Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Genocide Education For Teachers In Pasadena

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Genocide Education For Teachers In Pasadena

    GENOCIDE EDUCATION FOR TEACHERS IN PASADENA

    Published: Wednesday April 10, 2013

    Sarah Cohan with Pasadena teachers.

    PASADENA, CALIF. - In an effort to more permanently include the
    Armenian Genocide and other 20th century genocides into the Pasadena
    high school curriculum, The Genocide Education Project (GenEd)
    provided a full-day professional training workshop for Pasadena high
    school history teachers. Led by GenEd's Education Specialist, Sara
    Cohan, the comprehensive workshop covered a range of topics related
    to genocide, including the California state requirements on Armenian
    Genocide instruction, the genesis and meaning of the term, common
    conditions leading to genocide, and the "eight stages of genocide."

    The basic history of the Armenian Genocide was provided, and teachers
    were introduced to a variety of resources to use in class, including
    GenEd-developed lesson plans, "Human Rights and Genocide: A Case
    Study of the First Modern Genocide of the 20th Century," "Nicole's
    Journey," an online, interactive course, "The Armenian Journey: From
    Despair to Hope in Rhode Island," a documentary video and classroom
    study guide produced by GenEd.

    Guest Speaker, Lorna Touryan Miller, spoke about her extensive work
    documenting the oral histories of Armenian Genocide survivors and
    survivors of the genocide in Rwanda. Herself a daughter of genocide
    survivors, Miller first recorded her father's story of survival, which
    spurred her and her husband, Donald Miller, to continue recording the
    oral histories of other genocide survivors. They are currently editing
    a new book titled, Survivor Voices: From Ottoman Turkey to Rwanda.

    "It was excellent," said Pasadena teacher Joe Shady. "The personal
    stories from Lorna were very moving." Shady said he plans to use the
    workshop's resources in preparing his social studies courses. "I want
    to incorporate the eight stages of genocide, so that way my students
    can compare genocides throughout history and across eras and regions."

    Teachers in attendance engaged in robust discussions about "best
    practices" around teaching the subject of genocide and the most
    effective ways of communicating the important society themes that
    run through the continuum of genocides of modern history.

    "We applaud the Pasadena Unified School District for hosting this
    unique and useful professional development activity to enhance their
    teachers' readiness for bringing lessons on the Armenian Genocide into
    their classrooms," said Shoghig Yepremian, chairperson of the Armenian
    National Committee of America's Pasadena Chapter. The ANCA-Pasadena
    chapter was instrumental in bringing the city's attention to the
    need for the Pasadena schools to incorporate this topic into their
    standard curriculum, and the organization led the effort to organize
    and fund the teacher-training workshop.

    ANCA-Pasadena initiated and organized the workshop, and secured
    funding from Saint Sarkis Armenian Apostolic Church, the Armenian
    Cultural Foundation, the Armenian Youth Federation Juniors, the
    Armenian General Athletic Union and Scouts (Homenetmen), PUSD and
    California State Senator Carol Liu.

    "We're very grateful to all the organizations and Senator Liu for
    recognizing the need for this instruction and pooling resources to
    make it happen," said Yepremian. "We're also sincerely appreciative
    to The Genocide Education Project and particularly Sara Cohan for
    sharing her incredible knowledge about genocide and human rights and
    delivering such valuable mentorship to educators," said Yepremian.

    "Likewise, sincere thanks to Lorna Touryan Miller, whose extensive
    knowledge of the traumatic experiences of genocide victims helps
    teachers and students put a human face on an otherwise faraway,
    historic event."

    The Genocide Education Project is a nonprofit, tax-exempt 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.

    Watch Videos:

    Educator Joe Shady on the value of the
    workshop:http://youtu.be/J6ZZzvBOXXs Guest Speaker Lorna Miller on
    documenting genocide survivors:http://youtu.be/ljdjoB4Q4l8

    ####

    The Genocide Education Project is a nonpartisan, nonprofit,
    tax-exempt 501(c)(3) educational 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. For more information about The Genocide Education Project,
    go to www.GenocideEducation.org.

    http://www.reporter.am/go/article/2013-04-10-genocide-education-for-teachers-in-pasadena

Working...
X