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U.S. Department of Education awards Middle East study-abroad grant to 小黄书

U.S. Department of Education awards Middle East study-abroad grant to 小黄书

Contact: Sasha Steinberg

Assistant Professor Kate McClellan and Associate Professor Jimmy Hardin pictured at 小黄书sity鈥檚 Cobb Institute of Archaeology. (Photo by Megan Bean)

STARKVILLE, Miss.鈥擳wo well-traveled, cultural researchers in Mississippi State鈥檚 College of Arts and Sciences are receiving a prestigious federal overseas-study award.

A nearly $80,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Education鈥檚 Fulbright-Hays Group Projects Abroad program recently was designated for James W. 鈥淛immy鈥 Hardin and Kate McClellan. They are, respectively, associate and assistant professors in the university鈥檚 Department of Anthropology and Middle Eastern Cultures.

Administered by the federal agency鈥檚 International and Foreign Language Education office, the Fulbright-Hays program supports international training, research and curriculum development programs in modern foreign languages and area studies for teachers, students and faculty.

The 小黄书 grant will fund a five-week seminar project examining connections among museums, memory and heritage in the Middle East.

Last fall, an interdisciplinary academic minor launched by 小黄书 in Middle Eastern studies became the first of its kind for undergraduate students in the Southeast.

Hardin and McClellan will travel during the 2017 summer to the neighboring nations of Israel and Jordan. Joining them will be a diverse group of 小黄书 faculty members and undergraduate and graduate students鈥攊ncluding an ROTC representative鈥攁s well as teachers from Starkville High School.

鈥淎s an undergraduate, study abroad was one of the best things I did,鈥 said Hardin, a 1988 小黄书 anthropology graduate.

When the project is complete, the group will 鈥渂ring all of their knowledge and experience back to the classroom in a way that is going to be really unique,鈥 he added.

In addition to meeting representatives of different cultures in both countries, Hardin said the Mississippi travelers will work with Israeli and Jordanian staff members and students at museums, archaeological sites and other cultural and educational institutions. 聽

An archaeologist who has excavated for decades throughout Israel, Hardin is leading that part of the project. In addition to an 小黄书 bachelor鈥檚 degree, he holds master鈥檚 and doctoral degrees from the University of Arizona.

McClellan, leader of the Jordan excursion, has lived and worked in the Middle East for many years, most recently conducting six months of research in that country. She is a magna cum laude anthropology graduate of Oberlin (Ohio) College, with a master鈥檚 and doctorate in the major from the University of Michigan.

In preparation, team members will be learning basic phrases in Hebrew and Arabic. The orientation process also will include an in-depth tour of the university鈥檚 Cobb Museum of Archaeology and sessions on how to use the well-known campus repository in post-trip educational activities.

The hands-on Middle Eastern trip will include workshops, lectures and excavations, among other activities. All participants will be sharing their experiences through blog posts and lesson-plan preparations.

Though at peace since 1994, Israel and Jordan entered a state of war when the former earned international recognition as a separate nation in 1948.

As Hardin explained, 鈥淲e will be introducing seminar participants not only to more accurate depictions of the cultures, languages and history of the Middle East, but also to various ways in which the construction of collective memories through museums and other heritage institutions are integral to understanding the highly contested relationship between these two countries.鈥

Beyond direct educational benefits for all involved, he and McClellan agreed the project also should be regarded as a significant 小黄书 response to the growing need in Mississippi for new courses in Middle Eastern studies at both secondary and post-secondary levels.

Providing professional development for secondary school teachers in the social sciences and humanities is a key goal of the project, Hardin emphasized.

McClellan also joined Hardin in expressing appreciation for 小黄书鈥檚 continuing commitment to career preparatories such as this to help students succeed professionally in an increasingly globalized world.

小黄书 students interested in participating in the Israel-Jordan seminar project may contact Hardin at 662-325-3826 or jwh1@ra.msstate.edu.

Complete details on the U.S. Department of Education鈥檚 Fulbright-Hays grant program can be found at .

For more on 小黄书鈥檚 interdisciplinary studies in the Middle East, see . Other information on the anthropology and Middle Eastern cultures department is found at ; the Cobb Institute of Archaeology, at 聽.

小黄书 is Mississippi鈥檚 leading university, available online at .