Shumla School Join Participate Discover Experience Imagine
Home | Site Map | Slide Shows
 
Taking place now
    Click on pictures to enlarge.
 
Dr. Dering discusses useful plant.
Dr. Phil Dering discusses plants and how Native Americans used them.
 
Learning about spears
Students learn how spears were used to obtain food.
 
Using lechugilla fiber to make bracelets
Brenda Norman shows how to use cordage made from lechugilla to make bracelets.
 
making bracelets
Students learn about flint knapping from Steve Norman.
 
rock art with prehistoric paints
Tonda Harrup describes how various tribes adapted natural items for use.
 
Learning how to make fire
Neal demonstrates how to start a fire without matches.
 
Painting rocks
Students learning how to make paint from plant materials, fat, and minerals.
 
Throwing a spear
Throwing a spear with an atlatl.
 
Learning about flint knapping
Participants learn about making stone tools.
 
Making a bracelet
Making cordage from lechuguilla fibers to make a bracelet.
 
starting a fire without matches
Students practice fire starting using friction.
 
using a mortar and pestle
Participants, students and teachers, before they leave for home.
 

Pecos Day Camp
February 7, 2005


Location
The Pecos Day Camp activities were held on the SHUMLA campus and on the Shumla Ranch, 50 miles west of Del Rio, Texas.

Instructors
SHUMLA instructors included artist/archeologist
Dr. Carolyn Boyd, specialist in Native American lifeways Tonda Harrup, outdoor education specialist Neal Stilley, archeologist/botanist Dr. Phil Dering, artist and renowned flintknapper Steve Norman, rancher Jack Harrington, volunteer artisan Brenda Norman, and educator Missy Harrington.

Activities
On February 7, 2005, approximately ninety 5th grade students and teachers from Seco Mines Elementary in Eagle Pass, Texas attended a full-day Shumla Survivors program at the SHUMLA campus.  Using archeology as a foundation for teaching math and science skills, SHUMLA provided hands-on opportunities for enhancing classroom lessons. Students were divided into five groups, the Bear Clan, the Deer Clan, the Hawk Clan, the Wolf Clan and the Panther Clan. Upon their arrival at SHUMLA each clan was directed to its first station to begin a rotation of lessons and demonstrations. These stations included:

  • Paint Making Experiment: Dr. Carolyn Boyd led students in a hands-on experiment replicating prehistoric paint making and discussed how art was used in prehistory to communicate information necessary for survival.
  • Stone Tools: Steve Norman demonstrated for students flint knapping techniques used by early hunters.
  • Native American Lifeways: Tonda Harrup showcased Native American tools, baskets, gourds, and furs, and discussed how different tribes adapted them for their particular cultures. She invited students to inspect her own personal lodging facilities for the week she spent at Shumla....her tipi.
  • Lechugilla—Food and Fiber: Brenda Norman showed cordage techniques to students and directed the students' efforts to produce their own lechugilla bracelets and necklaces.
  • May the Force be with You, The Atlatl Advantage:  Jack and Missy Harrington directed students in the use of the atlatl for spear throwing and students calculated their distances.
  • The Adaptation Station: Dr. Phil Dering instructed students in plant adaptations and the techniques that Native Americans used for processing them for food and fiber.
  • Friction Fire Starting: Neal Stilley used primitive fire starting techniques to teach about energy forms and transfer of energy.

Volunteers
Programs at SHUMLA are made possible through the help of our volunteers. This program's volunteer leaders were Brenda Norman, Al and Nancy Morgan, Sally Finkelstein, Jane Morain, and Terry Burgess.

Cost
This program was underwritten by a gift to SHUMLA from an individual donation. Additional funding was made available through the Title V Program administered by Sul Ross State University — Rio Grande College in Del Rio.

Information
For more information contact the education division at education@shumla.org or call the office at
432-292-4848.

 

 

Youth Programs
Overview & Program Goals
Pecos River Kids Curriculum
Pecos River Kids Adventure Camps
Pecos River Kids Day Camps
Pecos Teacher Training Camps
Field Programs
Shumla Adventures
A Typical Day in Shumla Adventures
Past Programs

Relive the Adventures

 
           
© 2003–present, Shumla School, Inc. All rights reserved.   |   PO Box 627, Comstock, TX 78837
Tel: 432-292-4848   |   E-mail: info@shumla.org