In 1901 Robert S. Peabody lamented the lack of instruction in archaeology at his high school alma mater Phillips Academy, a prestigious New England boarding school. To rectify the situation, he used family funds and artifacts amassed by his personal curator Warren K. Moorehead to establish a Department of Archaeology at the school. A building was constructed and Moorehead and Peabody’s son, Charles, set about teaching classes. The pattern established by Moorehead and Peabody, however, was disrupted in 1914 when the school refocused the program exclusively on research. Classes were offered periodically over the next decades, and some students were inspired to follow their high school passions to lifetime careers in our field. Successive admi...
Over the last few decades, scholars have recognized the importance of discipline-based education res...
Recent studies of the public perception of archaeology shows that while it is a popular and valued d...
The recent re-evaluation of archaeology's raison d'etre has opened up the new field of public archae...
Our 2012 article, “Putting Anthropology Into Schools,” argued that integrating anthropology and arch...
This thesis introduces a niche job for public archaeologists with an interest in education. I sugges...
Archaeology belongs in the schools. Students and teachers both find it interesting, and it has been ...
The turn toward community-based research in archaeology is “transforming” the discipline. No longer ...
There is often a disconnect between archaeology and the education system. Archaeologists, as well as...
Archaeology education and outreach for the general public is more widely recognized among profession...
Archaeology education and outreach for the general public is more widely recognized among profession...
Common schools, often comprising a single room with one or two teachers, taught millions of children...
Purpose of the Study:\ud Classroom based archaeology education programs for elementary age students ...
This paper explains how archaeology has been used to teach history to children in English schools, m...
Most archaeology students first experience field work during a field school aimed at upper-division ...
Archaeologists are increasingly asked to justify the meaning and importance of their work to the pub...
Over the last few decades, scholars have recognized the importance of discipline-based education res...
Recent studies of the public perception of archaeology shows that while it is a popular and valued d...
The recent re-evaluation of archaeology's raison d'etre has opened up the new field of public archae...
Our 2012 article, “Putting Anthropology Into Schools,” argued that integrating anthropology and arch...
This thesis introduces a niche job for public archaeologists with an interest in education. I sugges...
Archaeology belongs in the schools. Students and teachers both find it interesting, and it has been ...
The turn toward community-based research in archaeology is “transforming” the discipline. No longer ...
There is often a disconnect between archaeology and the education system. Archaeologists, as well as...
Archaeology education and outreach for the general public is more widely recognized among profession...
Archaeology education and outreach for the general public is more widely recognized among profession...
Common schools, often comprising a single room with one or two teachers, taught millions of children...
Purpose of the Study:\ud Classroom based archaeology education programs for elementary age students ...
This paper explains how archaeology has been used to teach history to children in English schools, m...
Most archaeology students first experience field work during a field school aimed at upper-division ...
Archaeologists are increasingly asked to justify the meaning and importance of their work to the pub...
Over the last few decades, scholars have recognized the importance of discipline-based education res...
Recent studies of the public perception of archaeology shows that while it is a popular and valued d...
The recent re-evaluation of archaeology's raison d'etre has opened up the new field of public archae...