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Last Updated: Jun 17th, 2008 - 15:46:17
Websites for Teacher Resources on the Holocaust: "The Pianist"
By Sarah Lane
Aug 25, 2006, 08:50 PST |
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Websites for Teacher Resources on the Holocaust
Holocaust Teacher Resource Center
This Holocaust Teacher Resource Center (TRC) website strives to combat prejudice and bigotry by transforming the horrors of the Holocaust into positive lessons to help make this a better and safer world for everybody. This site is sponsored by the Holocaust Education Foundation, Inc. At this site Educators (kindergarten through college) will find materials which can be brought into the classroom and studied. Whenever possible entire documents are included and may be downloaded for direct use in the classroom.
Source: TRC
Holocaust Educational Resource
Here youll find Holocaust Research Guides and Special Features including Techniques of Holocaust Denial, People from A-Z, The Holocaust Camps, Nuremberg Trials, Organizations, Places, and more.
Source: The Nizkor Project
Museum of Tolerance Multimedia Learning Center
The Learning Center is a comprehensive resource on the Holocaust and World War II with over 3,000 text files and tens of thousands of photos. There are online versions of past exhibitions from the Simon Wiesenthal Center's Museum of Tolerance. The Teachers Resource Center features glossaries, timelines, bibliographies, 36 questions and answers about the Holocaust, and curricular resources for teachers.
Source: MLC Online
Education... A Legacy Forum
This section of the Cybrary of the Holocaust is for teachers to exchange lesson plans, share new ideas, and help students learn. Witness testimonies are available, as are interactive maps. Visit the Online Education Links page, the Cybrary Bookstore, or view art from survivors.
Source: Remember.org
The Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies
Access the Virtual Museum of Holocaust and Genocide Art, Histories, Narratives, Documents, Educational Resources, Links, Bibliographies, and contact information.
Source: University of Minnesota
Holocaust Memorial Center
Ground was broken for the Holocaust Memorial Center on the property of the Jewish Community Campus at Maple and Drake Roads in West Bloomfield, Michigan, on December 6, 1981. Almost three years later, in October 1984, the Holocaust Memorial Center was dedicated and opened. Since then, the HMC has welcomed more than one million visitors from all over the world. Tens of thousands of school children tour the museum each year and have the unique experience of speaking with a survivor of the Holocaust. Learn more here.
Source: HMC
Educational Resources
This is a set of educational links to over 40 resources for studying the Holocaust.
Source: Ryerson Library
© Copyright 2006 by Classbrain.com
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