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School Spotlight: DeForest Students Spread Their Study Of Genocides

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  • School Spotlight: DeForest Students Spread Their Study Of Genocides

    SCHOOL SPOTLIGHT: DEFOREST STUDENTS SPREAD THEIR STUDY OF GENOCIDES
    By Pamela Cotant

    Wisconsin State Journal
    http://www.madison.com/wsj/home/local/446775
    Apri l 13 2009

    DEFOREST -- Students in the New Reflections program of DeForest High
    School not only tackled the wrenching subject of genocide, they put
    on a symposium to let others know about the atrocities they researched.

    The 20 juniors and seniors in DeForest's alternative high school
    program set up informational booths in the basement of the DeForest
    Public Library, where their classes are held. They invited parents,
    school staff members, School Board members and others to view their
    displays and multimedia presentations.

    "Most high schoolers are never in that position where they are the
    experts," said alternative school teacher Jen McGorray. "They took
    this project and ran with it and made it their own."

    McGorray said the idea was to extend the traditional study of
    the Holocaust by looking at other genocides. The students studied
    genocides, a massacre and other human rights violations against the
    Hmong, Cambodians, Congolese, Rwandans, Muslims in India in 2002,
    Chechens, Kurds, Armenians, American Indians and Sudan and China.

    Senior Jackie Holland and junior Crystal Pullen said it was difficult
    to study the Nanjing, China massacre, finding it "disgusting" and
    "gross."

    "I didn't even know about this," junior Eric Debrow said about studying
    the killing of the Congolese with classmate Levi Bingham. "It affected
    me because people were being killed for no reason."

    The students also got lessons on research. Senior Michelle Schumacher
    and junior Kate Wagner found it difficult to obtain information on
    the violence against Muslims in India from books so they turned to
    the Internet -- but found that unreliable at times, too. Senior Ted
    Waggoner, who studied events in Chechnya along with junior Nicole
    O'Donnell, said he learned about propaganda and wasn't sure if he
    could trust everything he found on the Internet.

    The genocide unit is being taught every other year by McGorray and
    Michelle Kruse, who teaches 20th century history and literature at
    New Reflections, along with English at the high school.

    Research for the unit was funded by a grant obtained by McGorray,
    Kruse and Lisa Aldrich, German teacher at DeForest High School. The
    three went to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington
    and a synagogue in the Milwaukee area, where they received curriculum
    materials.
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