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GenEd: Illinois Teachers Awarded 2006 Aharonian Award For Excellence

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  • GenEd: Illinois Teachers Awarded 2006 Aharonian Award For Excellence

    PRESS RELEASE

    The Genocide Education Project
    51 Commonwealth Avenue
    San Francisco, CA 94118
    (415) 264-4203
    [email protected]
    www.GenocideEd ucation.org
    www.TeachGenocide.org

    Contact: Sara Cohan ([email protected])

    ILLINOIS TEACHER AWARDED 2006 AHARONIAN AWARD FOR EXCELLENCE
    http://www.genocideeducation.org/pr/200 6/08_15_2006.htm

    SAN FRANCISCO, CA - The Genocide Education Project is pleased to
    announce the first recipient of the Aharonian Award for excellence
    in the teaching of the Armenian Genocide, Mr. Ronald Levitsky of
    Northfield, Illinois. Mr.

    Levitsky is an extremely accomplished educator who has received
    countless awards for ground-breaking work in the classroom and serves
    on various local and national educational committees.

    The 2006 Aharonian Award is the first time that a national award
    has been offered to secondary level educators who teach about the
    Armenian Genocide.

    "We know that teachers all over the country are teaching about the
    Armenian Genocide in unique and interesting ways," stated Raffi
    Momjian, Executive Director of The Genocide Education Project. "Now
    we have a chance to recognize and reward the important work educators
    are doing on the subject."

    Mr. Levitsky's curriculum project was based on an action alert
    issued by the Armenian National Committee of America, suggesting
    people submit a new design for a postage stamp to the Citizen Stamp
    Advisory Committee.

    The postage stamp activity became a springboard for studying the
    Armenian Genocide as well as America's response to it. Levitsky
    noted, "Because adolescents have a sense of justice and sensitivity
    to cruelty, students need to believe that, in the midst of genocide,
    people can act affirmatively." The lesson includes background readings
    on the Armenian Genocide as well as information on America's response
    to the Genocide, which is culled from the research of Peter Balakian
    and Merill Peterson. Students not only learn the details of the history
    of the Armenian Genocide but they are also required to write journal
    entries examining a variety of related topics from "why people bully"
    to exploring ways to stop genocide. Finally, designing a stamp allows
    students to express the ideas and issues they have learned about in an
    artistic manner. Levitsky's approach ensures his students will learn
    both the history of the Armenian Genocide and the responsibility of
    all people to respond to genocide in more effective way.

    The Aharonian Award was inspired by Avedis Aharonian, a prolific
    Armenian writer, public servant, and one of the founders of the
    first independent Armenian Republic in 1918. Aharonian wrote, "If
    evil of this magnitude can be ignored, if our own children forget,
    then we deserve oblivion and earn the world's scorn." By sponsoring
    an award in his name, The Genocide Education Project hopes to inspire
    more U.S. educators to teach about the Armenian Genocide.

    Additional information about the Aharonian Award and the full criteria
    for submitting a lesson plan can be found on The Genocide Education
    Project's online resource library at www.TeachGenocide.org. Winners
    of the Aharonian Award receive teaching resources on the Armenian
    Genocide, a cash award, and the publication of their lesson plan on
    www.TeachGenocide.org. A set of resources is also provided to the
    award recipient's affiliated institution's library.

    ####

    The Genocide Education Project is a nonprofit, tax-exempt 501(c)(3)
    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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