602 1/2 East Green St., Champaign, IL 61820
(217) 359-5600
E-mail: plmxiha@prairienet.org

Our pages were last updated on December 29, 2007

   
IHA Mission
IHA Services

IHA Publications
IHA Technical Inserts
Selected Inserts:

Plan Your Work, Part 1
Plan Your Work, Part 2


IHA Governing Board and Staff
Programs
Members Say ...
Join IHA
Archival Materials List

Guest Book and Contact IHA

The Illinois Heritage Association is a publicly supported charitable organization under 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code and is partially supported by tax-exempt contributions. Annual membership dues in the IHA include $12 for subscription to the IHA newsletter and technical insert, issued six times per year.

Visit the Global Cultural Memory Website, which was developed by the University of Illinois Library using images from Champaign County. This searchable database was constructed as a model for integrating access to the collections of many cultural heritage institutions, including museums, community groups, schools, historical societies, archives and libraries. The Illinois Heritage Association was a major contributor to the project, providing many historical photographs of Champaign County as well as accompanying text from A Commemorative History of Champaign County, Illinois: 1833-1983. Champaign County Cultural Memory is part of the Global Cultural Memory project, funded by the Getty Information Institute. The web site is a model for a future virtual distributed repository to which institutions would contribute multimedia information from their collections, such as curatorial records, oral histories, and educational program materials. It is one of several projects under development by the Digital Imaging & Media Technology Initiative, which is exploring collaborative approaches to providing widespread searching access to digital repositories of arts and humanities resources to promote the use and preservation of these collections. For a list of other projects, visit http://images.library.uiuc.edu/projects.

The Illinois Heritage Association is a partner with the University of Illinois Library and the Illinois State Library in Basics and Beyond, a project funded by the Institute of Museum and Library Services that offers digitization training through the Illinois Digitization Institute at the University of Illinois. The workshops were offered to museums and libraries during 2004 and 2005. The training opportunities are being continued in 2006 through support from the Illinois State Library. There are three workshop tracks. Track One is a series of two-day workshops offered at the Illinois State Library in Springfield. It is designed to help people decide if digitization is right for them. Track Two is a series of three-week on-line courses with more in-depth information about digitization projects. Track Three is similar to Track Two, but in addition to the three-week on-line course, participants come to the Illinois State Library for two-days of hands-on experience with experts. For more information about the courses and a listing of those scheduled to date, visit http://images.library.uiuc.edu/projects/IDI/Index.HTM.

For an extensive collection of web resources for researchers, volunteers, and staff of local historical organizations and museums, visit the Indiana Historical Society Local History Web Resources.

CONFERENCE REPORT 

Web Wise 2005: Teaching and Learning with Digital Resources

 

The 2005 Web Wise conference, cosponsored by the Institute of Museum

and Library Services and the University of Chicago, was held February

17-18, at the Hyatt Regency in Washington, D.C. The meeting was

preceded by a reception on Wednesday evening, February 16, at the

Dirksen Senate Office Building, where new library commissioners for

the IMLS board were inducted. Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day

O'Connor administered the oath of office.

 

Thursday began with a keynote address by David Rumsey, Cartography

Associates, entitled "Open Content: How Online Digital Libraries and

Resources Will Provide Access to Cultural Information in the 21st

Century." This address was one of the highlights of the conference. He

struck a responsive chord with the audience in Washington by opening

his illustrated talk with an image of an 1882 drawing of the Grand

Canyon by William Henry Holmes, who was later head of the Smithsonian

Institution. Rumsey has a personal collection of over 150,000 maps and

is interested in ways that the public can access digital information.

He is digitizing and making his collection freely available, with the

goal of creating a free online map library.  He is working with

several other repositories.

 

Rumsey noted that much current access to information is through

Google, and that there is a need for more interoperability and linking

of information. In addition to image databases, there is a need for

text and audio. Technology makes it possible to do more online than

one could do in person. To enrich the information in maps, Rumsey uses

several types of software including Luna Insight, Java, GIS, and

Collections Ticker. With these he can zoom in, create overlays,

compare time periods, document change over time, paste together

images, combine map images with text and objects, and make the

information available in several languages. He has an interest in

gaming technology and demonstrated how it can be utilized to take a

flat map, expand it into three-dimensional images, and then allow the

viewer to make a virtual fly-through. His Web page, available through

Google, gets 5,000 to 7,000 hits per day. He closed by saying that the

important factor is how to search.

 

Following the keynote speech, there was a forty-five minute break,

during which there were several project demonstrations, a traditional

feature of Web Wise. These included collaborative projects among

schools and libraries in Montana; an online educational project of the

Whitney Museum of American Art; and a digital costume project

sponsored by Wayne State University and nearby museums. The National

Palace Museum in Taipei, Taiwan, distributed CDs of its wireless

guided tours. The IMLS Digital Collections Registry, a collections

registry of images from more than 136 IMLS projects funded since 1988

through its National Leadership Grants program, was demonstrated by

representatives from the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.

This registry is available through the IMLS Web site and will soon

offer item-level searching capability.

 

During the last hour Thursday morning, presenters talked about

ways to use digital resources for effective teaching and learning.

David Leakes, from Syracuse University, made several good points about

working with teachers. He emphasized that you must have lesson plans

for teachers. The teachers may use them for starting points to create

their own plans, but without them, they will not be interested in your

digital project. He also emphasized that the lesson plans must be

correlated with specific grade levels. He noted that there is more

information available on the Internet for teachers in science subjects

than in language arts, so there is a bigger opportunity for project

development there. There is a need beyond just making information

available. The challenge is to help make sense of it. Teachers are

faced with a flood of information and they don't have time to make

sense of it. Libraries and museums can help them easily access

information. Leakes warned that it is important to be aware of the

standards, which are locally controlled and vary widely from place to

place.

 

Nena Bloom from the Colorado Digitization Program (now Collaborative

Digitization Program, CDP) gave some tips on how CDP uses primary

source materials to assist teachers, utilizing photos, documents, maps, and

newspapers. There are training sessions for teachers. Master teachers can train

other teachers. There is a need to develop skills in analyzing documents. Primary

 sources can be used to help teachers present more than one point of view. The

information must be keyed to content the teachers have to cover.

Teachers want models, even if they later modify them. Lesson plans can

be put on a Web site. Teachers want strategies to cope with situations

such as having only one computer in a classroom. The speaker noted

that libraries are reluctant to provide interpretation but will need

to do more. Currently, textbooks are the number one influence in the

classroom, but there are many ways to learn. Museums and libraries

need to become an essential part of the system. The most important

tool in this endeavor is an educator's advisory group.

 

Following lunch, presenters talked about educational opportunities for

learners of all ages. An Ag Econ Challenge Game at the National

Steinbeck Center was described. The students can plant, hire workers,

harvest, pay bills, and essentially run a business by making decisions

and following the progress of a lettuce crop.

 

At the Frist Center, Nashville, and the Nashville Public Library,

adult English-language learners attend eight sessions where they learn

art terms, see narrative art, and complete an art project.  They learn

computer skills and write personal narratives.

 

In the Columbia River Basin Ethnic History Project (Vancouver, Washington),

students learn about diverse cultures that populate the area, and through

computer access and directed discussions they gain an understanding of some of

the challenges the immigrants have faced.

 

During the conference breakout session--an opportunity to visit

individual computer stations--outstanding projects were demonstrated.

At Winterthur, staff members are using radiography to teach students

about the conservation of objects. At the State Historical Society of

Wisconsin, over 150 narratives about exploration are the basis for

full-text stories, accompanied by instructional guides for 40,000

teachers. In Connecticut, a house museum focuses on a hero of the

American Revolution and puts its museum in the context of larger

events through digital images and interactive videos. A special

project at Syracuse University uses multimedia and Web-based teaching

to assist in developing literacy skills for elementary and

middle-school students. At Drayton Hall, teachers, students, and

researchers can make use of rich historical resources that have been

digitized.

 

Nuala Koetter described the University of Illinois's "Teaching with

Digital Content" project, which brought together libraries, museums,

and school districts, using digitized collections to meet educational

goals. The IHA served as a co-principal investigator in this project.

 

When the sessions resumed, three more projects were presented in some

depth. "Re-Presenting Race in the Digital Age" encouraged students to

explore race and identity in art projects they created about

themselves.

 

Librarians from the Folger Library at the University of Maine gave a

riveting demonstration of how technology could help students learn

about music and have fun at the same time. A special software package

with audio enables a student to play along, change the tempo,

eliminate instruments, and change octaves on a musical score in an

interactive educational lesson. This was the most interesting project

of the conference.

 

Speakers for the final project for the day described how they utilized

technology to present the different viewpoints of five different

groups at a historical event. Visitors could isolate different

participants on all sides of the famous 1704 raid by the French and

Indians on the English settlement at Deerfield, Massachusetts, and

follow what happened to them. They could use interactive maps, zoom

technology, and rollovers to retrieve information that interested

them. The Web site also serves as a model for others wanting to

present a controversial story with multiple points of view.

 

Friday morning began with a keynote address by Susan Sclafani,

Assistant Secretary, U.S. Department of Education. She began her talk,

entitled "Preparing America's Future," by saying that the No Child

Left Behind legislation has dramatically changed education in the last

four years.  While most in the audience would agree with this

statement, not everyone was as enthusiastic about it as she was. She

listed the key principles of No Child Left Behind.

 

She told the audience that there is new data on those children who are

not doing well. One conclusion is that reading skills are extremely

important for future success. In spite of the fact that teachers and

parents like small class size, the speaker maintained that data

indicate that this factor does not increase learning. She noted that

the fastest-growing jobs require some education beyond high school,

and that many American students fall into "below basic" category,

especially in science and math.  Remediation is the fastest-growing

coursework in college.

 

At the same time, many students know more about technology than do

their teachers. The setup of schools is antiquated and textbooks are

outdated. Museums and libraries must become the place where kids go.

They are community resources that can contribute to all-day learning,

instead of focusing on simply the 8:00 to 3:00 school day. Students

need to be asked to do more. She believes that educators are the ones

who are limiting our students. She described some schools with

innovative approaches to learning and concluded by saying that

students can begin college work before leaving high school.

 

Among the questions and comments following Sclafani's address was the

comment that it is the innovative schools that have difficulty with

the tests.

 

Ken Kay, chairman of Infotech Strategies, spoke about teaching and

learning in the twenty-first century. He compared the skill needs of

twentieth and the twenty-first centuries and noted that in today's

world a worker will probably have ten to fifteen jobs during his or

her career. This requires that people develop new learning skills.

Critical thinking, problem solving, and communicating skills are more

important than content. The Partnership for 21st Century Skills

(www.21centuryskills.org) has established models to promote analytical

thinking and self-directed learning. Kay also mentioned the

Business-Higher Education Forum (www.BHEF.com), a nonprofit

organization of leaders from business, colleges and universities,

museums, and foundations.  The BHEF issues initiatives and

publications and makes policy recommendations. Kay emphasized that

twenty-first-century objectives need to be built into library and

museum objectives. Self-directed learning is at the core of library

and museum missions. These organizations should be leaders on

twenty-first-century skills and should involve all community

stakeholders in an integrated effort to redesign education.

 

The final speaker, John Lewis Needham, spoke about Google and new

content initiatives. Google's goal is to organize the world's

information and to make it universally accessible. Needham spoke about

Google Scholar (a new beta service) that allows specific searches of

scholarly literature. It is subject based and will allow researchers

to locate information on specialized subjects. Google Print, which was

introduced last fall, will allow users to search excerpts of texts

online. Some feel this will lend credibility to the source because of

the respect that exists for published books. Google has several

partners in digitizing articles, papers, abstracts, and books in these

new programs.

 

The conference ended with its customary "On My Mind" panel, followed

by questions and comments from the audience. Joyce Ray, associate

deputy for library services at IMLS, moderated. She started the

discussion by stating that the diverse audience of learners demands

"re-purposability." There is a need to train teachers to use

resources. There is also a need for effective assessment tools.  The

speakers emphasized the importance of public-private partnerships.

They noted the educational potential of television but warned that we

have let it get away from us. They suggested that there needs to be a

conversation about how to use technology. The process of learning

needs to be more fun. There is a potential for a more interactive

environment and for personalized attention. As at the beginning of the

conference, the model of gaming was cited as an example of what is

possible. Finally, it was noted that museum and libraries have people

on staff who understand subject matter and who know how to manage

information. These individuals can take more risks than teachers can.

They can encourage conversation and integrated thinking. They have

"neat stuff," and they have a tradition of creativity and

collaboration.

 

There were numerous handouts in the conference, which have been added

to the IHA library. For more information on any aspect of the

conference, contact the IHA office (217) 359-5600 or by e-mail at

plmxiha@prairienet.org.

 


We thank Prairienet for giving us the opportunity to provide this information.

Thank you and (Graphical counter showing number of visitors)others for visiting our pages. Please visit again soon. Our URL is: http://illinoisheritage.prairienet.org

[ IHA Mission | IHA Services | IHA Publications | Technical Inserts | Sample Inserts |
Local Books
| IHA Board and Staff |
Programs | IHA Members say ... | Join IHA | Contact IHA | ]