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Freshmen at Rancho
Buena Vista High School have four days dedicated
to Rwanda in world history class; some of the
students even belong to an Invisible Children
Club, which raises awareness about child victims
of war in Africa.
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EARNIE GRAFTON
/ Union-Tribune
Jazmine Damian (left) and Stephanie
Smith rehearsed for the play "And
Then They Came For Me" at the
Centers of Learning by the Sea. The
play, which is about the Holocaust,
will run next week. |
An after-school
theater program brings the Holocaust to the
stage in Otay Mesa next week after years of
performing lighter fare.
Last June, the end-of-the-year humanities
project for High Tech High's 10th-graders
involved spending the night on the lawn of the
Point Loma campus in a tent village called Camp
Darfur.
Genocide is a hot topic in local classrooms.
Educators nationwide are giving it more
attention, as evidenced by the schedule for this
weekend's annual conference of the National
Council for the Social Studies in downtown San
Diego.
The 4,000 teachers expected to attend can choose
from workshops such as "Teaching Genocide and
Human Rights for the 21st Century" and "Despair,
Death, and Denial: The Armenian and Pontian
Greek Genocides."
The prevalence of teaching about ghastly
episodes in Germany, Bosnia, Sudan and other
places reflects an increasingly global outlook
in the teaching of social studies, educators
say.
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EARNIE GRAFTON
/ Union-Tribune
Christine Nathanson portrays Anne
Frank in the play "And Then They
Came For Me." The drama teacher
behind the performance was inspired
to take on the material after
visiting a Holocaust museum in
Washington, D.C. |
Growing awareness
about the conflict in Darfur and the recent
congressional debate about an Armenian genocide
resolution bring relevancy to the topic in the
classroom.
"How to teach about genocide is still a very new
concept," said Sara Cohan, education director
for the San Francisco-based Genocide Education
Project. The organization specializes in the
Armenian genocide, which the state Board of
Education has said all 10th-graders should learn
about in social studies.
The development of training seminars and
instructional materials by human rights groups
has given teachers guidance on how to talk with
teenagers about mass killings.
"It's sometimes hard to come out of class
smiling when I'm teaching because it seems like
we've had evil empire after evil empire," said
Ellen Bergan, a history teacher at Morse High
School in San Diego's Bay Terraces neighborhood.
Bergan and other educators say they work through
it by taking a solution-oriented approach to
teaching genocide.
"I see it as kind of the whole purpose of
education," Bergan said. "This is your world.
These people are living in your world, and what
are you going to do about it?"
San Diego Jewish Academy students Jennifer Popp
and Michael Shoemaker formed a Darfur Action
Committee on their La Jolla campus after
learning about that conflict in their Judaic
studies class. Morse student Jon Yturralde
visited Uganda last summer and organized a
schoolwide "Week of Consciousness" last month to
raise awareness of international crises.
AdvertisementStudents in the extended program at
the Centers of Learning by the Sea in Otay Mesa
will present a Holocaust play for hundreds of
South County students next week. Jazmine Damian,
15, a sophomore performing in the play, said
it's important to learn about the Holocaust
because genocide can occur again.
"I feel like in certain places it could because
people aren't informed," Jazmine said.
A visit to the Holocaust Memorial Museum in
Washington, D.C., in the late 1990s inspired
drama teacher Sam Teres to have his
seventh-through 12th-grade students tackle the
difficult material. He said part of the lesson
for his students is that in contrast to the
comedies and fantasies they have performed, they
have the responsibility of portraying real
people.
Last spring at Southwest High School in Nestor,
history teacher Joel Rodriguez assigned his
students to research and give a presentation on
a genocidal event.
Rodriguez decided on the lesson after attending
a seminar by Facing History and Ourselves, a
Boston-based teacher-training group.
Marty Sleeper, Facing History's associate
director, said genocide resonates with teenagers
because collective violence has to do with
identity, stereotyping and group membership –
issues that teens are grappling with.
Sleeper hopes to teach students that they don't
have to be a president or a hero to prevent
violence.
"We give kids a sense of what it means to make a
difference," Sleeper said.
Chris Moran: (619) 498-6637;
chris.moran@uniontrib.com |