(1999). Raising Children with Roots, Rights & Responsibilities: Celebrating the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. Human Rights Education Series, Topic Book 2. This curriculum resource grew out of a grass roots effort to promote the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child through education and political action. Designed primarily for young children and their parents, the curriculum builds on the power of the parent-child relationship to help build a positive self-image for both parent and child. By offering a positive parenting approach, the curriculum has a strong community and societal impact. Based on the idea that by starting with human rights for children, human dignity can be ensured for all, the curriculum resource helps ensure that the youngest members of society and their parents know about children's rights and responsibilities. The curriculum consists of 12 two-hour sessions, each of which follows the same format: the first hour includes parent-child interaction time and a community circle where families gather for songs and information sharing, while the second hour is a planned parent education time where adults…
(2008). The Impact of a Special School Placement on Student Teacher Beliefs about Inclusive Education in Northern Ireland. British Journal of Special Education, v35 n2 p108-116 Jun. This article, by Jackie Lambe, lecturer in education, and Robert Bones, lecturer in psychology, both from the University of Ulster, provides a useful review of the current state of policy, practice and teacher education relating to pupils with special educational needs in Northern Ireland. The authors use this review to launch their account of their own investigation into the attitudes towards inclusion of student teachers who had experience of working in special schools. Jackie Lambe and Robert Bones drew data from the transcripts of online discussions involving the student teachers. Using direct quotations from these discussions, the authors here reveal the positive attitudes that the student teachers developed towards practice in the special school settings; the confused or negative responses of the special school staff towards policy on inclusion; and mixed views on the promotion of enhanced collaboration between mainstream and special schools. Interestingly the student teachers,… [Direct]
(2008). Pleasurable Pedagogies: \Reading Lolita in Tehran\ and the Rhetoric of Empathy. College English, v70 n5 p506-521 May. In her audio essay for the the National Public Radio's series \This I Believe,\ Iranian-American author and professor Azar Nafisi celebrates the affective power of empathy. In the essay, Nafisi refers to actual people in Darfur, Afghanistan, Iraq, Algeria, Rwanda, and North Korea, but she turns to classic nineteenth-century American novel to provide her exemplary hero, Huckleberry Finn, who chooses not to turn in his friend, Jim, a runaway slave, despite social and religious pressure to do. Although Huck Finn does not play a prominent role in her bestselling book, \Reading Lolita in Tehran: A Memoir in Books,\ other famous characters from American and British literature do loom large, as does her argument about the privileged relationship between empathy and fiction. In this article, the author discusses \Reading Lolita in Tehran\ with Nafisi's audio essay in order to highlight the entanglements of consumer culture with self-representational practices and affective and \ethical… [Direct]
(2007). Talking Books for Children's Home Use in a Minority Indigenous Australian Language Context. Australasian Journal of Educational Technology, v23 n1 p48-67. Members of the Kunibidji community are the traditional owners of the lands and seas around Maningrida, a remote community in Northern Australia. Most of the 200 members of the Kunibidji Community speak Ndjebbana as their first language. This study reports on the complexities of transforming technology to provide Kunibidji children with access to digital texts at home. The printed Ndjebbana texts that were kept at school were transformed to Ndjebbana talking books displayed on touch screen computers in the children's homes. Some results of the children's interaction around these touch screens are presented as well as some quantitative results of the computer viewing in the homes. The processes of rejecting technological determinism, upholding linguistic human rights of speakers of minority languages and viewing technology as practice rather than a set of artefacts are discussed in this paper. The results of this study highlight the need for speakers of minority Indigenous Australian… [Direct]
(1993). Life in a Democratic Society: A Primary School Civics Course for Poland. This document summarizes a civics course for primary schools in Poland, grades 6-8. The curriculum was developed as part of the Education for Democratic Citizenship in Poland Project, a cooperative effort of the Polish Ministry of National Education and the Mershon Center, The Ohio State University (United States). The project aims to help schools and teachers educate succeeding generations of Polish youth to be active, competent citizens committed to democratic values. The curriculum includes over 80 detailed lesson plans. The document is divided into two sections. The first consists of unit and lesson titles, and lesson abstracts. The second part is made up of sample lessons. The curriculum has five units: (1) local government, which includes fighting unemployment, different interest groups, water, garbage, influencing decisions, day care, budget decisions, neighborhood, local campaigns and elections, problem solving and responsibilities of local government; (2) principles of… [PDF]
(2007). The Moral Dimension of Children's and Adolescents' Conceptualisation of Tolerance to Human Diversity. Journal of Moral Education, v36 n4 p433-451 Dec. This study examined the kinds of justifications children and adolescents used to support tolerant and intolerant judgements about human diversity. For the tolerant responses, three main belief categories emerged, based on the beliefs that others should be treated fairly (fairness), empathetically (empathy) and that reason/logic ought to govern judgements (reasonableness). Fairness emerged as the most used belief to support tolerant judgements and the most commonly used combination of beliefs was found to be fairness/empathy, linking tolerance to moral reasoning, rules and values. Specifically noticeable was that 6-7-year-olds appealed to fairness more often in comparison to the 11-12 and 15-16-year-olds. Older students used a larger repertoire of beliefs to support tolerance, indicating developing cognitive maturity. There was also a tendency for females to appeal to fairness/empathy more often than males. The major constraint to positive tolerance was not prejudice toward the target… [Direct]
(1995). Multicultural Education: Bias Awareness, Empathy, and Transcultural Identities. A Selective Bibliography. Reprints and Miniprints No. 830. The bibliography contains 331 citations of books, dissertations, research reports, and articles on multicultural education, primarily materials in English written in recent years. Topics include cultural awareness, classroom communication and culture, development of ethnic or national identity, classroom processes, curriculum design and evaluation, teacher education, immigrants, adult education, racism, research and research needs, national policy, peer relationships, human rights, and values education at all educational levels. (MSE)… [PDF]
(1975). Revenue Sharing and its Impact on Civil Rights. Journal of Intergroup Relations, 4, 3, 48-53, Jul 75. A discussion by the Assistant to the Director, Office of Revenue Sharing, U.S. Treasury Department, of the four part approach of that agency to extending the ability of the federal government to combat discrimination in the state and local sector; human rights workers should focus on the monetary and economic impact these funds have on the capability of local government, it is stated here. (Author/JM)…
(1975). How Far to Equality?. Integrated Education, 13, 3, 32-33, May-Jun 75. This testimony, before a public hearing of the New York City Commission on Human Rights, concludes that, although education is important, it clearly is not a panacea for the problems of blacks, it is stated: statistical analyses are interpreted as suggesting that a high school education is more necessary among blacks, than among whites, to escape poverty–but it is not a sufficient condition. (Author/JM)…
(1975). Blacks and Trade Unionism. Integrated Education, 13, 3, 53-59, May-Jun 75. This testimony, before a public hearing of the New York City Commission on Human Rights in May 1974, focuses on two issues: (1) the effect of the presence of trade unionism on the position of black workers in the labor market relative to white workers; and (2) the effect of federal government efforts to increase the position of black workers relative to white workers. (Author/JM)…
(1975). Housing Deprivation. Integrated Education, 13, 3, 85-86, May-Jun 75. This testimony, before a public hearing of the New York City Commission on Human Rights in May 1974, summarizes the implications of a study done at the Joint Center for Urban Studies of the number and characteristics of families that will buy a house, and what kind of housing problems they have, for the relative status of blacks or whites or other groups. (Author/JM)…
(1975). School Desegregation and Planned Deprivation. Integrated Education, 13, 3, 112-115, May-Jun 75. This testimony, before a public hearing of the New York City Commission on Human Rights in May 1974, notes that what is faced in this country is the dismantling of a system of segregation and planned deprivation, both aspects of which were protected by the U.S. Supreme Court within a period of three years between \Plessy va Madison\ 1896, and the \Cummings\ case, 1899. (Author/JM)…
(1975). Implications of the Weinstein Decision. Integrated Education, 13, 3, 143-146, May-Jun 75. This testimony, by the General Counsel for the National Association Advancement Colored People before the May 1974 public hearings of the New York City Commission on Human Rights, discusses the case entitled "Jeffrey Hart et al Vs The Community School Board of Brooklyn, District 21", which has come to be known as both the Weinstein case and the Coney Island case. (Author/JM)…
(1978). Trustees, Diverstiture and the Law. AGB Reports, 20, 4, 9-14, Jul/Aug 78. The responsibility of college governing boards to make appropriate investments is discussed in terms of current protests over doing business with South Africa. It is suggested that the "prudent investor" rule is paramount, that divestment has little real effect on policies of companies, and that human rights criteria should be considered but should not be elevated over the requirements of securing economic return. (LBH)…
(2004). Socio-Economic Development and Gender Inequality in India. Online Submission, Paper presented at the Academy of Human Resource Development International Conference (AHRD) (Austin, TX, Mar 3-7, 2004) p168-175 (Symp. 8-2). Gender discrimination in India affects poor women's socio-economic development. This paper describes and interprets recurrent themes indicating that the Indian government, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), and other international human rights organizations show growing concerns regarding gender inequality in India. As it is not within the scope of this paper to cover India's vast continent, only certain states will be highlighted. [For complete proceedings, see ED491481.]… [PDF]