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“We need learners more than we need teachers.” - Will Richardson 1 Participate on Twitter #nhec.

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Presentation on theme: "“We need learners more than we need teachers.” - Will Richardson 1 Participate on Twitter #nhec."— Presentation transcript:

1 “We need learners more than we need teachers.” - Will Richardson http://blogs.ksbe.edu/edtechconference2012/videos/ 1 Participate on Twitter #nhec

2 Survivor Testimony at the Crossroads of Media, Practice, and Purpose Phip Ross English faculty, Southeast Community College Ed.D. University of Nebraska, Lincoln, (Dec. 2013) Holocaust Educator Network Fellow, 2009 2 Corey Harbaugh English teacher, Gobles MS/HS (Michigan) USHMM Teacher Fellow; USC Shoah Foundation Master Teacher; Holocaust Educator Network Fellow, 2009; Director, MI Summer Seminar on Holocaust Education

3 Who we are today? 3 Friends and professional collaborators for twenty years, we’ve worked on many projects together, most of which have included the creation, collection, and/or publication of story.

4 The formative center of Holocaust education explore digital resources, guidelines, best practices, and ideas for using videotaped testimony in the classroom. Consider both the use of testimony as a primary documentation of the Holocaust, and also the use of testimony as humanizing personal narrative for both social studies and E/LA classrooms. Survivor testimony

5 “[l]iteracy is the ability to express oneself in an effective way through the text of the moment, the prevailing mode of expression in a particular society. Literacy follows language. To be literate.. is to be conversant in the dominant expressive language and form of the age. -- Stephen Apkon The Age of the Image: Redefining Literacy in a World of Screens (2013) A pedagogical framework: Holocaust Studies

6 Andrea Lunsford adds: In today’s literacy, reading, writing, speaking, and listening are increasingly blurred Acts of literacy are deeply social and collaborative: to communicate, as Apkon notes, means to commune Literacy involves consuming and producing, receiving and creating Storytelling is the universal literacy—in words, images, moving pictures, and sounds.

7 A pedagogical framework: Holocaust Studies Personal story: activating a lens Story: Constructing Story Jessie’s Story: A Rock Story Digital Storytelling

8 8 Story as Co-Creative Action Change is difficult & good teachers often do not teach well to CLD students To understand literary imagination as acquiring awareness by way of walking in another’s shoes and entering the world of the other, one becomes “an intelligent reader of that person’s story” (Naussbaum, p. 10-11). As well as enabling one to “cross the empty spaces between ourselves and those we have called ‘other’ (Green, 1995, p. 3).

9 “... the miniature version of the self that can be seen by leaning in to see one’s own reflection in the eye of an Other. Decentering is like this. I try to shift the focus of the aperture of my mind’s eye, to open it wider, to let in more light. I need to see, to know differently. I try to move myself so that what I can see of the world changes. I need to see, to know the world differently.”(Condon, I Hope I Join the Band, p. 62)

10 Meet Gisela Glaser 10 “My story should matter. It should count for something.” 2009

11 Using Testimony in the Classroom 11 PROS: As primary documentation of the Holocaust; As a humanizing element to the overwhelming “statistics” of the Holocaust; To authenticate the literature ; To build contemporary human connections to historical times; Because it’s formative: people care about people! Testimony Makes the Content Relevant!

12 Meet Renee Firestone 12

13 Using Testimony in the Classroom 13 PITFALLS: Personal stories are subjective, so they contain factual errors; Personal stories meet the needs of the storyteller– survivors are not historians; Students can universalize individual stories to represent the whole (aka The Danger of One Story); Personal stories can be manipulated and manipulative, presented out of context, The Teacher Must Provide Context to Testimony

14 Testimony as Touchstone and Mentor Text 14 Touchstone Text: A text that doesn’t go away; it becomes a force in your own life and the way you act in the world. Mentor Text: A text that becomes a curricular anchor/framework for teaching and learning. If we hear only a single story about another person or country, we risk a critical misunderstanding. Chimamanda Adichie

15 Testimony Now and Forever 15 Today and increasingly: For students to be able to experience the full “telling of the story” by a Holocaust survivor, teachers will need to turn to online/digital resources, such as The USC Shoah Foundation’s IWitness program: iwitness.usc.edu

16 Understanding Narrative Structure of Testimony at USC Shoah Foundation 16 1) PRE-HOLOCAUST– Survivor remembers life and family before the war. 2) HOLOCAUST—Survivor tells the story of events, etc., during the Holocaust. 3) POST-HOLOCAUST—Survivor tells of coming to America, finding career, love, etc. 4) CONTEMPORARY REALITY—Survivor tells of personal/family reality in current day; often involves photos of family. 5) MESSAGE TO FUTURE—Survivor is invited to leave a legacy message. Nostalgia: An Aching or Yearning for the Nest

17 from Corey’s Rationale for Holocaust Education 17 Holocaust education in English allows me to focus on stories and characters. Real stories, true stories, told to us by the people who lived at that time and the historians who make sure stories and memories are understood in the context of the times that were lived….

18 A Final Digital Story 18

19 The Ultimate Goal of Holocaust Education 19 The Journey!


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