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GenEd: The Genocide Education Project Established

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  • GenEd: The Genocide Education Project Established

    PRESS RELEASE

    The Genocide Education Project
    "Learning the Past, Building the Future"
    51 Commonwealth Avenue
    San Francisco, CA 94118
    (415) 264-4203
    [email protected]
    www.GenocideEducation.org
    www.TeachGenocide.org

    Contact: Raffi Momjian (415) 264-4203


    THE GENOCIDE EDUCATION PROJECT ESTABLISHED
    http://www.genocideeducation.org/pr/2005/04_14_2005. htm

    San Francisco, CA - The Genocide Education Project proudly announces its
    formal establishment as a non-profit educational organization and the
    recent hiring of Sara Cohan as its Education Director.

    The mission of The Genocide Education Project is to assist educators in
    teaching about human rights and genocide, particularly the Armenian
    Genocide, by developing and distributing instructional materials,
    providing access to teaching resources and organizing educational workshops.

    "We're excited that The Genocide Education Project has become a
    full-fledged non-profit organization, and that Sara Cohan, an
    exceedingly qualified and enthusiastic educator has come on board,' said
    Raffi Momjian, Executive Director. "We're eager to put into motion many
    of the ideas we've been developing to encourage educators to teach the
    lessons of genocide to their students.'

    In addition to reaching out to public school districts about the
    importance of genocide and human rights education, organizing workshops
    for teachers, distributing resources and lesson plans to be used in the
    classroom, The Genocide Education Project maintains a website at
    www.TeachGenocide.org. This cyber resource library was published
    specifically for teachers, providing resources for classroom use about
    the Armenian Genocide and other gross human rights violations.

    The Genocide Education Project has published a comprehensive binder for
    educators that includes step-by-step lessons to use in the classroom as
    well as information about other curriculum, videos, books, and
    discussion topics. The binder, "Human Rights and Genocide: A Case
    Study of the First Genocide of the 20th Century' is sponsored by the San
    Francisco Unified School District and was developed in close cooperation
    with San Francisco high school history teachers.

    Sara Cohan, the organization's new Education Director, was a classroom
    teacher in Florida for five years. She has a Master's Degree in Social
    Science Education, received a Fulbright-Hayes Fellowship, and served as
    the Research Fellow at Teaching Tolerance, a project of the Southern
    Poverty Law Center. Cohan also served on state and national education
    committees and was a research associate at the Armenian National
    Institute. After serving briefly as a volunteer for The Genocide
    Education Project, she welcomed the opportunity to serve the
    organization in a more comprehensive manner.

    "I am looking forward to serving an organization with the mission of The
    Genocide Education Project,' said Cohan. "Incorporating human rights and
    genocide education in the classroom is an important step in training
    young people to be proactive when genocidal events occur in the future."

    The Genocide Education Project began seven years ago as the Genocide
    Curriculum Project, one of the many public education initiatives of the
    Bay Area Armenian National Committee. When members recognized that the
    Armenian Genocide was generally not being taught in public schools,
    despite a 15-year old California law mandating instruction of the
    Armenian Genocide, an effort was conceived to reach out to school
    districts, reminding them of the need for instruction on this crucial
    part of modern history. With the publication of the "Human Rights and
    Genocide" lesson plans and TeachGenocide.org website, volunteers began
    the process of establishing a new organization whose mission is to help
    institutionalize public education about the Armenian Genocide and the
    problem of genocide and human rights violations. Volunteers from
    Southern California, New York, Washington DC and Chicago joined the
    effort to reach school districts all over the country, and the process
    of establishing a new organization and receiving non-profit status began
    in 2004. Tax-exempt, 501(c)(3) status is now pending and expected to be
    complete within the coming year. For more information about the efforts
    of The Genocide Education Project please visit their website at
    www.GenocideEducation.org.


    The Genocide Education Project is a nonprofit organization that assists
    educators in teaching about human rights and genocide, particularly the
    Armenian Genocide, by developing and distributing instructional
    materials, providing access to teaching resources and organizing
    educational workshops.
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