Integrating Special Collections & Archives into Learning Experiences

Integrating Special Collections & Archives into learning experiences offers the opportunity to get hands-on with books, manuscripts, and archival records: the raw ingredients of history and how we’ve interpreted the past across time.

Grounded in the Primary Source Literacy Guidelines, the education program of Special Collections & Archives emphasizes active learning for information, archival, and visual literacy.

There are infinite ways to integrate special collections materials into a classroom experience, whether exploring examples of printmaking techniques, transcribing nineteenth century correspondence to use as mapping data, or investigating the dissemination of a work of literature through the ages. The intersection of distinctive materials and intentional pedagogy offers an exciting space for collaboration. The participants in the NEH Seminar Teaching the Holocaust through Visual Culture engaged with four artist’s books and publications:

This collection of materials allowed participants to explore the pedagogical impact of close-looking and sensory experiences by engaging with Holocaust narratives in the artist’s book format. Artist’s books, as book and art objects, encourage us to think broadly about how we experience narrative and receive information.

Introduction to Artist’s Books video:

Read more about ways to integrate books and other primary source materials (whether physical or digital) into meaningful learning experiences on SC&A’s education site. The Teaching with Primary Sources Collective also offers various entry points for considering the pedagogical and practical aspects of working with sources.