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Cavanagh, Tom – Journal of School Violence, 2009
In this post 9/11 era Western cultures are focusing on values that support war and violence. In this article an ethnographer explores the impact of these values on schools. These values, seen through the lens of restorative justice, include: (a) punishment, (b) adversarial relationships, (c) monopolization of power, (d) problemization and…
Descriptors: Biculturalism, Peace, Juvenile Justice, Social Attitudes
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Martin, Kathleen C. – History Teacher, 2007
Many students assume that history has nothing to do with them and therefore is a waste of their time, so finding a way to get involuntary history students truly involved in a topic is always the most challenging aspect of teaching it. As passive listeners they will remember little; as active participants they will remember more and--in at least a…
Descriptors: History Instruction, College Instruction, Introductory Courses, European History
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Studak, Cathryn M.; Workman, Jane E. – Journal of Family and Consumer Sciences, 2007
This research examined news reports in order to identify incidents that precipitated dress code revisions. News reports were examined within the framework of rules for civil behavior. Using key words "school dress codes" and "violence," LEXIS/NEXIS was used to access 104 articles from 44 U.S. newspapers from December 3, 2004 to December 2, 2005.…
Descriptors: Role Models, Teacher Role, Dress Codes, Sciences
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Miller, Richard E. – Academe, 2007
Today's major problems all share the same outsized modifier: the global economy; global warming; global terror. As the Internet and the marketplace continue to commingle peoples, desires, conflicts, and opportunities, the frenetic pace of change accelerates, dragging in its wake an ever-increasing sense of impending doom. The markets will…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Global Approach, Climate, Humanities
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Aricak, Tolga; Bekci, Banu; Siyahhan, Sinem; Martinez, Rebecca – Electronic Journal of Research in Educational Psychology, 2008
Introduction: Historically, terrorism has occurred in various regions of the world and has been considered a local problem until the September, 11 terrorist attacks on the United States in 2001. After 9/11, terrorism has become a global concern. The definition of terrorism has changed from a violent act of a group of local people against their…
Descriptors: Health Services, Elementary School Students, Terrorism, Student Attitudes
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Masemann, Vandra L. – Comparative Education, 2008
This paper gives an overview of the ideas generated in a course taught by a Canadian academic to American students on the subject of teaching in the post-9/11 period. The four major topics discussed are the technological context in which modern societies are situated, particularly the evolution from agrarian to industrial and now knowledge-based…
Descriptors: Multicultural Education, Teacher Education, Educational Change, Mass Media
Argo, Nichole – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2006
An increasing number of studies on suicide bombing suggest that terrorism is not necessarily bound to religious extremism. The authors of this body of work, primarily drawn from political science and social psychology, agree that suicide bombings, with or without the trappings of religion, are largely a response to occupation, or, since September…
Descriptors: Social Environment, Suicide, Social Psychology, Political Science
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Khan, Mehre Y. – Intercultural Education, 2007
Arguably, Muslim subjects of the diaspora, regardless if they identify as secular, religious, feminist, or queer, have taken on a new and further stigmatized visibility post-9/11. How can students and teachers located in feminist classrooms, Muslim and non-Muslim alike, safely imagine Muslim bodies and identities outside and within war propaganda,…
Descriptors: Propaganda, Cultural Activities, Muslims, Feminism
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Ruby, Nell – Across the Disciplines, 2004
A week after the 9/11 WTC event, the collage project that Nell Ruby and her class had been working on in a basic design classroom lacked relevance. They had been working from master works, analyzing hue and value relationships, color schemes, shape, and composition. The master works seemed unimportant because of the immense emotional impact of the…
Descriptors: Terrorism, Art Activities, Coping, Creativity
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Cassuto, Leonard – Across the Disciplines, 2004
The author used to teach a core course at Fordham University called "Language and Knowing." It was during an evening meeting of that class early in 1991 that he first heard that "Operation Desert Storm" had begun-by which he means that the United States and its allies started dropping bombs on Iraq and occupied Kuwait in…
Descriptors: Language Usage, War, Teaching Methods, World Problems
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Jay, Karla – Across the Disciplines, 2004
Though Pace University's Civic Center campus is just two blocks from where the Twin Towers stood, they have never thought of themselves as the epicenter of anything. They are usually a footnote to New York University or Columbia. To read the media after September 11, 2001, one might have thought that New York University was the closest school to…
Descriptors: Terrorism, Coping, College Instruction, United States History
Texas School Safety Center, San Marcos. – 2001
Although American schools have not been targeted for terrorist activity, circumstances do warrant that schools adopt a heightened state of awareness. This guide addresses the potential for terrorist activity within the context of September 11, 2001, and the new reality America faces. A significant portion of the information in this guide was…
Descriptors: Crisis Management, Elementary Secondary Education, Emergency Programs, Prevention
Backon, Lois; Galinsky, Ellen; Brownfield, Erin; Sakai, Kelly – 2003
This book provides tools for educators to help children respond to traumatic events with resiliency and hope. Created as an extension of the "9/11 As History" initiative, the book provides an overview of 16 unique lesson plans created for children from pre-kindergarten through the 12th grade. It also contains selections from the writings…
Descriptors: Childrens Art, Childrens Writing, Elementary Secondary Education, Lesson Plans
Shapiro, Lawrence E. – 2001
This book is intended to help parents, teachers, and counselors of school-age children who did not experience the loss of someone close to them in the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, but who are still at risk for prolonged anxiety reactions. Although every child will react in a different way to these events, concerned adults must help…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Children, Coping, Counseling Techniques
Metz, Mary Haywood – 2002
In a partially personal account, written in March 2002, the author asks what education can teach the larger society about appropriate responses to the events of September 11, 2001. She describes the ways in which she and other members of the general public were educated by scholars concerned with the Arab and Muslim worlds from colleges and…
Descriptors: College Role, Higher Education, School Community Relationship, Terrorism
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