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The layering of knowledge, memory, and understanding. Using Berlin’s ‘Places of Remembrance’ memorial to teach about the Holocaust Carson Phillips offers detailed and specific suggestions for teaching about the Berlin memorial described in Pnina Rosenberg’s essay (pp. 90–96), along with extended learning opportunities that feature contemporary encounters with, and the meaning of, that and two additional exhibits. “This educational unit,” he writes, “is designed to develop the critical thinking skills of students, to elucidate the complexities of the Holocaust, and to examine the range of human responses to it.” An invaluable aid for educators is the appendix with the text of decrees originally imposed between 1933 and 1945. (By the publisher)
United States Holocaust Memorial museum The website of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum has extensive in-depth historical information about the Holocaust. It provides easy access to primary source documents, including photographs and maps that deal with the Holocaust. It also has broad information on genocide and mass atrocities.
Mémorial de la Shoah - Musée, Centre de documentation juive contemporaine The Shoah Memorial provides access to various resources on the Holocaust, mostly in French.
How to teach the Holocaust to Middle School Students : Increasing Empathy Through Multisensory Education This study examines the relationships among seventh-grade students' achievement scores, attitudes toward instructional approaches, empathy scales, and the transfer of skills between traditional versus multisensory education. The Learning Style Inventory (LSI) was employed to determine learning-style preferences. The data collected in this study was subjected to statistical analyses, supporting the use of a multisensory, rather than a traditional, approach for teaching lessons of the Holocaust. (By the publisher)
Developing reflective citizens: The role of Holocaust education In what way can we best conceptualize the relationship of Holocaust education to the broader goal of developing reflective citizens? Keeping in mind the diversity of our audience while simultaneously recognizing the traditions of social studies education in the United States, the author argues that Holocaust education should be integrated within the rationale of educating young people to reflect upon issues that have direct relationships to (1) the development of values and (2) the fostering of behaviours emphasizing social responsibility. In short, Holocaust education ‒ meaning the design of curricula, creation of pedagogical strategies and evaluation of student performance ‒ can be a critical component in developing a citizenry who are capable of addressing global problems such as human rights violations and genocide by employing a reflective understanding of history and its relationships to present and future policies and practices, irrespective of national boundaries (By the author)
Les élèves face à la Shoah : lieux, histoire, voyage Teaching the Holocaust is not easy. All teachers know it. In order to develop new forms of teaching, some have found a solution: leave the classroom and go with their students to visit places of memory. This approach, at a time when travel in general is developing, is increasingly popular. Its success has helped fuel a debate: what is the impact on students participating in these visits? What does the teacher need to do to prepare and to conduct such a trip to a memorial site? This books addresses the subject from the French perspective, and also from the English, Belgian, Spanish, Italian, Swiss, and Israeli point of view. Auschwitz is the main focus, but other places are also examined. (By the publisher - Translation)
Contemporary Debates in Holocaust Education Holocaust education is a controversial and rapidly evolving field. This book, which critically analyses the very latest research, discusses a number of the most important debates which are emerging within it. Adopting a truly global perspective, Contemporary Debates in Holocaust Education explores both teachers' and students' levels of Holocaust knowledge as well as their attitudes and approaches towards the subject. Moreover, it employs a forward-looking perspective by thinking about how the subject will be taught when there are no survivors remaining and what challenges and opportunities digital technology, social media and online learning offer the modern teacher of the Holocaust. This book seeks to shift the parameters of existing debates and offer an insightful commentary on the nature, scope and direction of Holocaust education, which will be of great use to academics, teachers and policy-makers alike. (By the publisher)
Mémoires à venir - Une enquête sur la mémoire du XXe siècle auprès de 31 172 jeunes de 16 a 29 ans, en 24 langues, dans 31 pays The Foundation for Political Innovation(Fondapol) and the Foundation for the Memory of the Shoah have carried out an international survey of the younger generations that reveals the memories and perceptions of youth regarding the major events of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. The participants were 31,172 young people aged 16 to 29, surveyed in 24 different languages in 31 countries : Australia , Austria, Belgium , Canada, China , Croatia, Denmark , Estonia , USA , Finland, France , Greece, Hungary , India, Israel, Italy, Japan , Latvia, Lithuania , Netherlands , Poland, Czech Republic, Romania, United Kingdom , Russia, Serbia , Switzerland, Turkey and Ukraine. (By the publisher - Translation)
Toward a Philosophy of Holocaust Education: Teaching Values without Imposing Agendas Most teachers hope to make a difference in the lives of their students, but whether they accomplish this with any regularity is often left unclear. With a topic like the Holocaust, the stakes are greatly raised. In this essay, the author discusses the place of the Holocaust in the liberal arts. He argues that the content of Holocaust education must revolve around a methodology that allows students to conjure and experiment with new and deeper self-understanding(s). Teaching the Holocaust effectively means freeing (and urging) students to ask questions about historical epistemology (i.e., the ways in which historians come to know what they do), as well as questions which speak directly to the challenges of the current moment. The idea behind this philosophy is to teach the past in a manner that equips students to see the ramifications of their choices in contrast to the Germans who, by virtue of their own choices, allowed themselves to be fastened in a system designed to achieve national revitalization and racial purification at any and all costs. He stresses that history teachers, as the most recent data show, cannot further their own agendas by using the Holocaust as an instrument for political indoctrination, but they can still lead their students toward new ways of thinking about the world and their place in it. (By the publisher) 