Monthly Archives: March 2025

Bibliography: Peace Education (Part 183 of 226)

Erickson, Christina L.; Lee, Serita; Mattaini, Mark A. (2009). A Community Prevention Approach to Peaceful Schools: Application of Wakanheza. School Social Work Journal, v34 n1 p43-60 Sep. Schools have long recognized the importance of creating climates that are peaceful, laying the groundwork for good student academic learning. This article explores the work of a large urban school district as it applies a community violence prevention model developed by the local county public health department to create peaceful communities. Qualitative focus groups with four schools that implemented the program explore the nature of this project. Findings demonstrate several elements that correlate with evidence-based practice methods found in the literature, pointing to several positive benefits to implementing the project. School social workers, adept at understanding elements of person-in-environment, are suggested as a natural fit for implementing the program in school settings. (Contains 3 tables.)… [Direct]

Gencheva, Yuliyana (2010). The International Children's Assembly "Banner of Peace": Performing the Child in Socialist Bulgaria. ProQuest LLC, Ph.D. Dissertation, Indiana University. This project offers a close look into the meaning-making practices of the Bulgarian socialist state with regard to the conception and enactment of childhood. Held for the first time in 1979, on occasion of the UN declared "International Year of the Child", the International Children's Assembly "Banner of Peace" emerges as a focal point of Bulgaria's cultural management in the 1970s. The Assembly exhibits the conceptual tension between the aesthetic-humanist ideas characterizing Bulgarian culture of that period and traditional socialist discourse. To examine this process, I employ a diachronic analysis of the rationale, enactment, and significance of the Children's Assembly, paying attention to the ambivalent images of the child embedded in its model. In light of the peculiar status of socialist children as future builders of the new regime, my work foregrounds the discursive and embodied strategies which reinterpret and "perform" the child within the… [Direct]

Gulbrandson, Jennifer; Luzincourt, Ketty (2010). Education and Conflict in Haiti: Rebuilding the Education Sector after the 2010 Earthquake. Special Report 245. United States Institute of Peace In Haiti, education both promotes and ameliorates conflict. This report describes the education sector before the 2010 earthquake, then presents recommendations on how Haiti and the international community can increase access to and the quality of Haitian schools and modernize the organization and function of the national education sector. Although these recommendations were initially developed before the earthquake occurred, the basic problems are unchanged, and the recommendations are relevant for "building back better," in UN secretary-general Ban Ki-moon's words. (Contains 2 tables and 29 notes.)… [Direct]

Mendeloff, David; Shaw, Carolyn (2009). Connecting Students Internationally to Explore Postconflict Peacebuilding: An American-Canadian Collaboration. Journal of Political Science Education, v5 n1 p27-54 Jan. This paper presents the design and assesses the results of an international collaborative course of American and Canadian undergraduates on the topic of postconflict peacebuilding. Using online discussions, a web-based role-play simulation, and videoconferencing this collaborative course sought to enhance student engagement with the material by exposing them to views from different countries and encouraging broader thinking about the complex set of activities and challenges involved in peacebuilding. The challenges and benefits of such collaboration are discussed. (Contains 8 notes.)… [Direct]

Overland, Martha Ann (2007). Peace Amid Violence. Chronicle of Higher Education, v53 n30 pA41 Mar. When the doors of the International Buddhist College opened in the southern rural province of Songkhla in Thailand after nearly a decade of hard work and planning, the founders praised the achievement as the culmination of devotion, faith, and, of course, good karma. With its rare combination of secular academics and monastic life, the college is a place where monks and nuns, as well as lay people, can pursue Buddhist studies. Not one, but all three major traditions of Buddhism–Mahayana, Theravada, and Tibetan–are taught. And with no single language spoken by the religion's multitude of followers, English is the medium of instruction. However, not long after the college welcomed its first students in October 2004, a bomb tore through a column of monks and the soldiers guarding them in the neighboring province of Narathiwat. Buddhist schools were burned and teachers were gunned down on their way home. Several were shot and then beheaded. The attacks on Buddhists, particularly… [Direct]

Carson, Susan; Chandler, Susanne; Collins, Elaine C.; Snow, Debbie; Williams, Jerri-Lynn (2010). Going against the Grain: Challenges to Peaceful Leadership Styles in a K-12/University Partnership. International Education Studies, v3 n2 p32-41 May. This article shares and examines the challenges, findings, and lessons learned associated with embracing peaceful leadership styles during the first two years of a partnership between a failing K-12 urban school district and a university in the United States. The ongoing daily leadership issues that influenced, but were beyond the scope of, the partnership are also explored. Through the individual and collective lens of six educational leaders (K-12 and higher education) who embraced leadership feminist practices embedded in structures of difference, Buddhist philosophies, equity, and social justice, this study examines and illustrates the administrative efforts associated with "going against one's grain" when faced with the proverbial brick wall…. [PDF]

Lopes Cardozo, Mieke T. A. (2009). Teachers in a Bolivian Context of Conflict: Potential Actors for or against Change?. Globalisation, Societies and Education, v7 n4 p409-432 Nov. In response to exclusionary globalisation processes, Bolivia forms part of a wider Latin American return to regionalism and nationalism. With the indigenous president Morales, Bolivia distances itself from "imposed" neoliberal policies, aiming instead for "dignity and decolonisation". The Bolivian conflict is characterised by historical processes of poverty and inequality, discrimination and exclusion, a regional autonomy struggle linked to separatist discourses and identity politics, mistrust in the state and between societal groups and a tradition of (violent) popular pressure methods. Both urban and rural teachers play crucial roles in these processes of conflict. Drawing on insights from critical educational theories and the strategic relational approach, the paper analyses the possibilities and challenges Bolivian teachers face in changing this context of continuing tensions, discrimination and instability. It presents an analysis of teachers' complex… [Direct]

Mirici, Ismail Hakki (2008). Training EFL/ESL Teachers for a Peaceful Asia-Pacific Region. Asia Pacific Education Review, v9 n3 p344-354. In this experimental study which is based on qualitative and quantitative data collection from an experimental and a control group, it has been found that when some educational terms in English Language Teacher Training programs are strengthened in meaning through some adaptations to better convey the message, their effectiveness is increased. Therefore, it is suggested that foreign or second language teachers in the Asia-Pacific region should not teach the target language only for linguistic and communicative purposes but also to introduce characteristics of different cultures and to contribute to educating people who enjoy similarities, respect differences and value human rights. (Contains 1 table and 2 figures.)… [PDF] [Direct]

Kirk, Jackie (2007). Education and Fragile States. Globalisation, Societies and Education, v5 n2 p181-200 Jul. Within the fragile states agendas and policies of development agencies and organisations education is of concern; education is a social service sector in which the impacts of state fragility are significant, in terms of access and quality of provision for children, working conditions and support for teachers, good governance and legitimacy for the society/community as a whole. However, this article argues that education should be at the centre of fragile states discussions as more than a basic service; in relation to fragility, education is at the same time cause, effect, problem and possible solution. Education needs to be part of fragility analysis as well as in the identification of priority stabilising interventions. In education–as in other sectors and domains–gender equality and state fragility are inherently connected and gender equality must be integrated through all analysis and interventions. The article ends with some recommendations for moving in this direction…. [Direct]

(2010). Minimum Standards for Education: Preparedness, Response, Recovery. Inter-Agency Network for Education in Emergencies Education in emergencies comprises learning opportunities for all ages. It encompasses early childhood development, primary, secondary, non-formal, technical, vocational, higher and adult education. In emergency situations through to recovery, quality education provides physical, psychosocial and cognitive protection that can sustain and save lives. Education in emergencies ensures dignity and sustains life by offering safe spaces for learning, where children and youth who need other assistance can be identified and supported. Quality education saves lives by providing physical protection from the dangers and exploitation of a crisis environment. However, education's life-sustaining and life-saving role has been recognised and the inclusion of education within humanitarian response is now considered critical. Education is an integral part of the planning and provision of humanitarian response, which goes beyond providing immediate relief. Coordination and collaboration between… [PDF]

Cook, Sharon Anne (2006). "Patriotism, Eh?" The Canadian Version. Phi Delta Kappan, v87 n8 p589-593 Apr. How does patriotism look north of the 49th parallel? In this article, the author explores the answers to this question and examines the "quiet nationalism" that characterizes Canadians' views of themselves and their nation. One of Canada's best-known philosophers, John Ralston Saul, argues that Canada's contribution to the world has been to build a new type of quiet nationalism, characterized most fundamentally by the tradition of compromise between the three founding people: French, English, and First Nations. Adding to its heterogeneous mixture, Canada has welcomed a larger percentage of immigrants compared with its population base than has any Western nation over the past century, Saul asserts, including the United States. The concepts and proclivities underpinning this tradition of compromise–self-effacement, careful and endless debate on a shifting agenda of priorities, the notion of "limited identities" to describe the range of competing factors (regional,… [Direct]

Crain, Margaret Ann (2006). Redefining the Fundamental Questions. Religious Education, v101 n4 p438-442 Fall. Every researcher must make some fundamental questions. A researcher's questions should include the following: (1) What is the nature of the reality that I wish to study? (2) How will I know it? (3) What must I do to know it? (4) Who am I? (5) Where is God in this? and (6) For religious educators–How does my research lead to a world of peace and justice, the realm of God? In this article, the author shares her views on how researchers should address these questions when doing research. (Contains 5 footnotes.)… [Direct]

Hunter, Mary Ann (2008). Cultivating the Art of Safe Space. Research in Drama Education, v13 n1 p5-21 Feb. Performance-making and peace-building are processes predicated on the production of safe space. But what is "safe space"? In performance-making, what is it that makes space safe without losing the creative potential of tension? What role is there for risk? And, once achieved, how does safe space become meaningful beyond its immediate community of participants? This paper examines the value of the concept of "safe space" in performance, suggesting that for applied theatre practitioners it is more than just a precursor for the art-making processes it supports. Here, safe space is considered as a processual act of ever-becoming: a space of messy negotiations that allow individual and group actions of representation to occur, as well as opportunities for "utopian performatives". Contact Inc's Peace Project is profiled as a performance-based program that grounds these issues and offers insight into the ways in which "safe space" might function… [Direct]

Patterson, Jack T. (1991). Learning Peace. Adult Learning, v3 n1 p13-14 Sep. Contemporary adult education has neglected social change movements. Social action could benefit from broader exposure to the research findings and theories of adult learning and adult education cannot continue to overlook social action without cost. (JOW)…

Schmidt, Fran; And Others (1992). Mediation for Kids: Kids in Dispute Settlement. Second Edition. The Kids in Dispute Settlement mediation program for grades 3 through 12 recognizes that conflicts are a part of everyone's life and that students can responsibly and constructively solve their own conflicts. Mediation uses the help of a third party to facilitate the conflict resolution process by working out differences non-judgementally. Student mediators are used because they do not threaten other students and can promote cooperation. Mediator training lessons are organized sequentially. They include objective, vocabulary, procedure, student pages, introduction, discussion questions, and closure. Student mediators should reflect the school population; and it must be clearly recognized that disputes involving weapons, drugs, and physical or sexual abuse are not cases for mediation. Confidentiality is emphasized, and a procedure is explained for situations in which mediation does not resolve the conflict. The following sections are presented: (1) "Setting the Stage"; (2)…

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Bibliography: Peace Education (Part 184 of 226)

Friedman, Alice; Schmidt, Fran (1990). Fighting Fair. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. for Kids. Second Edition. This curriculum guide for grades 4 through 9 uses the life and work of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., to teach conflict resolution and to explore the philosophy of non-violence for daily life. To enable students to learn and apply non-violence, it must be modeled in a classroom environment that builds trust and a sense of community. Each of the following sections of the Teacher's Guide contains student activity suggestions: (1) "See Yourself"; (2) "A Strong Man"; (3) "People Power"; (4) "Fighting Back"; (5) "Confronting Fear"; (6) "You Are You, I Am Me, We Are Us, Us Are We"; and (7) "The Power of Nonviolence." An appendix contains a Peacemaker certificate as a student award and a list of 10 other resources. Student pages parallel the teacher guide, in the same chapter format. Role playing is a significant part of the student activities suggested; and brainstorming, problem solving, and decision making are also…

Friedman, Alice; Schmidt, Fran (1989). Fighting Fair for Families. This document offers families the tools for handling conflict. Conflict is a normal and unavoidable part of life. We cannot avoid conflict, but we can learn to "fight fair," attacking the problem and not the person. Weapons that attack people and not problems are listed as fouls, destructive habits that can be changed. Fighting fair involves: (1) identifying the problem; (2) focusing on the problem; (3) attacking the problem and not the person; (4) listening with an open mind; (5) treating a person's feelings with respect; and (6) taking responsibility for your actions. Suggestions are given for implementing these ideas, and changing the family battlefield into a sanctuary. A peaceful world begins with a peaceful family. Multiple illustrative cartoons are included. (SLD)…

Friedman, Alice; Schmidt, Fran (1990). Come In Spaceship Earth. Kids as Crew Members. Peace Works Series. This program, for grades 4 through 12, introduces students to the concepts that result in cooperative work for the survival and improvement of the quality of life of the human family. In addition to the teacher's guide presented here, the program comes with a music video recorded in seven languages, reproducible pages, a class simulation game, and a poster of Planet Earth. The guide includes the following sections: (1) "To See the World" (an introduction); (2) "Connections"; (3) "Who Speaks for Earth?"; (4) Terra II–A Spaceship Earth Simulation"; and (5) an appendix that lists 17 environmental organizations, 16 resource organizations, 4 young peoples' groups, 3 pen-pal programs, and 5 games and projects. Sections 1-3 are further divided into a total of 16 subsections containing activities and discussion materials, each beginning with brief guidelines for teaching that section. The guide concludes that the interconnection that binds all people and…

Friedman, Alice; Schmidt, Fran (1983). Creative Conflict Solving for Kids. Both student and teacher materials for a unit introducing elementary students to conflict situations and conflict resolution techniques are presented. The student materials contain pre- and posttests and 27 exercises in which students examine emotions, love and friendship, frustration, learned behavior, and basic needs, and explore different ways to resolve conflicts. Activities include word scrambles, puzzles, games, simulations, writing assignments, problem solving, and question-answer exercises. The teacher's guide contains overall unit objectives and concepts as well as teaching suggestions, vocabulary, and extension activities for each of the student exercises. Pen and ink drawings of five conflict situations with which elementary students can identify conclude the unit. (LP)…

Friedman, Alice; Schmidt, Fran (1985). Creative Conflict Solving for Kids, Grades 4-9. Second Edition. Intended to challenge students in grades 4-9 to deal creatively and constructively with conflict, this interdisciplinary resource book contains 40 reproducible student worksheets that can be incorporated into social studies, science, and language arts curricula. Teaching techniques include modeling, mediation, problem-solving, brainstorming, role playing, visualization, body movement, and integration of conflict-resolution concepts. Lessons encourage students to develop positive interpersonal skills, respect human differences, understand the causes of conflict, practice conflict-resolution strategies, learn ways to handle frustration and anger, and explore conflict as a positive force for change within the democratic process. Incorporated within the text, the teacher's guide presents major concepts, important vocabulary, teaching suggestions, discussion questions, and extension activities for each lesson. A posttest concludes the booklet. (LH)…

Boulding, Elise; Passmore, J. Robert (1974). Bibliography on World Conflict and Peace. This bibliography is compiled primarily in response to the needs of teachers and students in the new field of conflict and peace studies, defined as the analysis of the characteristics of the total world social system which make peace more probable. The introduction includes some suggestions on how to use the bibliography, sources of literature on war/peace studies, and a request to users for criticisms and suggestions. Books, monographs, research reports, journal articles, or educational materials were included when they were: (1) related to conflict management at every social level, (2) relevant to nonviolence, and (3) classic statements in an academic specialization, such as foreign policy studies when of particular significance for conflict studies. A subject guide to the main categories of the bibliography lists 18 major topics with various numbered subdivisions. The main body of the bibliography lists citations by author and keys them to the topic subdivisions. Lists of… [PDF]

Cunningham, Phyllis M. (1991). What's the Role of Adult Educators?. Adult Learning, v3 n1 p15-16,27 Sep. Discusses the increasing importance of peace studies and the role of adult educators. (JOW)…

Haasner, Adrian; Stidder, Gary (2007). Developing Outdoor and Adventurous Activities for Co-Existence and Reconciliation in Israel: An Anglo-German Approach. Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, v7 n2 p131-140 Dec. Conflict resolution between different social groups is an issue that has continued to gain high profile news coverage both nationally and in a global context. In this respect, it has been shown that carefully designed and managed physical activity programmes can make a small but nonetheless invaluable contribution to reconciliation and co-existence within deeply-divided communities and socially fractured societies. Where this has been successful it is possible that projects such as these can be designed to be tangible products that not only facilitate co-existence work but can also be part of a more sustainable product that local coaches, teachers and community leaders can continue to promote through the teaching of core values and principles. This paper highlights how outdoor and adventurous activities (OAAs) can be used as a means to address co-existence and reconciliation within a deeply-divided society and outlines the work that is currently being undertaken in northern Israel by… [Direct]

McCarthy, Colman (1992). Why We Must Teach Peace. Educational Leadership, v50 n1 p6-9 Sep. To teach peace through nonviolence is to give youth a chance to develop a philosophy of force. Those who prefer violent force must justify deaths of this century's 78 million war victims–500 percent increase over last century. Describing his nonviolence classes at various Maryland schools, "Washington Post" journalist urges students to pressure schools to adopt peace studies curriculum. (MLH)…

Mesplay, Gail (2001). Its Seat Is in the Heart. Teaching Tolerance, n19 p17-24 Spr. Presents several practical ideas for making peace a priority within the classroom. Shares stories of a high school and an elementary school where peace projects have flourished. The elementary project involved planting a tree germinated from a Japanese tree that had survived the atomic bomb. The high school project involved apprenticing teenagers worldwide with Nobel Peace Laureates. (SM)…

Carmody, Brendan (2006). Zambia: Multi-Faith Religious Education?. Journal of Beliefs & Values, v27 n3 p291-301 Dec. As countries' populations become more religiously diverse, a need to review the religious education syllabus that operates is often perceived. One such country is Zambia, which was not only traditionally religiously diverse but has become even more so with the advent of Christianity, Islam and Hinduism and other non-African faiths. This article therefore explores the feasibility of adopting a multi-faith approach to religious education in Zambia in the light of such increasing religious diversity. In doing so, special reference is made to parallels with what is happening elsewhere, especially in England, for the Zambian religious education situation had a somewhat similar shape as that of England. Among the issues which this paper raises are: what kind of multi-faith religious education, that preserves its integrity, is likely to enhance social harmony in Zambia, as well as, how might such a religious education be effectively introduced and implemented? (Contains 1 note.)… [Direct]

Ayers, Ann; McMillan, Ellen (2006). Planning for Whirled Peace. SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, v106 n1 p53-54 Aug-Sep. This article describes Pinwheels for Peace, an art and literacy project started in 2005 as a way for students to express their feelings about what is going on in the world and in their lives. Art educators, teachers, scout groups, churches, and entire cities quickly embraced the project, which is becoming a meaningful and powerful art advocacy agent. Many schools used the Pinwheels for Peace project as a springboard to a much larger celebration of peace and diversity–and musical performances, dedications, and proclamations made the day unique and special. It is hoped that this project will help students make a public visual statement about their feelings about war, peace, tolerance, cooperation, harmony, and unity…. [Direct]

Curle, Adam; O'Connell, James (1985). Peace with Work To Do: The Academic Study of Peace. This document contains two lectures concerning the nature and status of peace studies. Adam Curle, in "The Scope and Dilemmas of Peace Studies" presents: (1) the study of peace and related subjects; (2) diversities and contradictions in peace studies; (3) personal interpretations; (4) teaching peace studies; and (5) moral and practical dilemmas. He urges people to recognize mankind's common traits and to eliminate or diminish those issues that are divisive. In "Towards an Understanding of Concepts in the Study of Peace," James O'Connell examines the linkage of concepts concerning peace, justice, and freedom and considers coexistence in the contemporary world in terms of the community of nations, technology, and arms control. Ideas and attitudes about the nature and extent of peace studies in academic environments are explored, and peace is identified as a subject that civilization cannot afford to ignore. (JHP)… [PDF]

Lovett, Tom (1994). Bridging the Sectarian Divide in Northern Ireland: The Ulster People's College. Adults Learning (England), v5 n6 p155-57 Feb. The Ulster People's College continues the tradition of radical adult education by seeking to assist both Catholic and Protestant communities with social and economic problems and by attempting to bridge cultural and political divisions by fostering communication between communities. (SK)…

Bauer, Marion Dane (1994). Visions of Peace through Literature. ALAN Review, v21 n2 p12-13 Win. Discusses the ways literature instruction might be used to foster the idea of peace in today's troubled and violent social atmosphere. Argues that selected literary texts help young people envision the possibilities of peace. Provides titles and outlines of several literary works that would be useful for such purposes. (HB)…

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