Lewis & Clark IP

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lewisandclarkippgscrc.gifLewis & Clark The Lewis & Clark IP is an interest project from the Girl Scouts of Columbia River Council.

Skill Builders

  1. The Corp of Discovery recorded over 300 new species of plants and animals. We have become stewards of the land and creatures described in those journals.

  2. The Native American peoples of the region use pictographs in stone and totems on their boats, lodges and villages to tell tales of their family and legends.

  3. The mysterious Sacajawea. (this is the preferred spelling by Sacajawea’s decendants, the Lemhi Shosoni. Imagine being a 16 year old woman about to participate in the greatest expedition in man’s history. Then read about the contributions Sacajawea made to the expedition, how the Captains empowered her, how she took on responsibilities beyond her original assigned role. What a steadying influence she must of had on the party as she kept her cool in emergencies. I’ve come to think that the Corps would have been in dire straights more than once if Sacajawea had not been there with her skills and personal strengths.

  4. YOU ARE THERE! Was a television program with Walter Cronkite. The premise was to reenact a moment in history and ‘insert’ a television news reporter at the scene. Pretty inventive! It was very entertaining. Try out your leadership, acting, researching, arts and stage craft skills and produce either a stage play or video using this technique to make a “live report” on a few of the adventures recorded (events noted) in the Lewis and Clark journals. (Perhaps Sacajawea’s heroic saving of the journals and other light items which escaped the keelboat when it nearly flipped over...I can see the reporter now...running to her as she drags the bundles to shore....”Sacajawea, tell our viewers, how on Earth did you manage......” or any of the other many exciting events that are recorded in the journals).

  5. Think about casting the expedition your self either in the same era or out in the future say the 23rd century exploring an Earth like planet.

  6. Read portions of the journals from the expedition. Think about the members of the Corp of Discovery in a different era participating in a similar expedition. Say as astronauts exploring a new world, or aquanauts exploring the ocean floor, getting into similar tight spots. Use your communication skills to write a story, play or your own version of their journals to record their discoveries, trials and successes, keeping in mind the directives given them by President Jefferson.

  7. In 1803 President Thomas Jefferson commissioned Meriwether Lewis to lead an expedition to explore and map the uncharted western areas of North America as far as the Pacific Ocean. This expedition embodied a spirit of adventure, curiosity and exploration that is as exciting today as it was 200 years ago. The journey that Lewis and Clark made in the early 1800’s would be similar to an “extreme adventure” by today’s standards. To capture that spirit use your leadership and planning skills and design your own expedition or “extreme adventure” to an unknown place. Choose a place that you have never visited, but would love to explore. Check out the National Geographic Adventure magazine web site: [WWW]http://www.nationalgeographic.com/expeditions/activities . After exploring this site, try to think of an extreme adventure of your own.

Technology

  1. Consider the Leave No Trace Ethic (to learn more about it go to www.lnt.org) and apply it to the impact left by the Corps of Discovery. What technologies could you use today to gather the same information and have less of an impact on the lands and creatures encountered by the Corps?

  2. Learn about the scientific tools taken on the expedition and what they were used for.

  3. Did you know that Lewis & Clark have been in space and under the sea?

  4. Lewis used the technique called dead reckoning to create his maps.

Service Projects

  1. Make a timeline for the expedition. Illustrate it with pictures from the Internet or magazines. Share it with a younger troop to get them excited about the Lewis and Clark Expedition.

  2. Learn about ecology projects going on in your area and assist in a clean up or stream restoration.

  3. Find out about local Lewis and Clark Bicentennial observances. Volunteer to assist at the event. Check out Lewis & Clark Bicentennial in Oregon website www.LCBO.net for listings of upcoming events or execdir@lcbo.net (Barbara Allen) to see if she can link you up with organizers so you can assist as a volunteer at the event(s).

  4. Create a puppet show or play based on the native legends you learned about or read about Seaman, Lewis’s Newfoundland dog and create a puppet show or play for Brownies expanding on the journey from his point of view (he had many “adventures”. Get some ideas by reading “Seaman-The Dog Who Explored the West with Lewis and Clark” by Gail Langer Karwosk, PeachTree Publishing, “The Captain’s Dog: My Journey with the Lewis and Clark Tribe” by Roland Smith, Gulliver Books or “The Dog who Helped Explore America” by R.W. Gustafson. Here’s an idea, go to www.nps.gov/jeff/LewisClark2/Education/Lewis&ClarkFestival/ and explore. They have some great projects that show how to make puppets, puppet stages and even a moving panorama that you could use with your project.

  5. Share your “You Are There” episode with younger girl scouts or a grade or middle school class studying Lewis and Clark. Contact your local grade or middle school principal and ask permission to present the idea to the appropriate teachers.

  6. Compile a listing of your favorite web sites and books you discovered during your journey into the story of the expedition. Share this collection with Brownie or Junior Girl Scouts as they work on their own Lewis and Clark Try-it or Badge.

Career Exploration

  1. Go on line and learn more about modern explorer careers with NOAA and NASA.

  2. Lewis had to draw his maps using “dead reckoning”. Learn what tools are used today to map the earth. Learn more about careers in mapping and surveying, not only on earth but also out in space and distant galaxies.

  3. Lewis not only had to map their journey, but he also made observations about the plants and animals they discovered. Check out careers in botany and biology. Do you think there are still new species to discover?

  4. Learn what careers are available in the realm of ecology.

  5. Explore the USGS.gov web site. Look at the career opportunities described there. Investigate what education or life experiences are required for those positions.

  6. And lets not forget the historians. How has their work clarified or clouded our interpretation of what the journey was like? And who the people were. Explore the roll of historians in the 21st century. How does ‘point of view’ color the way a history is written? Are Historians just reporters of events or are they mystery sleuths? Explain or give examples of your answer.

  7. Visit one of the many Lewis and Clark interpretive centers or reenactment sites. Interview a Ranger or reenactor. Learn what type of education is required. What drew them to do their job? What does their job entail?

See also

List of Council's Own Interest Projects

External Links

[WWW]Council's Own Awards - Columbia River Council
[WWW]Lewis & Clark IP

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