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Winter 2002/2003
For all of the following, it might help to also read George Capaccio's
article on the effects of the U.N. sanctions against Iraq, "How Many
Must Die?" at www.rethinkingschools.org/archive/13_03/iraq.shtml.
- Have students examine recent newspapers that discuss the possibility
of war with Iraq. Is Howard Zinn right? Do these articles ignore the
realities of war? If so, why? Visit www.iraqjournal.org
and compare the reporting with mainstream media.
- Write a dialogue poem between a U.S. policymaker or journalist and
someone who will be hurt if the United States attacks Iraq. For a
model, see "Two Women" (p. 112, Rethinking Our Classrooms,
Vol. 1) or "Two Young Women" (p. 152, Rethinking Globalization.)
- Write interior monologues from the standpoints of various individuals
contemplating this war: Iraqi civilians, U.S. or Iraqi soldiers, mothers
of U.S. or Iraqi soldiers, Iraqi schoolchildren, anti-war activists,
etc.
- Go to the website, www.dqc.org/~ben/index1.htm,
that includes photos of the human reality of the bombing of Afghanistan.
Copy these off for students and ask them to choose one photo and to
write from the point of view of the victim or a member of the victim's
family. They might complete this as a letter to President Bush or
another proponent of the war. Students might write other presidents
from the standpoint of war's victims. See also: "A Dossier on Civilian
Victims of United States' Aerial Bombing of Afghanistan," by University
of New Hampshire professor, Marc Herold, www.cursor.org/stories/civilian_deaths.htm.
- See the Rethinking Globalization column, "Thinking
in Puctures." Have students complete metaphorical drawings
based on Howard Zinn's article and other research about the possible
war against Iraq.
Bill Bigelow, S. J. Childs, Julie O'Neill, Bill
Patterson, Josh Weiner, Mary Weiss, and Paul Weiss contributed to these
teaching ideas.
Winter 2002/2003
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CONTENTS
Vol. 17, No. 2
Abstinence-Only Education Continues
to Flourish
'McDonald's or IBM'
Keeping Public Schools Public
Remembering Paul Wellstone
'A Harsh Agenda'
E.S.E.A. Watch
Taking a Stand for Learning
Creating a Literate and Compassionate
Community
Rethinking Globalization
Reading and Writing the World
Exploring Child Labor with Young
Students
Bringing
the Civil Rights Movement into the Classroom
Voices of Black Liberation
What
War Looks Like
Discriminating
Against 'Regular' Kids
Bilingual
Education is a Human and Civil Right
DEPARTMENTS
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