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Bibliography: Peace Education (Part 216 of 226)

Scriven, Michael (1971). Values and the Valuing Process. This paper develops a basic conceptual framework of values and the valuing process. Section 1, Values and Value Claims, discusses the four different types of value claims (personal, market, real, and implicit) and their relationships. The second section considers the process of rational evaluation as a method of arriving at and supporting value claims. As this discussion points out, the process of rational evaluation is basically one of comparing alternative means to our ends, and this means/end model must be seen as operating not with initially fixed means and ends, but with the task of developing, clarifying, and combining means and ends. A number of different skills are involved in this process, and it is worthwhile encouraging students to identify these skills during these discussions. The third and final section, Foundations of Morality and Democracy, discusses the place and function of ultimate values in discussions of values in general, and democratic values in particular…. [PDF]

Fine, Esther Sokolov (1997). Shaping and Reshaping Practice: Preparing Teachers for Peacemaking. Theory into Practice, v36 n1 p53-58 Win. Describes several exploratory sites where peacemaking is becoming an integral part of teacher education and reeducation within a university, research site, and student teaching practicum. The paper introduces a peacemaking school, highlighting shared learning of an experienced and a student teacher who wrote, read, talked, listened, and problem solved in their classroom. (SM)…

Ferguson, Henry, Ed. (1981). Handbook on Human Rights and Citizenship: Perspectives of Five Nations. This handbook was designed to help students learn the cultural contexts in which human rights are variously defined. It provides a comparative study of five nations, selected for their geographic and cultural scope, as a unique way to study human rights. Chapter 1 sets the stage for the study by presenting activities for establishing class objectives and examining the definition of human rights. Chapter 2 contains 90 readings from the five countries. These materials were selected for their value in illustrating the human rights situation in the five countries. International documents are included in chapter 2 which broaden the knowledge and understanding of human rights, such as "The Helsinki Agreement." Chapter 3 presents different activities and instructional strategies for presentation of the materials. Activities are included for different grade levels. Chapter 4 is the evaluation component in which an attitudinal questionnaire is administered to students to assess the… [PDF]

Schaufele, William E., Jr. (1981). Polish Paradox: Communism and National Renewal. Headline Series 256. This brief issues booklet provides basic information about the role of the Catholic Church in Poland, the erosion of Communist party leadership over the past year (as of 1981), the rise of the Solidarity Union and the economic problems plaguing the Polish people. An introduction is followed by the following sections: (1) "History of a Millennium"; (2) "Communist Poland"; (3) "Solidarity"; (4) "Church, Farm, and Freedom"; (5) "Poland between East and West"; and (6) "1981 and Beyond: A Personal Epilogue." A list of discussion questions and an 11-item reference list conclude the booklet. (EH)… [PDF]

Nelson, Jack L. (1990). Nuclear Proliferation as a Global Values Issue. Social Education, v54 n3 p169-70 Mar. Presents a classroom activity designed to involve students in critical thinking and values inquiry concerning the horizontal nuclear proliferation. Provides a set of global values, explaining the conflict between them and nuclear proliferation. Uses indicators, hypothesis development, and testing. Provides sources for material evidence to use in reports and discussions. (NL)…

(1995). Conflict & Gang Violence Prevention Using Peer Leadership: Training Manual for CHAMPS. Conflict and violence on the part of adolescents and pre-adolescents has been a growing problem. Young people will respond to an \anti-gang message\ if that message is delivered from their peer group. This manual describes a peer approach to impact young people about productive ways to handle conflict. Older students are trained to operate puppets and present age appropriate pre-recorded lessons to K-3 students. Younger students respond well and listen to the older students. At the 4th through 6th grade level, peer led activities are provided to use within the classroom. Students take turn leading activities, becoming \part of the solution\ rather than \part of the problem.\ This manual covers the program through the following chapters: (1) The program: An introduction; (2) The kit: What you have and how to use it; (3) The need: Elementary conflict, gang & violence prevention is a must; (4) The puppeteers: Selection, training and techniques; (5) The method: K-3 puppet scripts and… [PDF]

Lackey, Donald H. (1995). Promoting Multiethnic Relationships by Utilizing the Principles of Community Building. This report describes a student leadership program, Putting the Environment Above the Common Ego (PEACE), designed to reduce incidences of eighth grade students forming self-segregating groups based on ethnic or racial heritage. The targeted groups form the diverse student body attending a middle school with 1,400 students in Rockford, Illinois. Formation of the student-devised segregated groups was revealed by staff and administration. Analysis of staff and student surveys, personal logs, and the study of the student composition of after school groups confirm the initial observations of this middle school's professional staff. Causes of the problem include: (1) a city historically and geographically divided with societal tendencies to categorize people by race, economic circumstances, or ethnic background; and (2) a school culture that failed to address adequately the issue of diversity. The PEACE leadership program, based on survey interpretation and personal logs, did not appear… [PDF]

Osborne, Ken (1995). The United Nations in the News: Making Your Classroom a United Nations Information Centre. An Approach for All Grade Levels. This guide is to help students become more aware of the wide variety of United Nations' (UN) activities taking place in the world; to give students an interest in the affairs of the UN; and to lay the foundations for continuing interest in the UN. In this activity students read articles of recent world events in which the UN has been involved, then follow up with discussion and writing activities. A reference list of UN organizations and conferences for further activities is included. Students are instructed to read newspaper articles that are attached and to make lists using the headings: What?, Where?, When?, Why?, Results, and Questions. Once the lists are completed students are instructed to answer the following questions: (1) What was in these articles that you already knew? (2) What three things most interested you? (3) What three things most surprised you? and (4) What three things do you need more information about to make sense of them? (EH)… [PDF]

Russ, Adryan; Webster-Doyle, Terrence (1994). Why Is Everybody Always Picking on Me? A Special Curriculum for Young People To Help Them Cope with Bullying (for Ages 8-12) [and] Why Is Everybody Always Picking on Me: A Guide to Handling Bullies for Young People. These curriculum materials include a leader or teacher's guide for helping 8- through 12-year-old children cope with bullying, a text for students, and a poster illustrating ways for children to react to bullies. The teacher's guide presents 16 lessons for teachers to use in the classroom. Four of the lessons are role plays through which direct experience can enhance students' understanding of bullying. The other 12 lessons are: (1) What Is a Bully?; (2) How Does Bullying Affect Us?; (3) Why Do Bullies and Victims Exist?; (4) Earthlings: Creatures Who Fight To Survive; (5) How Can We Stop Bullying?; (6) How Victims Can Become Winners; (7) How bullies can become winners; (8) Awareness is everything; (9) How Bullying Affects World Peace; (10) Understanding Aggression; (11) Seeing Yourself As Peacemaker; and (12) The Power of a Questioning Mind. The lessons typically include questions to ask students, stories to read to students, and activities for students to do. The student text…

Bettendorf, Joline; And Others (1988). Literature of War and Peace. Section III: Why War?. This 13-day curriculum unit is designed for use in English and language arts classrooms, grades 7-12 and junior college. While it is the third section in a series of five on the literature of war and peace, it can be used with or without the other four sections. Each section of the series focuses on a different genre of the literature of war and peace, and the literature in each section has common sub-themes. In this section, students analyze poetry to determine how perceptions of war change in response to poetry to determine how perceptions of war change in response to changed experience in a community. The poems also are used to examine how war affects and changes the values of individuals. By researching how wars were fought during the time periods in which the poems were written and by connecting the historical descriptions with the writers' experiences, students understand the impetus behind the writing of poems. The handouts and activities contained in the lessons provide an…

Bettendorf, Joline; And Others (1989). Literature of War and Peace. Section V: The Individual and the State. This 14-16 day curriculum unit is designed for use in English and language arts classrooms, grades 9-12 and community college. While it is the fifth section in a series of five on the literature of war and peace, it can be used with or without the other four sections. Each section of the series focuses on a different genre of the literature of war and peace, and the literature in each section has common sub-themes. In this section, students analyze the text of a play and discuss the relationship of the individual to the society in which he or she lives. In addition, this section focuses on the comparison of drama with other literary forms. Students relate the presentational style of the play to the intentions of the playwright while learning to visualize the play in performance. A reading of \The Firebugs\ introduces the discussion of an individual's responsibility to society and government, and of the constructive and destructive nature of an individual's behavior. The handouts and…

Strohl, Jean Bryson; Szalay, Lorand B. (1981). American, Jordanian, and Other Middle Eastern National Perceptions. International perceptions of Jordanian university students are compared with those of American, Egyptian, and Israeli students. The sample consisted of 50 students from each country; results concentrate on Jordanian perceptions. Assessments were based on the Associative Group Analysis (AGA) which reconstructs perceptions and attitudes characteristic of national/cultural groups from their free word associations. Jordanians tended to be conflict-ridden and laden with perceived threats and fears of aggressive, expansionist intentions. When compared to a 1977 assessment, an increase in their longing for peace, less concern with military threat, more concern with violence and security, and a deterioration in their image of the United States was evident. Egyptian and Israeli perceptions were similar to the Jordanian emphasis on group and family unity, while Americans valued individualism and autonomy. The document also discusses the role of psychological disposition in international… [PDF]

(1989). Nuclear Age Education Curriculum. The primary goal of the Oregon nuclear age education curriculum is to develop in students the knowledge and skills needed to meet the challenges of living in a nuclear age. This curriculum is developed around five general themes, each corresponding to a specific unit. The general goals for the units are: (Unit 1) to increase students' exposure to the world outside themselves, to other cultures, and to the natural and physical world; (Unit 2) to increase students' critical thinking skills and understanding of how people make decisions and form attitudes; (Unit 3) to promote skills of constructive communication and conflict resolution; (Unit 4) to increase students' knowledge of nuclear technology and their understanding of its benefits and limitations; and (Unit 5) to increase students' understanding of armed conflict and modern weapons issues. This is a K-12 curriculum, but many of the topics in units 4 and 5 are more appropriate for older children. For the most part, the lessons… [PDF]

(1986). U.S.-Soviet Relations. Close Up Special Focus. This booklet, part of a video and print educational unit consisting of a student text, a teacher's guide, and four 30-minute videotapes, focuses on the U.S.-Soviet relationship, attempting to distinguish what guides each nation's actions in the world as a whole and with each other. Chapter 1, "Differing World Views," examines how differing geographies, economic systems, and political structures contribute to the competing world views of the United States and the Soviet Union. Chapter 2, "Evolution of U.S.-Soviet Relations," examines the evolution of the current U.S.-Soviet relationship. Topics include the Russian Revolution, World War II, the Cold War, bipolar politics, the Cuban Missile Crisis, detente, and arms control. Chapter 3, "A Critical Issue: The Arms Race," highlights the arms race as the issue that causes the most friction between the superpowers. A history of the arms race is presented, its current state is assessed, and its future course is…

Lakey, George; And Others (1972). Training for Nonviolent Responses in Social Conflict: A Manual for Trainers. This manual contains an outline for a fifteen hour training course intended for hypothetical peace groups and includes skills and techniques for trainers to transmit to adult participants. The group discovers through role playing that tolerance, openness, non-retaliation policies, and preparation can effectively implement social change. Materials, prepared from trainers' experiences in other non-violent training including direct action and knowledge of philosophy of non violence, emphasize role playing and group dynamics. Five chapters include information on: 1) planning and conducting guidelines for trainers in nonviolent direct action; 2) directing and evaluating role plays; 3) and 4) understanding and teaching function roles of group members and strategy and tactics; and, 5) leading and participating in direct action involving street speaking and leafleting. The material in the manual is suggestive rather than prescriptive. Trainers are encouraged to adapt methods and materials… [PDF]

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Bibliography: Peace Education (Part 217 of 226)

(1972). Coping with Conflict and Change in Our Global Society. Report of a Summer 1972 Workshop. A five-week summer workshop offered inservice training to twenty-eight intermediate and high school social studies and English teachers. Participants examined the concepts of conflict, power and authority, identity, and interdependence through content and team working sessions, ranging from games to lectures, and independent study in an effort to produce workable mini-units around the concepts. Rather than writing an original curriculum unit, emphasis was on coordinating available materials with the individual needs of the schools where the fourteen units would be taught by the participants. Contact will be made with teachers in a follow-up program by the DVEP staff who will visit classrooms to evaluate the effectiveness of the materials, to provide ongoing resource assistance, and to choose the best units for wider local distribution. Staff and participants evaluated the workshop favorably. Teachers plan to implement mini-units and other workshop materials in their classrooms…. [PDF]

Schamel, Wynell; West, Jean M. (1997). Robert E. Lee's Resignation from the U.S. Army. Teaching with Documents. Social Education, v61 n2 p108-11 Feb. Outlines a series of teaching activities to be used in conjunction with Robert E. Lee's letter of resignation. These include textual analysis, class discussions, writing assignments, and student research. Includes a photocopy of the letter as well as a brief discussion of Lee's role in the Civil War. (MJP)…

Chatfield, Charles (1994). Peace as a Reform Movement. OAH Magazine of History, v8 n3 p10-14 Spr. Asserts that peace activism should be integrated into U.S. history. Traces the history of the peace movement and peace activism from the American Revolution to the 1980s. Concludes that the peace movement, although diverse and constantly changing, has made an appreciable difference in national attitudes toward war and civil violence. (CFR)…

Reinarman, Craig (1991). Political Pedagogy and Democratic Discourse: Bringing War and Peace into the Classroom. Journal of Urban and Cultural Studies, v2 n1 p99-106. A survey of approximately 60 college faculty members in several disciplines, all opposed to the Persian Gulf War, demonstrates their commitment to bringing the Gulf Crisis into the classroom democratically, not as an attempt to mobilize antiwar sentiment, but as an exercise in critical thinking. (SLD)…

(1970). Meetings of the War/Peace Curriculum Implementation Committee of Mount Diablo Unified School District. Workshop Report. This document includes reports from three workshop meetings of a curriculum development committee in the war/peace field. Nine social studies teachers met at the first session for introduction to: 1) the Project and District objectives; 2) the value choices, concepts, and topics making up the war/peace field; 3) some background on community and administrative support; and, 4) the curriculum development process to be pursued. Activities included presentations by consultants, group discussions, and an optional simulation. Four teams were formed to begin work designing curriculum units using the orienting concept of conflict. The second meeting was held for purposes of: 1) increasing understanding of the concept of conflict; 2) team discussions with consultants having expertise in relevant academic fields; and 3) planning necessary steps for producing teachable units by fall, 1970. The final meeting was devoted to: 1) team presentation of work to date and criticism; 2) planning summer… [PDF]

Kleg, Milton; Totten, Samuel (1990). On Teaching Horizontal Nuclear Proliferation: A Conceptual Framework. Social Education, v54 n3 p136-42 Mar. Recommends that the study of global issues be grounded in the study of war and peace, and urges teaching students that citizens can play an active part in public policy change. Provides nine questions as a basis for an instructional unit and includes a chronology chart and nuclear history of the five major nuclear powers. (NL)…

(1971). A Selected Bibliography on International Education. This unannotated bibliography is divided into four major sections; 1) General Background Readings for Teachers; 2) Approaches and Methods; 3) Materials for the Classroom; and, 4) Sources of Information and Materials. It offers a highly selective list of items which provide wide coverage of the field. Included are items on foreign policy, war and peace, technology and world power, the future, and world survivai. Books, articles, and other materials range from 1965 (one item) through 1971. Section 4, Sources of Information and Materials, is a directory of institutional and printed sources, which is divided into the following sections: Africa, Asia, Latin America, Middle East, Current Issues, Futures, and World Affairs. (JLB)…

Becker, James M. (1988). Global Education: An Overview. Louisiana Social Studies Journal, v15 n1 p4-8 Fall. Discusses the different definitions and conceptualizations of global education, stating that much of the traditional curriculum of international studies can be reinterpreted to prepare students to participate in an interdependent society. Gives nine objectives for global education, and delineates the issues surrounding current conceptions of global education. (SLM)…

Fernekes, William R. (1990). Nuclear Proliferation: A Unit for Study. Social Education, v54 n3 p170-72 Mar. Using Argentina as a sample case study, presents a classroom unit designed to explain the implications for world peace of nuclear weapons development. Employs a policy analysis model to make an indepth examination of the values underlying all government policy decisions. Includes unit topics and procedures for the exercise. (NL)…

Sunal, Cynthia Szymanski; And Others (1994). Children's Voices from El Salvador: War and Peace. Social Education, v58 n1 p31-35 Jan. Provides an overview of the decade-long civil war in El Salvador and discusses its historical and cultural roots. Presents 14 letters, 2 poems, and 3 drawings by fourth-grade students in El Salvador that relate to the impact of war on their lives. Provides suggestions for using these letters in social studies classes. (CFR)…

Durkin, Lisa Lyons, Ed. (1996). First Teacher, Volume 17, 1996. First Teacher, v17 n1-6 Jan-Dec. These six theme-oriented newsletter issues present specific curriculum planning ideas and activities for teachers of young children. The theme of the January/February 1996 issue is "Children's Literature." This issue focuses on library utilization, props, telling and creating stories, and bookmaking for children. The theme of the March/April 1996 issue is "People in the Neighborhood." It focuses on careers and jobs for kids, bringing in special visitors, neighborhood field trips, and a classroom restaurant. The May/June 1996 issue's theme is "Spring Creativity." This issue focuses on exploring the arts outdoors, springtime recipes, spring field trips, and problem solving with toddlers. The theme of the July/August 1996 issue is "Low-Key Summer Learning." This issue focuses on summer fun, outdoor motor skill development, picnicking, exploring summer weather, and summer carnivals. The theme of the September/October 1996 issue is "The Times…

Bettendorf, Joline; And Others (1987). Literature of War and Peace. Section II: Survival and Afterward. This 13 day curriculum unit is designed for use in English and language arts classrooms, grades 7-12 and junior college. While it is the second section in a series of five on the literature of war and peace, it can be used with or without the other four sections. Each section of the series focuses on a different genre of the literature of war and peace, and the literature in each section has common sub-themes. In this section, students analyze oral history and prophetic literature; one common subject featured in both works analyzed is the topic of survival. By comparing issues of war and peace in different cultures as revealed by literature, students consider the relationship between ancient and modern literature. The handouts and activities contained in the lessons provide an opportunity for students to develop writing skills and to understand better various literary styles and techniques. Six appendices are as follows: (1) Introduction to the literature of war and peace series;…

Gulick, Thomas G.; Merkle, Melanie L. (1983). The Model U.N. Program: Teaching Unreality. A United Nations Assessment Project Study. The Heritage Foundation Backgrounder No. 282. An evaluation of the instructional materials used by high school and college students who participated in the Model United Nations Program showed that the program is uncritical of the United Nations (U.N.) and biased against the United States and the West in general. These materials are strongly promoted by many prominent educational professional organizations. Examples of some of the biases found follow. The core curriculum being taught through the materials is the New International Economic Order (NIEO), which teaches that capitalist nations are exploiting poorer nations and that the solution to this exploitation is the massive redistribution of wealth from the developed nations to the Third World. There is no analysis of the internal problems of developing countries. Other curricula support the U.N. continual condemnation of Israel and South Africa, never mentioning PLO terrorist activities, the training of Angola troops by Soviet advisors, or the extensive U.N. funding of… [PDF]

Armacost, Michael H. (1987). U.S.-Soviet Relations: Testing Gorbachev's "New Thinking." Current Policy No. 985. Forty years ago, George F. Kennan advanced the doctrine of containment against Soviet encroachment throughout the world. The Soviet Union has evolved from a Eurasian land power into a global superpower. In an effort to create an international environment congenial to domestic reforms, Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev has sought greater tranquility along Soviet borders. He seeks to exploit latent anti-nuclear sentiment in Europe and to challenge the conceptual underpinnings of Western deterrence. While an Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces (INF) agreement would represent a major victory for the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), there are some who fear Gorbachev's moves represent a more subtle and effective means of removing the U.S. nuclear presence from Europe. This would leave a denuclearized Europe alone to face numerically superior Soviet conventional forces. These concerns can be dealt with by recognizing that NATO will need to retain a significant nuclear element in its… [PDF]

(1981). Project for Global Education: Annotated Bibliography. Over 260 books, textbooks, articles, pamphlets, periodicals, films, and multi-media packages appropriate for the analysis of global issues at the college level are briefly annotated. Entries include classic books and articles as well as a number of recent (1976-1981) publications. The purpose is to assist students and educators in developing a better understanding of the complexities, dangers, and possibilities of life in an increasingly interdependent world. Items are listed alphabetically in seven categories: interdependence and international organizations, war and peace, ecology and society, problems in economic development, human rights and social justice, women in world society, and social movements and political change in the United States. Subtopics include militarism, intervention and U.S. foreign policy, the political economy of natural resources, technology and energy use, food and hunger, the multinational corporation, religious freedom, patriarchy, and violence against…

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