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Showing 1 to 15 of 139 results Save | Export
Roberts, Peter; Webster, R. Scott; Quay, John – Peter Lang Publishing Group, 2023
Often regarded as one of life's few certainties, death is both instantly familiar to us and deeply mysterious. Death is everywhere, yet few of us take the time to consider its significance in shaping human lives. This book addresses the difficult, complex, sensitive subject of death from a unique point of view. Drawing on insights from…
Descriptors: Death, Philosophy, Teaching Methods, Instruction
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Schafer, Zachary; Scharmann, Lawrence – Science Teacher, 2022
Death as a common mental health issue, however, can be viewed through a lens of student well-being, which can be nurtured through the use of a simple triad--maximize positive affect, minimize negative affect, and minimize the inhibition of affect (Watchtel 2016). Teachers often fear that difficult topics may maximize negative affect.…
Descriptors: Death, Psychological Patterns, Science Education, Mental Health
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Ineson, Sam – Teaching History, 2022
How can we help students understand the Holocaust in its full historical complexity, particularly when they often come to class with misconceptions arising from the representation of the Holocaust in popular culture? Over a three-year period, Sam Ineson set out to integrate the historical Holocaust into his school's formal and informal curriculum,…
Descriptors: History Instruction, European History, Jews, War
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Lawrence, Andy – Teaching History, 2022
In this article, Andy Lawrence returns to arguments made in "Teaching History 153" about the importance of teaching young people about other modern genocides in addition to the Holocaust. Building on those arguments with his own rationale, Lawrence also acknowledges the constraints on curriculum time that compel all departments to make…
Descriptors: Death, History Instruction, Grade 9, Curriculum Development
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Moore, Tara – Children's Literature in Education, 2023
Students in the English Language Arts classroom have access to more author commentary than ever. While following authors on social media may deepen students' engagement with their assigned reading, it also threatens to subdue students' own interpretations of the authors' texts. This essay explains how educators can introduce basic aspects of…
Descriptors: Authors, Childrens Literature, Death, Literary Criticism
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Hagmayr, Martin; Fröschl, Felix – Journal of Museum Education, 2023
What does a learning center for civic education do in a museum environment? How and why can democracy be taught in a museum? The Museum Arbeitswelt in Steyr, Austria, offers with its "Politikwerkstatt" a learning environment for people of different age groups where they can learn, discuss, and talk about democracy. This article shows the…
Descriptors: Museums, Democracy, Citizenship Education, Futures (of Society)
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Rodriguez, S. M. – Teaching Sociology, 2022
Sci-fi has the power to open dialogue because its alternate world-building enables students to feel far enough from reality to discuss social problems unreservedly. In this essay, I review an assignment I developed using "Black Mirror" and "Philip K. Dick's Electric Dreams" that present episodes in which militarized policing,…
Descriptors: Science Fiction, Violence, Police, Racial Segregation
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Katie Sluiter – English Journal, 2024
The author's eighth-grade ELA curriculum is rich with opportunities for students to bear witness to a variety of experiences. Besides the Holocaust unit, they read "Ghost Boys" by Jewell Parker Rhodes (2018) while exploring police brutality and segregation; "The Giver" by Lois Lowry (1993) while investigating government…
Descriptors: Jews, Death, War, European History
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Stead, Amanda; Haynie, Sara; Vinson, Monica – Teaching and Learning in Communication Sciences & Disorders, 2023
Speech-language pathologists often lack preparation for working with patients near the end of life (EoL). Few academic training programs offer dedicated or sufficient content in the area of end-of-life care (EoLC). Furthermore, traditional knowledge-focused outcomes are not the most effective pedagogical strategy in teaching EoL and palliative…
Descriptors: Speech Language Pathology, Older Adults, Death, Hospices (Terminal Care)
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Mašát, Milan – Journal of Pedagogical Research, 2019
The paper aims to introduce opportunities for the presentation of the theme of Shoah within institutional education. In the article we deal in detail with the inclusion of a defined phenomenon in the teaching of literary education. The artistic narratives are a suitable standard for familiarizing pupils with the given subject, both in a factual…
Descriptors: Jews, Death, War, European History
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Baldelomar, César – Religious Education, 2022
An expansive understanding of ancestors is integral to the opening of imaginative spaces for religious education--particularly in university and adult faith formation settings--to grapple deeply with contexts of precarity and the hopelessness such contexts breed. More specifically, this essay considers how hauntings by one's past selves…
Descriptors: Family Relationship, Religious Education, Religious Colleges, Psychological Patterns
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Deitcher, Howard – Religious Education, 2019
Bibliotherapy is an educational approach that attempts to engage learners in meaningful discussions about relevant, compelling, and complex issues that they confront in their lives. Bibliotherapy begins with reading and reflecting on stories that can draw participants into a process of reflection, in ways that are user friendly and…
Descriptors: Bibliotherapy, Religious Education, Judaism, Jews
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Powell, Sarah J.; Somerville, Margaret – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2022
In performing the zombie game, children enact embodied literacies through movement, gesture, and sound, and through incorporating the materiality and the spatiality of the outdoor area. They communicate in many ways, both brutal and subtle, enacting their understandings with each other as well as with other adults. The repeated performance seems…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Educational Games, Human Body, Motion
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Lincoln, Margaret – Knowledge Quest, 2020
The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM) defines the Holocaust as the systematic, bureaucratic, state-sponsored persecution and murder of six million Jews by the Nazi regime and its collaborators. During the Holocaust, German authorities targeted groups because of perceived racial and biological inferiority: Roma (Gypsies), people with…
Descriptors: Jews, Death, War, European History
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Reingold, Matt – SANE Journal: Sequential Art Narrative in Education, 2019
The following paper considers how integrating Holocaust graphic novels that prominently feature non-Jewish characters can be effective in introducing Jewish students to new perspectives on contemporary understandings of the Holocaust. Drawing on the results of recent studies about rising anti-Semitism and Jews' concerns for their safety, feelings…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Novels, Cartoons, Jews
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