teaching teens with rare books

12
Eileen M. Bentsen & Jennifer Borderud Baylor University Libraries

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Presentation by Eileen M. BentsenAssociate Librarian, Reference & Instruction Baylor University Jesse H. Jones Library from the WESS Classical Medieval Renaissance Discussion Group Midwinter Meeting in San Diego (January 2011)

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Teaching teens with rare books

Eileen M. Bentsen & Jennifer Borderud

Baylor University Libraries

Page 2: Teaching teens with rare books

Opportunity #1

• Live Oak

Classical School

•29 students,

grades 9 - 11

• Mss to print

culture focus

• Extensive

planning

2

Page 3: Teaching teens with rare books

Opportunity #2

•Texas Christian

Academy

• Materials in

support of Latin

classes

•25 students,

grades 7 – 10

•Very impromptu

preparation (<24

hours)

3

Page 4: Teaching teens with rare books

Content

• actively engage

•Relevant to class

content

• What’s “rare”

• Experience rules

of a rare books

library

•Scriptorium”

experience (Live

Oak)

•Digital impact4

Page 5: Teaching teens with rare books

Challenges

• actively engaging

• large group –

small room;

divided groups

•“scriptorium”

content

•Students’ age

range

• short lead time

for TCA

5

Page 6: Teaching teens with rare books

• asked what

students wanted to

see

• asked that classes

view “Mr. Bean Goes

to the Library” on

YouTube

• asked instructor to

explain rare book

room use rules to

class

Live Oak - Prep

6

Page 7: Teaching teens with rare books

Scriptorium

• What makes for “rare”

discussion

• Viewed section of B. J.

Muir’s “Making of a

Medieval Manuscript”

(Evellum, 2008)

• Practice in uncial

script

(www.learncalligraphy.

co.uk/uncial.html)

• Held in seminar room7

Page 8: Teaching teens with rare books

•Chosen because

already digitized

•Discussed similarities

with mss

• Latin terminology for

mss & incunabula

• Translation

• Held in Fine Arts

Library Seminar Room

Latin Text

8

Page 9: Teaching teens with rare books

Asked students to

see what they could

make of this

sentence of the book.

Translation

9

Page 10: Teaching teens with rare books

Pleasant Surprises

• pride/respect

towards materials

• interest in topic

• bring cataloging

into the classroom

• applications of

languages beyond

their classroom

• Latin knowledge

increased interest

10

Page 11: Teaching teens with rare books

Three questions:What did you like bestName something you learned from the visitWhat was the least interesting part of the visit

Sent almost 2 months after visit Muir’s video was least liked item for the Live

Oak students; translating portion for the TCA students

Both favored the display of the mss and facsimiles

Liked and/or asked for interactive work11

Page 12: Teaching teens with rare books

12