Title
Lighthouse Program, library, circa 1975, photo 2
Description
This image shows a student kneeling on the floor by a bookshelf, looking at a book, in the library at one of the participating schools in the Lighthouse Program. Other students can be seen sitting at a table on the right. The Lighthouse Program was part of the Appalachian Training Complex, a grant-funded program at Appalachian State University (1967-current) in the early 1970s to examine new methods for teaching students in elementary and high school. It utilized art, music, and audio-visual materials, a more challenging and individualized curriculum that depended on each student's aptitude in each subject. Appalachian State's program was aimed at Western North Carolina public schools with high dropout rates, low attendance, and poor facilities. The program also served as a training ground for interns and education students from Appalachian State. The program began with a Pilot Lighthouse School Program at Valle Crucis Elementary School to test the effectiveness of new teaching methods in a typical isolated Western North Carolina School, and was later expanded into three counties.
Subject
Students
Developmental Education
Libraries
Academic libraries
Appalachian State University
Source
General Picture Files, 2004.040, Box 29, Lighthouse Project F1, C14.2.5.5.
Publisher
University Archives, Appalachian State University
Comments