When Students Rewrite History: A Twistory Project for Schools, Museums, and Archives

A. Knüsel
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Abstract

Twistory (twitter + history) projects encourage creativity and critical thinking by allowing students to research topics they are interested in and turning them into digital timelines. This article describes a twistory project that was created as a collaborative project between a Swiss public secondary school, a museum, and an archive. The project tries to make history come alive for students by turning them into historians, allowing them to research museum objects or archival documents and writing historical narratives about them. Their findings are uploaded in chronological order onto social media with corresponding blogs on the school’s website, resulting in a digital timeline that consists of historical narratives of museum objects and archival records written by students. The article explains how the project works; how the collaboration between the school, museum, and archive developed; and how each institution benefits from such a project. Twistory projects are exciting new ways for museums to engage with students and participate in digitized culture. They also turn students into storytellers and history detectives. They learn how museums and archives work and how to deal with primary sources, do research, write academic papers, and present their work to a public audience. Furthermore, students realize that “history” is not a definitive story that has already been written but that there is an infinite number of fascinating “histories”—depending on the sources considered and the questions asked.
当学生重写历史:学校、博物馆和档案馆的一个曲折项目
Twistory (twitter +历史)项目允许学生研究他们感兴趣的主题,并将其转化为数字时间轴,从而鼓励创造力和批判性思维。这篇文章描述了一个曲折的项目,它是瑞士公立中学、博物馆和档案馆之间的合作项目。该项目试图让学生成为历史学家,让他们研究博物馆文物或档案文件,并撰写有关它们的历史叙述,从而使历史栩栩如生。他们的发现按时间顺序上传到社交媒体上,并在学校网站上发布相应的博客,从而形成一个数字时间轴,由博物馆物品的历史叙述和学生撰写的档案记录组成。这篇文章解释了这个项目是如何工作的;学校、博物馆和档案馆之间的合作是如何发展的;以及每个机构如何从这样一个项目中受益。Twistory项目是博物馆与学生互动并参与数字化文化的令人兴奋的新方式。他们还把学生变成了故事讲述者和历史侦探。他们学习博物馆和档案馆是如何工作的,以及如何处理第一手资料,做研究,写学术论文,并向公众展示他们的工作。此外,学生们意识到,“历史”并不是一个已经写好的确定的故事,而是有无数迷人的“历史”,这取决于所考虑的来源和所提出的问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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