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Holmberg, Ulrik – London Review of Education, 2017
In 2012, Uganda celebrated 50 years as an independent state following more than half a century under colonial rule. Since independence, Uganda has experienced a period of political turmoil and civil war within its constructed colonial borders. Given these historical experiences, what do students find important about their nation's history and what…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational History, World History, War
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Kim, Paul Youngbin – Psychology Teaching Review, 2020
The blend of traditional and contemporary culture in South Korea offers study abroad students a valuable setting to learn about psychological constructs. Despite South Korea's potential as a study abroad destination, the body of literature on teaching psychology abroad in the country remains undeveloped. An immersion experience can be a valuable…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Asian Culture, Cultural Awareness, Psychological Patterns
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Kim, Hyunduk – Social Education, 2012
During World War II, human rights violations against women took on gargantuan proportions of indescribable horror. The Japanese military engaged in the systematic abduction of women from China, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, the Philippines, Taiwan, and other nations and confined them to military installations in Japanese-occupied territories to serve…
Descriptors: Females, Civil Rights, Rural Areas, Foreign Countries
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Wallace, Robert M. – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2009
Because Dominique (or D-Mon, as he liked to be called) had drill before class, he would sometimes come in late in the author's class, his army boots silently moving across the tile as though he were trying to sneak by a sentry. The army fatigues that he wore were supposed to help him blend into a desert landscape, a tan-and-brown world of sand. In…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Writing Assignments, Personal Narratives, War
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Burdick, Melanie – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2009
This article considers the emotional and psychological complexities of responding to personal narratives when the focus is war. The author teaches at a community college and she always begins her semester with a narrative assignment for the usual reasons: students write better when they write what they know; teachers should scaffold writing…
Descriptors: Writing Assignments, War, Foreign Countries, Personal Narratives
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Gillette, Aaron – History Teacher, 2006
The question, "What were the causes of World War I?," has become one of the classic historical debates of which there seem to be endless permutations. In the past 90 years historians, journalists, and politicians have offered many more or less rational explanations for the war. Although at least some of the usual "causes"…
Descriptors: War, World History, Modern History, Historical Interpretation