Albuquerque Journal

MIAC puts curriculum on tribes online

Range of lessons target kindergart­en through 8th-grade students

- BY ADRIAN GOMEZ JOURNAL ARTS EDITOR

Each year, the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs’ Wonder on Wheels mobile museum travels through the state. A special curriculum is developed by the one museum with the Wonder on Wheels, which then goes out to communitie­s far and wide.

With students out for the summer, parents and teachers may find that many of the state’s museums have an online component to it.

“We’ve been in the process of getting materials online for the public to use,” says Daniel Zillmann, director of communicat­ions and marketing for DCA. “These are important tools.”

Take for instance, the Museum of Indian Arts & Culture in Santa Fe.

The museum has put its 116page curriculum for “Indigenous

New Mexico — Sharing the Wonders of Our World!” online and available for download. It is at indianarts­andculture.org/wonderon-wheels-curriculum.

The packet includes informatio­n and educationa­l lessons to provide background on the following Southwest land-based tribes: Apache tribal communitie­s, Navajo Nation, and Pueblo communitie­s — and features a total of 24 tribes.

According to MIAC, the curriculum packet is intended as a pre-visit companion to the WOW mobile exhibit, which has been developed around essential areas that are important to the three land-based tribal groups: Plants and Foods (corn and yucca; Navajo textiles/dyes); Clothing (Apache, Pueblo and Navajo); Musical Instrument­s (drums and rattles); Art (Apache and Pueblo pottery; Navajo textiles); and Hunting Tools (bow & arrow, atlatl and rabbit sticks).

According to MIAC, the educationa­l lessons target kindergart­en through 8th-grade students and are tailored to address New Mexico State Content Standards, Common Core and Next Generation Science Standards, which focus on the following content areas: Social Studies, Language Arts, Reading, History, Geography,

Mathematic­s and Science.

The packet also features background informatio­n on the 24 tribes in New Mexico.

“There are three Apache tribal groups (Mescalero, Fort Sill and Jicarilla), the Navajo Nation, and 19 New Mexico Pueblos.

One additional Pueblo is included in this document, Ysleta del Sur, located on the border between New Mexico and Texas, near El Paso,” the MIAC document said. “While related through kinship, clans and language groups, each of these tribes has its own distinctiv­e traditions and ways of knowing the world. What complement­s them is the notion of their core values that are embedded in daily ways of living. While each tribe has a set of core values that embodies who they are as the principal people residing in the places they call home, the shared core values are common to all three tribal groups.”

 ?? COURTESY OF MUSEUM OF INDIAN ARTS & CULTURE ?? The traditiona­l uses of the buffalo are included in “Indigenous New Mexico — Sharing the Wonders of Our World!” Another page asks students to identify the parts of a corn plant. The curriculum also features general informatio­n on pueblo pottery.
COURTESY OF MUSEUM OF INDIAN ARTS & CULTURE The traditiona­l uses of the buffalo are included in “Indigenous New Mexico — Sharing the Wonders of Our World!” Another page asks students to identify the parts of a corn plant. The curriculum also features general informatio­n on pueblo pottery.
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