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As I follow Ukraine coverage, full of vivid images and detailed, poignantly human descriptions of the upending of common people’s lives, I wonder: Why don’t more K-12 curricula — especially history classes — present other wars in this same way?
Igor, a 54-year-old driver, is shown standing in front of a two-story house turned to rubble, staring blankly into the distance, holding a coffee. He describes an airstrike that killed his wife and 12-year-old daughter sleeping in an adjoining room. “This was her wheelchair … now she’s dead.”
Displaced families queue for food outside a hospital after the bombing of a residential area. “We are all scared, why us?” wonders Svetlana. “We are ordinary folk.”
Lena, one of 15,000 people hiding in a Kiev subway tunnel, “wipes her brow in exhaustion,” entertaining 3-year old Max with her smartphone, so his parents can rest.
At a Berlin train terminal, crowds of smiling Germans offer lodging to fleeing, heavy-hearted Ukrainians leaving loved ones behind: “Welcome 2 people, as long as you want,” one sign reads. Host Ms. Sanchez just wants to “make them feel safe.”
As adults, we understand war most deeply based on details like these, while textbooks most often omit them altogether. In my 10 years teaching history across grades 1-12, I never came across one textbook that portrayed a war in this way.
In one popular textbook, the Vietnam War is covered in one page: broad government goals and military actions towards stopping communism, general disagreements, years, presidents, casualty numbers. In another, the Cold War is explained as “a state of hostility between superpowers. … Later the United States used military intervention to keep communism out of countries.” No individual experiences mentioned.
Yet, when my undergraduate education students at UC San Diego reflect on the most memorable, impactful lessons from their schooling, and think through future curricula, many corroborate this need for reform. One recalled a guest speech from a Holocaust survivor. “That stuck with me more than the rest of my history lessons combined.” Another remembered a college classmate describing growing up in Palestine: hiding from soldiers, hearing gunshots, sneaking around the city in fear. Others describe family members’ moving personal stories of surviving the Japanese invasion of China, and of the Korean War.
Of course, the idea of teaching history in this way raises some valid concerns, but I believe they can be addressed and mitigated:
Understanding that civilians being bombed want to flee and need refuge should transcend political allegiance. Wheelchair-using 12-year-olds and their mothers shouldn’t be killed or lose their homes, regardless whose government is in the wrong, and students should learn that collateral damage is inherent in armed conflict. Similar human stories from Vietnamese, Syrian, and Ethiopian wars could produce similar takeaways.
Few students will need to recite dates, presidents or military strategies as adults, but most will cross paths with people displaced by violence, and others from invading countries. They will elect officials who promote and oppose wars and refugee-related legislation. Informed reasoning about military action and fair treatment of future classmates, neighbors, and co-workers from such backgrounds requires an understanding of those human details.
Not everyone knows a Holocaust survivor, but many students and teachers know survivors of other violence who could share their stories. Books like “The Kite Runner,” “The Sympathizer” and “War Trash” can help supplement that local, human perspective. Resources showing the personal impacts of war can be found on open-access educational databases, including Facing History, OER Commons, the Shoah Foundation — which has created lifelike video interviews with Holocaust survivors — and individual stories and comparisons of Sudanese, Ukrainian and Syrian refugee experiences.
Unfortunately, textbooks lacking these elements are still often the default, and this needs to change. For kids to understand war on a deep level, teachers need to show the people caught in it.
•••
Marco Chacón is a former K-12 history teacher and current doctoral student in the education studies department at the University of California San Diego, studying curricular models that promote deep learning.
The opinions in this commentary are those of the author. If you would like to submit a commentary, please review our guidelines and contact us.
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Nancy Freehafer 2 years ago2 years ago
This is an important and difficult subject, and Mr. Chacon has done a masterful job in taking it on. The practice of school administrators and textbook publishers is generally to avoid issues they consider controversial. Unfortunately, these are the very issues that young people need to explore, and war is one of these issues. It is crucial to challenge these practices. Mr. Chacon's essay is in effect such a challenge. Not only does he demonstrate the importance … Read More
This is an important and difficult subject, and Mr. Chacon has done a masterful job in taking it on.
The practice of school administrators and textbook publishers is generally to avoid issues they consider controversial. Unfortunately, these are the very issues that young people need to explore, and war is one of these issues.
It is crucial to challenge these practices. Mr. Chacon’s essay is in effect such a challenge. Not only does he demonstrate the importance of exploring war “on a deep level,” but he also responds effectively to the common reasons given for omitting such explorations. I salute him for this fine work.
Anne-Marie Douglas 2 years ago2 years ago
Beautifully written and I agree with what you say. Having been a child in Europe during World War Two I experienced war as a child, and though my parents did their best to protect me and my brother, many scars remain. Young Americans, unless they have been to war, mostly do not understand the horrors of war and the long-lasting impact. The pictures from Ukraine have made that a little harder to ignore.
Lowen Berman 2 years ago2 years ago
Mr Chacon raises an important issue here. If we want a peaceful future we need children to understand the realities of war. Too often the media, both news and entertainment, glorify war or present one sided views. When we see videos of destroyed Russian tanks we are never reminded that those tanks had crews of young soldiers, fighting for their country, dying in agony and leaving moms, dads, lovers and children at … Read More
Mr Chacon raises an important issue here. If we want a peaceful future we need children to understand the realities of war. Too often the media, both news and entertainment, glorify war or present one sided views. When we see videos of destroyed Russian tanks we are never reminded that those tanks had crews of young soldiers, fighting for their country, dying in agony and leaving moms, dads, lovers and children at home to weep and grieve.
We want children to become adults who understand that war is indeed hell and that there is always a better way to resolve conflicts. We tell our children that “violence never solves anything” and then contradict that statement by our own actions.
Margaret Burk 2 years ago2 years ago
I agree. The coverage of war in educational books is primarily statistics which does not promote deep thinking and learning. This is an excellent article
Nick Wechsler 2 years ago2 years ago
K-12 education can provide practice in developing critical thinking skills, empathy and understanding in relation to others, and an invitation to think beyond limited boarders of the heart, mind and practice of politics. K-12 education can promote a growing life of informed decision-making. But none of this can be accomplished without guided exposure to a world events. Young children are exposed and engaged in stories about war, violence, systemic and personal racism, and deprivation of human … Read More
K-12 education can provide practice in developing critical thinking skills, empathy and understanding in relation to others, and an invitation to think beyond limited boarders of the heart, mind and practice of politics. K-12 education can promote a growing life of informed decision-making.
But none of this can be accomplished without guided exposure to a world events. Young children are exposed and engaged in stories about war, violence, systemic and personal racism, and deprivation of human needs based on economic freedom. If this is limited to what they learn outside of school, their early learning teaches them the “importance of school learning with blinders on.”
I appreciated Chacón’s vision of creating a safe place to learn about and grapple with real world realities that are too easily muted in our classrooms.
Tim Morgan 2 years ago2 years ago
Great ideas. To round out perspectives more completely, add the history (and varied acceptance) of conscientious objection to war.