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Honors for making history as she taught it

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  • Honors for making history as she taught it

    Boston Globe, MA
    July 13 2008


    Honors for making history as she taught it

    By Andreae Downs
    Globe Correspondent / July 13, 2008


    The experiment started 32 years ago, when an adventurous eighth-grade
    teacher decided to challenge herself and her students.

    With the nurturing support of dozens of Brookline officials,
    residents, students, teachers, and parents, her idea evolved into
    Facing History and Ourselves, now an international program with 160
    staff members and a $2 million budget.

    Margot Stern Strom asked tough questions and created a program that
    listens to young people and encourages them contribute to critical
    debates about history and moral choices. It teaches educators how to
    use critical periods of history, such as the Holocaust, Armenian
    genocide, US slavery, and segregation, to help students develop moral
    decision-making skills.

    In recognition of her extraordinary achievement, the Brookline Rotary
    Club last month honored Strom, who began the process with two Runkle
    School classes totaling 42 teenagers six years after she was hired in
    1970.

    Now in more than 120 countries, with more than 25,000 trained
    educators reaching about 1.8 million students annually, Facing History
    and Ourselves retains its Brookline roots, with an office in the
    former high school building of St. Mary's School, not far from Strom's
    home.

    Strom describes her program as a mix of elements: It is an incubator
    of good teaching, a book publisher, a place where adults reflect on
    and discuss their teaching, and a way of connecting people within
    schools, within communities, and across time.

    A slim dynamo at 66, Strom was brought back to the beginning a couple
    of weeks before the awards presentation when her first Facing History
    class held a reunion here.

    Strom recalls those 1976-77 sessions in Room 207 well, as she's drawn
    on them ever since.

    Journals kept by her and her students became the backbone of her
    resource book on teaching the Holocaust.

    What surprised her was how much the roughly 40 former students
    recalled of Strom's classes 31 years later.

    Now in their early 40s, they recalled what Strom wore, where she stood
    in the classroom, what they asked each other.

    "Something transformational happened, and not just with these kids but
    with me," Strom recalled. "That class was like a petri dish."

    The legacy of that pioneering class is its replication in classrooms
    today.

    A compulsive chronicler, Strom had former Runkle principal and current
    Facing History administrator Marty Sleeper interview the reunited
    students.

    One former student, Matthew Shakespeare, said his peers felt they were
    being taken seriously.

    "Margot had us reason through things as adults or almost as adults,"
    he said in his interview with Sleeper. "She really had us engage with
    each other, and I think previously, in earlier grades, it was the
    teacher interacting with the student."

    That model, Strom said, is what the program has since championed.

    "Education should be dynamic," she said.

    Strom said she's working to convince the US Department of Education
    that she has a model to teach tolerance and is gathering the data to
    back it up.

    With the receipt of her Public Service Award, presented by Ronny
    Sydney, a former state representative, Brookline Rotary's new
    president, and a former colleague of Strom's at the Runkle School, she
    joined a distinguished list of Rotary honorees that includes Michael
    Dukakis, the former governor, and Dr. Sydney Farber, whose name is on
    the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.

    Also on that list, and present at the June 19 ceremony, was Robert
    Sperber, the then-school district superintendent who made the growth
    of Strom's experiment possible.

    "He supported this concept of Brookline as a Lighthouse School
    System," Strom recalled in an interview in her office after the awards
    presentation. She was referring to Sperber's push to take good ideas
    and enact them across Brookline, and eventually across the country.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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