Guidelines for Teaching the Holocaust. Why Teach Holocaust History One of the most effective, and most extensively documented subjects for a pedagogical.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
World War II, The Holocaust, and Anne Frank
Advertisements

Click Image. Methodological Considerations Do not teach or imply that the Holocaust was inevitable The Holocaust took place because individuals, groups,
THE HOLOCAUST Historical Information. Holocaust Holocaust: The persecution and murder of approximately six million Jews by the Nazi regime. Holocaust:
The Holocaust.
The Holocaust Notice of fair use of copyrighted materials Further use is prohibited.
Introduction to Night In your composition book NOTES.
Holocaust Literature Study "Arbeit Macht Frei" (Work Brings Freedom) was the sign over the gates of Auschwitz. It was placed there by Major Rudolf Hoss,
The History Teacher  Read the poem at least 2-3 times.  Mark up the text with ideas about:  Visualization  Prior knowledge  Questions  Making meaning.
History of the Holocaust Ofer Ashkenazi Brief Survey.
The Holocaust. What can you learn? History doesn’t just “happen.” It occurs because individuals, organizations, and governments made choices.
A Tragic Legacy. Literally means “sacrifice by fire” The systematic mass slaughter of millions of Europeans, especially Jews, by the Nazis during WWII.
Introduction The Task The Process Resources Conclusion.
Guidelines for Teaching About the Holocaust Sample Presentation by Angie Hillman.
2012.  Ethics  Religion  Studies of behaviour  Psichology  Civic education  Language studies  History.
11th Grade American History Mr. Dalton’s Class Subject: The Holocaust.
Description History Victims Concentration Camps Liberation and Beyond
What do we mean by the term ‘the Holocaust’?. What do you know about the Holocaust? What I know about the Holocaust...
Holocaust Power Point Mrs. Trace and Mrs. Mueller Lindblom Math & Science Academy.
The Holocaust On a separate piece of paper, take notes as you go through the following slides and visit the websites provided. When you are finished, write.
Guidelines for Teaching the Holocaust Sally N. Levine Teacher Fellow Regional Educator United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Recommendations are based.
A Presentation by: Alexis, Ashyea, and Cameron
The Holocaust.
The Holocaust Liberation.
History of the Holocaust Why take this course? Course Overview Why take this course? Course Overview.
The Holocaust By: Ryan, Brittany, and Trisha. What is the holocaust? The holocaust was a systematic,bureaucratic,state sponsored persecution and murder.
What is the Holocaust?. The Holocaust refers to a specific event in 20th Century history: the state- sponsored, systematic persecution and annihilation.
Guidelines for Teaching the Holocaust. Head….. Heart….. Hands…..
What was it like to be a Jew living in Nazi Germany…. ? …. Presentation by Mr Griffiths
Discussion Question What makes a human being a human being?
The Holocaust State-sponsored, systematic persecution and annihilation of European Jewry by Nazi Germany and its collaborators between 1933 and Source:
Guidelines for Teaching the Holocaust United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Guidelines
The Holocaust: A Best Practices Workshop for Catholic School Educators What kind of world will future generations inherit? It's up to us to educate the.
The Holocaust In Europe The Final Solution WWII in Europe ( )
11 million people were killed in a span of 12 years from , of those killed 6 million were Jews. The Nazis targeted many different types of people.
Holocaust Introduction and Notes. Bellwork: Copy the definition in your journals, title: Holocaust The Holocaust refers to a specific genocidal event.
Holocaust  The state-sponsored persecution and murder of European Jews by Nazi Germany and its collaborators between 1933 and 1945  Resulted in the death.
THE HOLOCAUST The Destruction of the European Jews,
The Impact of the Holocaust on European Gypsies Cavan Hussein English, Period 8.
CENSORSHIP AND BOOK BURNING USHMM Museum Teacher Fellowship Lesson.
The Holocaust.
Guidelines for Teaching the Holocaust. Head….. Heart….. Hands…..
An Introduction THE HOLOCAUST. The Holocaust was the systematic, bureaucratic, state- sponsored persecution and murder of approximately six million Jews.
Auschwitz.
Holocaust Literature Study "Arbeit Macht Frei" (Work Brings Freedom) was the sign over the gates of Auschwitz. It was placed there by Major Rudolf Hoss,
An Introduction to Holocaust Literature
Intro to the Holocaust. Holocaust Systematic, state- sponsored persecution and murder of about 6 million Jews by the Nazis.
11 MILLION. 11 million people are estimated to have been killed during the Holocaust ( ) 6 million of those are estimated to have been Jews The.
The Holocaust By: Emily Landers. Holocaust The Holocaust was the systematic, state-sponsored persecution and murder of approximately six million Jews.
USHMM Guidelines for Teaching about the Holocaust Methodological Considerations.
Guidelines for Teaching About the Holocaust United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.
What was the Holocaust? The Holocaust was the systematic and planned murder of the Jewish people of Europe. This was carried out by the Nazi regime who.
Holocaust Background– The Bloodlands
Objective: Describe the Holocaust.
3/11 Bellringer His 1: Evaluating Primary and Secondary Sources
GUIDELINES FOR TEACHING ABOUT THE HOLOCAUST
Guidelines for Teaching the Holocaust
Goals of Guideline and Rational Session:
The Holocaust Non-Jewish Victims.
An Introduction to the Holocaust
Night By Elie Wiesel.
Legacies of World War II
Holocaust Phases (mid 1930s – 1945)
The Holocaust Extermination of the Jews By: Mrs. Marjorie D. Martin
*** Choose your own seat! First come, first serve!
The Holocaust was the systematic, bureaucratic, state-sponsored persecution and murder of approximately 6 million Jews by the Nazi regime and its collaborators..
World War II: The Holocaust.
Friday, April 17th Announcements: Holocaust Holocaust Vids Battles?
Middle School Curriculum Guide
Presentation transcript:

Guidelines for Teaching the Holocaust

Why Teach Holocaust History One of the most effective, and most extensively documented subjects for a pedagogical examination of basic moral issues

Rationale should fit your class Why should students learn this history? What are the most significant lessons to be learned? Why is a particular resource appropriate? What is the focus of your curriculum?

What can students learn? Responsible Citizenship Appreciation for democracy Silence and indifference can perpetuate problems. History doesnt just happen. It occurs because individuals, organizations, and governments made choices.

Ramifications of prejudice, racism, and stereotyping.

Dangers of apathy and indifference

Responsibility when others are being denied civil rights

Methodological Considerations

Age Appropriateness

Define the term Holocaust The state-sponsored, systematic persecution and annihilation of European Jewry by Nazi Germany and its collaborators between 1933 and Jews were the primary victims– 6 million were murdered; Gypsies, handicapped, Jehovahs Witnesses, Poles, Soviet prisoners of war, and homosexuals also suffered grievous oppression and death.

There are no simple answers

Avoid Comparisons of Pain

Avoid Generalizations

The Holocaust was not inevitable The Holocaust took place because individuals, groups, and nations made decisions to act or not to act.

Strive for precision of language Prejudice and discrimination Collaborators and bystanders Armed and spiritual resistance Concentration camps and killing centers Guilt and responsibility

Make careful distinction about sources Fact, opinion, fiction Primary and secondary sources Court testimony, oral history Photographs

Avoid Stereotypical Descriptions All experiences of Jews were not the same. All Germans were not Nazis. Although groups can share common experiences, generalization tend to stereotype group behavior.

Do not romanticize to engage students interest The number of non-Jews who helped rescue Jews in a small fraction of the population. Give a balanced perspective. Do not use the worst aspects of human nature to hook your students, they will become desensitized.

How many is 6,000,000

People not Statistics

If you were to live 6,000,000 hours, how many years would you be alive? 685 Years

How many times would 9-11 need to occur to equal 6,000,000 deaths? Every day for 5.8 years

Be Sensitive with visual and written content

Balance of Perspective

Appropriate Learning Activities

Why Remember?