11/8/2006
10/31/2006
Absolutely nothing. Two stories, one topic.
Story 1.
My oldest son (5) has been into a series of books called the Magic Tree House. A brother and sister find a tree house that can transport them through time and around the world. In ten chapters and about 80 pages we've visited Pompeii, the Titanic, the age of dinosaurs, the ice age, Ancient China, and about fifteen other destinations. They usually involve a riddle or simple mystery and have served as a good learning tool.
When the latest group of books came into the library, my wife and I noticed that two of the books were about war - the Civil War and the Revolutionary War. My children are probably a bit sheltered. We do not let them watch much television, and even then, it is stuff that both the five and three year old can watch together. We do not own a toy gun, nor do we let them play with them at other kid's houses. We know that will change eventually, but we are not looking forward to that day.
Last night I tried to explain the concept of war to him.
"Sometimes groups of people fight one another"
"Why"
"For lots of reasons. For this war, there were two groups fighting. The Northerners were trying to stop the Southerners from hurting another group of people."
"Well, why didn't they just ask them to stop?"
"They did, but they didn't listen. So they started to fight about it. Now we try to avoid fighting, right?"
"Yes."
"But does it make sense that somebody is doing something wrong you might have to fight them to get them to stop?"
"Yes." (still a little puzzled)
So I start reading the book. The tree house takes them back in a Civil War battlefield where injured soldiers are walking towards some destination.
"Why are they hurt?"
"Well, people can get hurt when fighting a war."
"Do people die?"
"Yes, sometimes people die."
Tears start to well up, "Why do people fight then?"
"They fight to stop other people from doing bad things. Or they fight because they are making bad choices. Or they fight because they just can't agree."
Tears turn into sobs. "I don't like this, I don't want to read this."
After he calmed down, I read him a nice book about jungle animals.
He was probably too young, for this book and conversation. As are the children who actually have to witness war firsthand.
Story 2.
Last February, I wrote about a former student who visited me after his second tour in Iraq. Today, I got another visit from him. As soon as I saw him walk in I knew something wasn't right. He was shipped out for his third tour in March. He still had several months before his tour was up. Then he limped through the door. I left the front of class - the students were involved in a self directed activity for the time - and went back to talk to him. His leg had almost been "blown off." Had it not been for the swift reactions of his friends, he would have died. He spent two weeks in a medically induced coma and was able to wake to the face of his wife.
I didn't feel comfortable asking him too much about his injury, but he pulled up his pant leg and showed a nasty wound, now filled with scar tissue and skin grafts from his upper thigh.
He stayed only a few minutes. I shook his hand. As he left, I thought, at least HE does not have to go back.
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While I am a pacifist at heart, I do recognize that war is part of humanity. One thing I always tell my students is that people, human beings as a whole, have issues. Humanity has always needed a good therapist - self help books just don't work. Religion doesn't seem to be the answer for world peace either.
Some times wars have to be fought. Sometimes they are fought over pettiness and greed. In middle of any war are the innocent, the children who just don't understand why people would kill each on purpose. In the middle of any war are the young men (and women today) who follow orders, fight, and die for what they, or what their leaders, believe is right. When is a sacrifice for the common good, just a waste and when it is it justified.
technorati tags:war
Blogged with Flock
10/19/2006
10/11/2006
Genocide is a subject I spend a lot of time on in my world history classes during the spring. One of the more powerful ways students connect with these events (or any historical topic for that matter) is through some sort of individual connection. To have a rock band lie System of a Down with a personal link to an event like the Armenian Genocide could be powerful. I'll have to watch the documentary to see if I can use it in the classroom.BBC in league with a rock band to broadcast a documentary about genocide, starting with the Armenian massacre
Source: Press Release -- Total Assault LLC (10-10-06)
In Iraq, Reagan did not want the horrors of Saddam Hussein’s massacre against the Kurds to come out, because then he would have to do something to stop him. In Bosnia, world television coverage of the genocide convinced the international community to step in...but only after 200,000 had been murdered.
In Rwanda, Bill Clinton did not want the true horrors to come out ...because then he would have to do something. And now, in Darfur, George Bush has finally declared the desolation of the Southern Sudan a “genocide”—yet refused to do what it takes to stop it.
Why? Because, once again, as in 1915, when the U.S. ambassador to Turkey, Henry Morgenthau, first reported the wholesale extermination of the Armenian population by the Ottoman Turks in Anatolia, it was denied so the United States would not be forced to act. That reaction gave Hitler his impetus for the Holocaust: “Who remembers the Armenians?” he declared in 1939, before ordering the murder of 6 million European Jews.
In “Screamers,” Garapedian and the multi-platinum selling, Grammy-winning Armenian-American rock band System of a Down trace the history of modern-day genocide from the fertile “Holy Mountains” of Anatolia to Darfur ... in a documentary as shattering as it is powerful, laced with seven of their most famous songs from “Holy Mountains” to “P.L.U.C.K.” to the #1 hit “B.Y.O.B.” that illuminate why the world’s inability to recognize the Turks’ annihilation of the Armenians leads directly to Cambodia, Rwanda, Bosnia and Darfur. And shows us we can stop it. (You can read the whole press release here).
10/3/2006
9/17/2006
9/1/2006
Announcing the first annual “K12 Online 2006″ convention for teachers, administrators and educators around the world interested in the use of Web 2.0 tools in classrooms and professional practice. This year’s conference is scheduled to be held over two weeks, Oct. 23-27 and Oct. 30- Nov. 3 with the theme “Unleashing the Potential.” A call for proposals is below.
There will be four “conference strands”– two each week. Two presentations will be published in each strand each day, Monday - Friday, so four new presentations will be available each day over the course of the two-weeks. Each presentation will be given in podcast or screencast format and released via the conference blog (URL: TBA) and archived for posterity.
THE FOUR STRANDS ARE:
Week 1
Strand A: A Week In The Classroom
Strand B: Basic/Advanced Training (one of each per day)
Week 2
Strand A: Personal Professional Development
Strand B: Overcoming Obstacles
CALL FOR PROPOSALS
We’d like to invite you to submit a proposal to present at the conference. If you have something you’d like to share with the community, both people who are new to blogs and/or experienced bloggers please email the appropriate conference convenor above with your ideas. The deadline to submit a proposal (just the proposal, not the finished product) is September 30, 2006. One of us will contact you to finalize the date of your presentation. Your presentation may be delivered in any web-based medium (including but not limited to…podcasts, PowerPoint files, blogs, websites, wikis, screencasts, etc.) and must be emailed to your assigned conference convenor one week before it goes live, (see above strands) so that it can be uploaded to the server.
If you have any questions about any part of this, email one of the conference organizers:
Darren Kuropatwa
Sheryl Nusbaum-Beach
Will Richardson
technorati tags:k12online06, blogging, education, conferences
8/29/2006