Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

Teaching about Genocide: Insights and Advice from Secondary Teachers and Professors [Pehme köide]

Edited by
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 240 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 221x152x19 mm, kaal: 358 g
  • Sari: Teaching about Genocide
  • Ilmumisaeg: 13-Dec-2018
  • Kirjastus: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
  • ISBN-10: 1475847513
  • ISBN-13: 9781475847512
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 240 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 221x152x19 mm, kaal: 358 g
  • Sari: Teaching about Genocide
  • Ilmumisaeg: 13-Dec-2018
  • Kirjastus: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
  • ISBN-10: 1475847513
  • ISBN-13: 9781475847512
This book presents the insights, advice and suggestions of secondary level teachers and professors in relation to teaching about various facets of genocide. The contributions are extremely eclectic, ranging from the basic concerns when teaching about genocide to a discussion as to why it is critical to teach students about more general human rights violations during a course on genocide, and from a focus on specific cases of genocide to various pedagogical strategies ideal for teaching about genocide.

Arvustused

Totten's Teaching about Genocide provides insights and advice from secondary teachers and professors, many with decades of teaching experience, not to mention writings touching on every major identified genocide. Key is the volumes interdisciplinary, as well as multinational approach. The time-deprived educator will find abundant strategies, caveats, and electronic resource possibilities. Significantly, political will is contrasted with political wont, as students are encouraged to become constructive activists in an age of genocides. -- William Younglove, Holocaust Studies Instructor, California State University Long Beach A much-needed and extraordinarily useful resource, Teaching about Genocide: Insights and Advice from Secondary Teachers and Professors will provide educators with well-reasoned and experienced based information on teaching about genocide. Drawing upon the expertise of both secondary and college and university professors, this impressive work examines rationales for teaching about genocide and offers practical pedagogical strategies from a variety of academic disciplines and geographical locations. The importance of this issue demands a timely and powerful resource such as this book. -- Stephen Feinberg, former Director of National Outreach, Education Division, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

Acknowledgments ix
Introduction xi
Samuel Totten
Part I Insights and Advice from Secondary Level Teachers
1 Student as Worker in Coming to Understand Modern Genocide: From KWL to Stanton's Ten Stages to Case Studies to Engaging in a Debate
3(10)
Keith Eaton
2 Challenging or Passively Accepting Questionable Authority
13(4)
Jamie Allen
3 The Power of Story: Teaching about Genocide through Literature Circles
17(6)
Kelley Szany
4 Reader as Witness: Introducing Students to Genocide through Literature
23(11)
Sarah J. Donovan
5 Unsettling Narratives: Teaching about the Genocide of Indigenous Peoples in North America
34(10)
George Dalbo
6 Teaching the Armenian Genocide in a Nation Whose Government Refuses to Acknowledge It
44(11)
Mark Gudgel
7 Flora's Journey: Teaching the Cultural Events and Significance of the Armenian Genocide
55(10)
Brent Beerman
8 Using Rebecca Tinsley's When the Stars Fall to Earth in the Classroom to Teach about the Darfur Genocide
65(11)
Kimberly Klett
9 Simplicity and Comdexity
76(5)
Mary Lee Webeck
Part II Insights and Advice from Professors
10 At the Threshold of Genocide Studies: On Not Being a Gatekeeper
81(6)
Andrew Woolford
11 Teaching Ten Stages of Genocide
87(16)
Gregory H. Stanton
12 The Three "Ds" of Teaching History: A Focus on Genocide
103(4)
Khatchig Mouradian
13 Teaching about Genocide: Three Major Pedagogical Issues Worthy of Serious Consideration by Teachers
107(6)
Rubina Peroomian
14 Incorporating the Issue of Genocide into History Courses: Enlightenment and Mobilization
113(10)
John Hubbel Weiss
15 Toward a Critical Pedagogy for Genocide Education
123(12)
James G. Brown
16 Teaching about the Bosnian Genocide
135(10)
Fred P. Cocozzelli
17 Teaching about Genocide Using Documentary Photographs
145(8)
Adam Muller
18 A Focus on the Prevention of Genocide
153(6)
Agnieszka Biericzyk-Missala
19 Educating the Military and Others: Building the Basis for Effective Atrocity Prevention
159(10)
David S. Frey
20 Teaching Complexity via Documentaries: Trauma and Co-existence after Genocide in Rwanda
169(9)
Gerise Herndon
21 Acts of Loving Kindness: Genocide Education in Cambodia
178(9)
Theresa de Langis
Select Annotated Bibliography 187(24)
About the Editor 211(4)
About the Authors 215
Samuel Totten a longtime scholar of genocide studies and retired professor (University of Arkansas, Fayetteville), is the author of Teaching About Crimes Against Humanity and Genocide: Fundamental Issues and Approaches (Information Age Publishing, 2018). Over the past fourteen years he has conducted field work into crimes against humanity and genocide in the refugee camps along the Chad/Darfur, Sudan border, and in the Nuba Mountains of Sudan.