Papers


1998

The Ceren Web Resource: Enabling Students to Become Anthropologists In A Virtual Site

  • Where: SIGGRAPH | proceedings of SIGGRAPH 1998 Educators Program | 1998
  • Abstract
    Using content from the University of Colorado Anthropology Department and our own knowledge of multimedia system development at the College of Architecture and Planning, we are developing interesting, informative and interactive web learning resources. Our topic: an anthropology site called Ceren, an ancient agricultural village in western El Salvador buried by volcanic ash over fourteen hundred years ago. Our goal: to create a virtual anthropology site on the web, with interactive QuickTime Virtual Reality, interactive database search tools, image applets, and detailed computer renderings of what the site may have once looked like. Currently in use by Anthropology classes at the University of Colorado, the Ceren Web Resource incorporates an array of web multimedia technology to link visual images with original excavation text, notes and discoveries. The Ceren web resource has attempted to lead the way in exploring the use of hypermedia tools in education. We aim to go beyond a tour of ancient buildings and enable students to begin to think and act like anthropologists. Using the Ceren site, students can participate in the excavation process as on location anthropologists, putting together the puzzling pieces of what ancient household life in Meso-America was truly like.
  • Authors: Jenniffer Lewin, Mark Ehrhardt, Mark D Gross
  • Related Projects: Place Maker, Ceren
Last modified: 6/3/2003 by Mark D Gross