If Lewis and Clark were making the trip today, their journals would be on a laptop and their Internet map coordinates would be checked using a GPS hand-held unit. Two hundred years ago Jefferson and the nation thought the explorers were lost; today their cell phones would keep them in constant communication with White House operators.
Lewis and Clark, with minimal advance education and training, classified and drew detailed pictures of 300 flora and fauna never before seen by white American citizens living east of the Mississippi River. They practiced anthropology skills by recording details of Indian tribes they met, including basic language structure. They monitored weather patterns, described geological formations and recorded all these data and drew their maps using quill pens that had to be dipped in ink for every other word using notebooks that had to be safely protected from canoe spills. Instead of "select all" and "copy," they often hand-duplicated each other's journal entries as backups in case tragedy befell the original set. And, yes, they really needed Spell Checker, relying instead on phonetics since there was no standardized dictionary readily available at the time.
Students and teachers were invited to join a modern-day community of learners to update the journals of Lewis and Clark's 28-month trip.
Teachers and students from 16 communities were the first to make contributions to the "Journal Update" project during school year 1999-2000 and they continued to make refinements during school year 2000-2001. The topics they chose and the communities where they live include:
Across the Continent: The Transportation of Lewis and Clark and the Corps of Discovery
Kimberly Middle School
Kimberly, ID
Animals & Plants of the Bitterroot/Clearwater-area (The Kamiah Corps of Rediscovery)
Kamiah Middle School
Kamiah, ID
The Chinook Tribe, Then and Now
Edwards Elementary School
Newberg, OR
End of the Trail: Fort Clatsop area
John Jacob Astor Elementary School
Astoria, OR
The Lolo Trail
Elmendorf Air Force Base
Anchorage, Alaska
Mapping Perspective
Will James Middle School
Billings, MT
Meeting the Lemhi Shoshone
Big Valley Elementary School
Rupert
Murals
Lewis and Clark Elementary School
Missoula, MT
Nez Perce Appaloosa Horses
Merlo Station High School
Beaverton, OR
Plants of the Lower Columbia
Harriet Tubman Middle School
Portland, OR
The Rivers & Streams of Montana named by the Expedition
Smith School Intermediate Montessori Class
Helena, MT
Sacajawea
St. John-Endicott High School
St. John, WA
The Teton Incident: Teton Sioux Tribe
Roncalli High School
Aberdeen, SD
Travellers Rest Campsite
Florence Carlton School
Florence, MT
Western Red Cedar
Astoria Middle School
Astoria, OR
Wishram, Washington
Wishram Elementary School
Wishram, Washington
Lewis and Clark's Expedition · The Legacy Grows: Lewis and Clark's Garden · Student Projects (Teach Lewis and Clark)
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This document's URL is: http://www.nwrel.org/teachlewisandclark/index.html © 2001 Northwest Regional Educational Laboratory
Date of Last Update: 2/21/2006 |