Vermont Historical Society

  • Visit
    • Vermont History Museum
    • Vermont Heritage Galleries
    • Leahy Library
    • Events & Calendar
    • Group Tours & Field Trips
    • Hours & Directions
    • Contact
  • Educate
    • Field Trips
    • Vermont History Explorer
    • In Your Classroom
    • Vermont History Day
    • Homeschool
    • Online Resources
    • Professional Development Workshops
  • Research
    • Leahy Library
    • VHS Library Online Catalog
    • Research Resources Online
    • Ask a Librarian
    • Museum Collections
    • Genealogy
    • Archaeology
    • Vermont Women's History
    • Publishing Program
  • Virtual VHS
    • Online Exhibits
    • Photographs
    • Film and Video Collection
  • Shop
    • All Store Items
    • Recent Additions
    • VHS Publications
    • Sale Items
  • Community Resources
    • Collections Care
    • League of Local Societies & Museums
    • League of Local Societies & Museums Directory
    • Community History
    • Vermont History Expo
    • Other Helpful Links
  • About VHS
    • Mission & Strategic Plan
    • News & Publications
    • Staff & Trustees
    • Fellowship & Awards
    • Membership
    • Rent a Conference Room
    • Hours & Directions
  • Support
    • Join, Renew, Donate
    • Planned Gifts
    • Company Sponsorships
    • Vermont Forever
    • Volunteer
  1. Home
  2. >>
  3. Educate
  4. >>
  5. In Your Classroom
  6. >>
  7. History Kits
  8. >>
  9. Archaeology Alive! Kit

Archaeology Alive! Kit

  • | Print |
  •  Email

Vermont's history from the ground up

Created as a joint project with the Vermont Division for Historic Preservation, this kit provides a unique approach to the study of archaeology. Students learn the principles of archaeology through artifacts, creative activities, games, and books that appeal to their imaginations and help them to delve into this fascinating field. Artifacts in the kit range from prehistoric stone stools to modern plastic implements. This project was generously funded by the Vermont Archaeological Society.

 Archaeology Alive! kitA comprehensive teacher’s guide that includes teaching objectives, background information, and discussion questions leads instructors step by step through all of the activities and all of the artifact-based lesson plans. The kit is arranged so that a teacher may use the entire kit to teach an archaeology unit, or may pick only one or a few activities as time, inclination, and class age permit.

Some of the activities included are:

  • The Excavating Vermont game — A bag of “artifacts” for each student launches them into this board-game archaeological dig.
  • Cultural History Mystery — study several artifacts spanning four historical eras and create theories about the education, transportation, communication, and other cultural activities followed by the people who used the items.
  • What is a Tool?— A box of artifacts that includes both Native American and modern tools helps students discover the definition of a tool, as well as how tools were developed and have evolved over time.
  • Archaeology Bingo — bingo game cards, chips, and coordinate cards that help students recreate a dig site.
  • A Rich and Ancient Heritage video and plenty of books, pamphlets, and other reading materials help to round out the comprehensive archaeology unit that teachers can create using this kit.

This kit is aligned with Vermont’s Framework of Standards, and addresses the following three core standards:

  • Standard 2.2, Problem Solving Process: Studying the past requires research and reasoning. Students are presented with artifacts and must use reason and prior knowledge to learn about the function and cultural context of the artifacts.
  • Standard 6.4, Historical Connections: The lessons and activities in Archaeology Alive! address Vermont’s history from 12,000 years ago through today.
  • Standard 6.6, Being a Historian: This kit emphasizes the use of artifacts as historical evidence. Through these lessons, students examine artifacts for cultural clues and explore archaeological principles while “excavating” a fictional site in Vermont.

All kits are available for a three-week lending period for a fee of $50.00 (round-trip shipping), $35.00 (one-way shipping) or $20.00 (you pick up at VHS). For more information see History Kits.

  • Field Trips
  • Vermont History Explorer
  • In Your Classroom
    • Vermont History Timeline
    • History Kits
      • Abenaki Kit
      • Archaeology Alive! Kit
      • Civil War Kit
      • Schooling in Early Vermont Kit
      • Village Life in Vermont Kit
    • Lending Library
      • General Vermont History
      • Era 1: Native Cultures Prior to 1609
      • Era 2: Settlement and Statehood 1609-1791
      • Era 3: Agricultural Expansion 1791-1840
      • Era 4: Economic Transitions 1840-1890
      • Era 5: Growth of Industry & Tourism 1890-1927
      • Era 6: Emergence of Modern Vermont 1927 - Present
      • Video & DVD
      • National History Day Guides & Videos
  • Vermont History Day
    • Vermont History Day Winners 2013
    • Going to National History Day
    • What's New for 2013?
    • 2013 Entry Form
    • Important Dates for 2013
    • About the State Contest
    • Information for Educators
    • Information for Students
    • Information for Homeschool Students
    • Special Prizes
    • Criteria
    • Primary Sources
    • Judges and Volunteers
    • Vermont at National History Day 2012
    • Vermont History Day 2012 photos
    • Vermont History Day Video
  • Homeschool
    • History for Homeschoolers
  • Online Resources
    • Civil War Letters
      • Elijah Brown Letters
      • Edwin Horton Letters
    • History Journals in Class
      • Part 1: Historical Journals
      • Part 2: Working with Historical Journals
      • Part 3: Classroom Journals
    • Underground Railroad Project
      • Teaching Suggestions
      • Documents
      • Essay: The Underground Railroad in Vermont
      • Essay: The Anti-Slavery Movement
      • Who's Who: Activists and Fugitives in Vermont
      • A Case Study: The Robinson Family
      • Glossary
      • Bibliography & Additional Resources
      • Vermont Timeline
      • National Timeline
      • The Black Bonnet
      • The Underground Railroad Debate
      • Colonization Movement
      • Anti-Slavery Society
    • An Era of Great Change
      • Introduction
      • Religion & Reform
      • Politics & Government
      • Work & Changing Markets
      • Transportation & Movement
      • Timeline
      • Glossary
    • The Gilded Age in Vermont
      • Bliss Letters
      • Camp Meetings
      • The Circus
      • Clemont Family Papers
      • Corn Sheller
      • Cronaca Sovversiva
      • Estey Organ
      • Railroad Map
      • Shingle
      • Sons of Vermont
      • Stereoptican
      • Thompson Diary
      • Vacuum
      • Vaudeville
    • Interactive Whiteboard Lessons
  • Professional Development Workshops
    • Old Documents, New Technology

Visit our Museum Store

visit bookstore

GraniteExh.jpg

Vermont Historical Society
60 Washington St., Barre, VT 05641
(802) 479-8500

  • directions
  • Career Opportunities
  • contact
  • sitemap

Web site sponsored by: Schultz-Blackwell Trust and   NatLife-logo