational Resources

Feedback

About CHICO

Awards

Music, Theatre, and Culture

Learn about Flamenco!

The Glorious Gamelan

Salsa Stories: A Community History

Great Lakes Powwows

Royal Shakespeare Company

Rainbow Crow

Coming to America

Performing Arts of West Africa

Folk & Blues

Snapshots of Who We Are

Museums and Collections

A Taste of the Ancient World

Animals in the Kelsey

Mummies of Ancient Egypt

Masks of the Yup'ik People

Instrument Encyclopedia

Stylistic Journey

African Presence in the Americas: 1492-1992

The Harlem Renaissance

Francis W. Kelsey's Near East Expedition

Monet at Vetheuil

Magic of Amulets

Painting with Fire

Norwood Murals

LA Murals

Matthaei Botanical Gardens:
Out of Africa Project

Local History & Community

Flint Timeline

Girls' Middle School

A Woman's Town

Students on Site

Along the Tracks

Cultural Scrapbook

 

Welcome to the front page for the Cultural Heritage Initiative for Community Outreach (CHICO) based at the University of Michigan School of Information. CHICO projects celebrate the arts and cultural expressions within and across communities. These communities may be as nearby as the projects engaged in by the "Students on Site" or as far-reaching as the communities addressed in more global studies, such as the archaeological exhibits about "Foods of the Ancient World" or the exhibit about the 500-year history of African people in the Americas. CHICO projects focus on engaging practitioners in the arts, and presenters of the arts, with students of all ages and general audiences. CHICO team members are graduate students at the University of Michigan's School of Information. Team members work with partners and collaborators in schools, art institutions, and lively arts organizations, including University of Michigan departments, K-12 schools as well as local, regional, and national museums and public libraries.

On these pages, you will find topics ranging from the extensive collection of Yup'ik masks and stories, a project done in collaboration with the National Museum of the American Indian, to the exploration in "Stylistic Journey" of how new technologies are shaping museum visits and experiences. Many of the CHICO websites include resource materials for K-12 students and teachers, and all are invited to explore in greater depth the topics here presented.


Funding generously provided by The W. K. Kellogg Foundation