Introduction and Week 1!
Hi there!
My name is Sarah, I am a history major and a Junior at the University of Central Florida, and I want to welcome you to my journey through my internship at Osceola History’s Pioneer Village at Shingle Creek.
I have been interested in living history since I was a child. Growing up in Wichita, Kansas I was extremely lucky to have the chance to volunteer and then later work at an incredible living history institution: Old Cowtown Museum. This is where I truly fell in love with history and the idea of developing ways to get kids like me, more involved and excited about the past. I helped with school groups, tours, and learned so many tools to help me in the development of museum education programs later in my career. In addition to my interests in creating and implementing education programs, I also have a love of food history and find myself gravitating towards historical cookbooks and cooking technologies whenever I get the chance. Working at a living history museum meant learning how to cook, and thus I learned how to cook and bake on a wood-burning stove and over an open fire before I became proficient at cooking in a modern kitchen.
When I was accepted into UCF, I knew that the first thing I wanted to do was get involved in the local public history community. After speaking to a couple professors, I applied for, and was given, an internship with Osceola History as a Museum Education intern. This opportunity gives me the ability to work on a project that I find myself being excited by more and more every single day.
When I first met up with the Experience and Engagement Director, he took me on a tour of the Osceola History’s Welcome Center where I learned about the era of Florida history I would be focusing on; roughly from the 15thcentury to the beginning of the 20th century. Then, we made the trek over to the actual living history part of the museum: Pioneer Village at Shingle Creek. I had a tour of the buildings and was very excited to see that many of the artifacts I was familiar with from my time at Cowtown! As I begin my work for this museum, I feel prepared and I hope that my background knowledge of this time period will assist in my creation of engaging topics that students will appreciate and enjoy.
Due to the current pandemic, the traditional methods of museum education and the possibility of field trip programs, as they have previously been done, are not able to be offered right now. Many museums have begun to create alternative distance learning curriculum and programs for students to learn about their local history and what local museums offer. My internship project will be to create just this, focused on the sites at Pioneer Village and the local history surrounding the interpretation of said sites. I will be focusing my project on the State Standards for 4th grade social studies and history course but I hope to bring in aspects of other subjects in as well. I want to create an interesting and accessible lesson that any student will enjoy no matter how they are being affected by the current constraints on education. I am a firm believer in the idea that learning about history should be fun and I hope to bring that excitement to the classroom for everyone, wherever that may be.
















