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Berchini, Christina – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2016
This research is situated in second-wave White Teacher Identity studies and investigates the ways context structures a high school English teacher's white identity, practices, and race-consciousness. Working with detailed data and vignettes from a single case study, the author highlights the teaching of a unit on the Holocaust. Using the required…
Descriptors: Context Effect, Consciousness Raising, Race, Secondary School Teachers
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Leyman, Tamsin; Harris, Richard – Teaching History, 2013
Why do we teach about the Holocaust and about other genocides? The Holocaust has been a compulsory part of the English National Curriculum since 1991; however, curriculum documents say little about why pupils should learn about the Holocaust or about what they should learn. Tamsin Leyman and Richard Harris decided to use the opportunity presented…
Descriptors: Death, Victims of Crime, Debate, Controversial Issues (Course Content)
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Pérez de Miles, Adetty; Peck, Scott – Art Education, 2017
Linda Stein created a series of artwork entitled "Holocaust Heroes: Fierce Females" (H2F2) in response to her experiences during the attacks on the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001. The body of work centers around 10 mixed media tapestries that depict different female heroes from the Holocaust. This article explores the idea of…
Descriptors: Creativity, Art Products, Artists, Civil Rights
Cathryn van Kessel Ed.; Kimberly Edmondson Ed. – Teachers College Press, 2024
In this collection, scholars from the United States, Canada, and Australia examine the concepts of villainification and anti-villainification in social studies curriculum and popular culture, as well as within broader sociocultural contexts. Villainification is the process of identifying an individual or a small group of individuals as the sole…
Descriptors: Political Issues, Social Studies, Popular Culture, Cultural Influences
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Hughes, Erika – Research in Drama Education, 2018
This article offers a discussion of two interactive museum installations, 'Remembering the Children: Daniel's Story' at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, DC, and the main exhibit at the Humanity House Museum in the Hague, Netherlands. Both are examples of what I term "self-guided dramas," taking the…
Descriptors: Trauma, Museums, Exhibits, Drama
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Gubkin, Liora – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2015
A commitment to empathetic understanding shaped the field of religious studies; although subject to critique, it remains an important teaching practice where students are charged with the task of recognizing, and perhaps even appreciating, a worldview that appears significantly different from their own. However, when the focus of the course is…
Descriptors: Jews, Death, War, European History
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Suissa, Judith – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2016
A great deal of philosophical work has explored the complex conceptual intersection between ethics and epistemology in the context of issues of testimony and belief, and much of this work has significant educational implications. In this paper, I discuss a troubling example of a case of testimony that seems to pose a problem for some established…
Descriptors: Death, Jews, European History, Educational Philosophy
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Brand, Noreen B. – Journal of Museum Education, 2013
The Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center (IHMEC) strives to engage youth as citizens through "Make a Difference! The Harvey L. Miller Family Youth Exhibition." Teaching about the Holocaust is complex and challenging work. Holocaust education is mandated in Illinois elementary and high schools, yet the Museum finds that many…
Descriptors: Museums, Jews, European History, War
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Ragland, Rachel G.; Rosenstein, Daniel – Social Studies, 2014
This article addresses how far educational institutions have come in designing authentic and meaningful curricula for teaching the Holocaust at the secondary level. Examined in this article are the historical development of Holocaust education in the United States, with a focus on the state of Illinois as a case study, what contributes to the…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Secondary School Curriculum, Curriculum Development, Educational History
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Jordine, Melissa – International Journal of ePortfolio, 2015
California State University, Fresno is currently considering implementing an ePortfolio requirement for all undergraduate students. The ePortfolio requirement would be introduced primarily to engage students in a HIP (high impact practice) but would also be used for assessment purposes. As a faculty member and a member of the CSU Fresno ePortfolio…
Descriptors: Electronic Publishing, Portfolios (Background Materials), Undergraduate Students, Museums
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Spidal, Debra F. – Journal of Academic Librarianship, 2012
Holocaust denial literature has been treated inconsistently in library collections. At one time Holocaust denial literature was classed and subject headings assigned with Holocaust literature. After specific Library of Congress classification numbers and subject headings for Holocaust denial and Holocaust denial literature became available in the…
Descriptors: Research Libraries, Library Materials, Classification, Indexing
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Dietsch, Johan – European Education, 2012
The article examines how Ukrainian history textbooks dealt with the Holocaust between independence and 2006. The analysis reveals two major, conflicting narratives about the Holocaust, though both externalize and relativize the Holocaust. As a template for understanding genocide, the Holocaust was applied to the Soviet-imposed 1932-33 famine in…
Descriptors: Jews, Foreign Countries, Death, Historians
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Goldberg, Tsafrir – Theory and Research in Social Education, 2017
This study explores the applicability of psychoanalytic trauma-centered perspectives and social psychological intergroup comparison perspectives to difficult histories of the Israeli context. The study describes 2 test cases of difficult histories in the Jewish-Israeli context at the levels of curriculum policy, teachers, and learners. The first…
Descriptors: Trauma, Psychiatry, Risk, Social Psychology
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Kuehl, Rachelle – Reading Horizons, 2021
Immersion in fiction narratives like Alan Gratz's (2017) "Refugee" can help students recognize and acknowledge our common humanity when discussed in a dialogic classroom using a critical literacy pedagogy. Following the literature on using novel discussions to help students understand pressing societal issues (e.g., Boas, 2012; Hsieh,…
Descriptors: Fiction, Refugees, Dialogs (Language), Teaching Methods
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Hilton, Laura J. – History Teacher, 2021
The aim of this article is to examine the frameworks that educators use, especially how they conclude teaching and learning about genocide, and to suggest readings and other sources for use. The narrative arc that educators establish by choosing where to begin and where to end is a powerful indicator of their course goals and teaching rationales.…
Descriptors: War, Death, History Instruction, Memory
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