Thirteen ed online
Strategy Community Service

Activities for Students

Introduce the Topic

Have workshop participants do the "-isms" activity from this guide. Then explain that the video features a program that helps students confront bias through an in-depth study of the Holocaust.


Activities for Students

Discuss:
  • the potential benefits of Facing History and Ourselves;
  • how studying the Holocaust could help students understand prejudice;
  • students' ideas about whether or not what happened in Germany could happen here;
  • how the teacher in the video facilitated students' discussion; and
  • the students' demeanor during their teacher's reading of the letter and their comments afterwards.
Try It Out

Facing History and Ourselves does not translate easily into brief workshop activities. However, these activites relate to the program's themes.

1. Looking at Groups

Prepare a large, simple drawing of a 12-petaled daisy on an 8 1/2-x-11 inch sheet of paper. Make a dot on the petal that would be at one o'clock on a clock face. Above the daisy write "Groups." Photocopy and distribute a copy to each participant.

Direct participants to write the name of groups of which they are a member on each petal. They should start on the dotted one, working quickly in a clockwise direction. (Do not give examples; these might be leading.) Allow four to five minutes. Then ask them to form groups of four and discuss their lists for five to eight minutes. Groups can then report to the larger group. How were the lists similar? Different? What were the first groups people thought of? Were there differences by gender or by ethnicity?

2. In Common

Ask participants to join with partners. Give the pairs three minutes to list things they have in common. Then ask that each pair join with another and find the items on both lists that all four share in common. Then have each foursome join another foursome, and so on, until the entire group has developed a list of things that everyone has in common. How hard or easy was this? Were there any surprises? How did people react when one person in a group was different, and therefore kept an item off the list?

Take It Further

Ask participants to get into groups of four or five and list the strategies their schools use to combat racism and discrimination. Allow about five minutes. Then ask them to brainstorm ideas for new approaches, listing them on chart paper. Allow five to ten minutes for this. Then ask groups to post their lists and report to the entire group. Afterwards, either continue to work as a group or regroup in a way that makes sense for your participants (e.g., by grade level or discipline). Discuss the bias-reduction ideas and determine if there are any that someone would like to try. If possible, develop an action plan for implementing the new strategies.





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