Fourth grade archeologists dig for buried treasure

MILLBROOK— As part of their study of ancient civilizations, the Dutchess Day School’s fourth grade participates in an interactive, hands-on learning archeology experience. 

Two weeks ago, the young scholars went with their teacher into the woods that are part of the school’s property. Directed to designated “dig sites,” the students used delicate sticks and brushes to uncover buried “artifacts”— namely, pots they had decorated a few weeks before and that their teacher had artificially “aged” (by smashing them into pieces) and buried. 

Krista Hendrickson, fourth-grade teacher, said she scattered the pieces, with a mind to the way, in real-time, the settling of the earth over the eons disperses buried items. Some small parts of each pot she also held back, to mimic the very real scenario that most ancient artifacts, even when found by archeologists, are never 100 percent recovered. 

Students, working either alone or in teams, cleaned and carefully transported their fragments back to the classroom where they painstakingly tried to piece them back together into a semblance of the original whole. The designs they had painted on the pots helped with this. 

When they are finished and have put their archeological finds on display, the students will write news articles, complete with interviews of the other “field scholars,” about the experience.

 

Vanessa Park is director of development,  alumni affairs and communications at Dutchess Day School.

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