Goals:
The students will be able to identify connections between past artifacts and their modern counterparts.
The students will exercise their library skills in the study of their artifact and will use critical thinking skills to reconstruct their particular artifact which will be assessed in their journal that is kept throughout the project.
Materials:
access to computers that are linked to the internet
$5 for each group (for materials to build artifact)
list of artifacts recovered from Titanic
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videos on shipwrecks and recovery efforts of treasures (can be
obtained from above internet links)
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Procedure:
2.Ý Show the class visual representations of artifacts recovered from ships throughout the years.
3.Ý Introduce the concept for the lesson, which is to become more familiar with artifacts in general, and especially with those of the Titanic. Then explain to the students that they are going to be asked to research an artifact from the Titanic, find its modern counterpart, and eventually reconstruct it.
4.Ý The students will be given free time to explore the materials, audio/visual and otherwise, that are provided in the classroom. These will include books, National Geographic magazines, and short videos.
5.Ý The following day the class will be split up into groups of 2 or 3. Each group will choose an artifact from the wreck of the Titanic that has been recovered.
6.Ý The students will be given time to research their artifact in the library. They will be asked to find information on things such as: where it was made, how it was made, its evolution, if it is still used today, & what it looks like today.
7.Ý The students will be given time at the end of class
to meet and discuss how they are going to reconstruct their
artifact. They will be given five dollars with which they must use
to reconstruct the object. They should be given a choice as how
best to do this. The group will form a possible list of supplies
and then take that list home to research its actual cost to see if
it will fit within their budget.
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8.Ý The following day, the students will spend the entire
two hours reconstructing their artifact. They will be given the
grading rubrics before they begin construction. This will show
them exactly how they will be evaluated.
9.Ý On the last day of the project, the students will present their reconstructed artifact to the rest of the class.
Assessment:
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Part of the recording of research and progress should include
exactly how the group spent their five dollars.
The final project will be assessed on how closely it resembles the original artifact. This does not necessarily mean the same size, but rather is a good representation of the original.
Curricular Strands and Major Concepts:
Social Studies - researching the artifact and finding its importance in its relation to the rest of history specifically the Titanic
Math - estimating costs
Science - studying how certain artifacts were used
Possible Extensions:
Have students research an invention that greatly impacted the course of history.
The Titanic - developed by Kelly Coleman, Nikki Cosgrove, Megan
Mills, & Dorothy Weber
This page was submitted by St.
Norbert College Ocean Voyagers Program