The Power of The Story
The Power of The Story
The Power of The Story
POWER
OF THE
STORY
T H E VOICE OF WI T NESS T EACH ER’S
GUI DE TO ORAL H ISTORY
R I C H A R D AY ER S
A N D W I LLI A M AY ER S
VO I C E O F W I T N ES S
V OI CE OF W I TN ES S
M c SW E E N E Y ’ S B O O K S
SAN FRAN CI SCO
Voice of Witness is a non-profit organization that uses oral history to illuminate contemporary
human rights crises in the U.S. and around the world. Founded by author Dave Eggers and physi-
cian/human rights scholar Lola Vollen, Voice of Witness publishes a book series that depicts hu-
man rights injustices through the stories of the men and women who experience them. The Voice
of Witness Education Program brings these stories, and the issues they reflect, into high schools
and impacted communities through oral history-based curricula and holistic educator support.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
PRIMARY WRITER: Cliff Mayotte Mark Davis, Facing History and Ourselves
ASSISTANT EDITORS: John Knight, Claire Kiefer
Charlotte Crowe
Voice of Witness would like to acknowledge the Kathryn Kuszmar, Notre Dame High School, San Jose, CA
following educators for their contributions to this Bill Pratt, Berkeley High School, Berkeley, CA
guide. Their commitment to teaching and learning
is present on every page. Lauren Markham, Oakland International High School,
Oakland, CA
Cheryl Nelson, John O’Connell High School, Robert Sanborn, Lick-Wilmerding High School,
San Francisco, CA San Francisco, CA
Katherine Geers, Mission San Jose High School, Fremont, CA Nishat Kurwa, Youth Radio
Gerald Richards, CEO 826 National
Jennifer Moore, Mission San Jose High School
Kathryn Kuszmar, Notre Dame High School, San Jose, CA
Anne Grajeda, Envision Academy
Joe Chellino, Joliet West High School, Joliet, IL VOICE OF WITNESS:
Denise Savoy, San Francisco Community School FOUNDING EDITORS: Dave Eggers and Lola Vollen
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR/EXECUTIVE EDITOR: mimi lok
Stephanie Sotomayor, Oceana High School, Pacifica, CA
MANAGING EDITOR: Luke Gerwe
Michael Sudmeier
DEVELOPMENT AND COMMUNICATIONS
Stacey Goodman, The Athenian School, Danville, CA DIRECTOR: Juliana Sloane
Mark Heringer, Academy of Arts and Sciences, San EDUCATION PROGRAM DIRECTOR: Cliff Mayotte
Francisco School of the Arts PUBLICITY ASSOCIATE: McKenna Stayner
EDUCATION ASSOCIATE: Claire Kiefer
This project was made possible with the generous support of the Hemera Foundation.
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FOREWORD
This teaching guide initiates a collegial discussion among teachers and within communities. It is
an invitation to take off from some excellent teaching projects that have already been piloted, and
then to go further, to invent your own way in.
Oral history can be a truly revolutionary pedagogy. Because the work is propelled by questions
instead of answers, it liberates students from the dull routines of passively receiving predigested in-
formation. Instead, they become actors in constructing history and contributing substantively to the
trajectory of the curriculum. They invent and experience the method of science, proposing explana-
tions of the world, and then investigate to test the truth or to modify their explanations.
Students can approach the work as artists, filled with creativity and inventiveness, generative
mistakes and sparkling epiphanies. Teachers can learn to take an attentive and supportive backseat,
after sufficient preparation, and watch democratic education emerge from projects that the students
themselves have learned to own. Through these projects, the stories that have been hidden, sup-
pressed, and ignored begin to take center stage, and the real dimensions of one’s community and its
struggles burst forth and grab the mic. This is why oral history, in form and content, can become a
central project of social justice in our classrooms.
Oral history concerns itself with what happened, and with an essential overlap: that which is
said to have happened. Oral historians do the work, then, of historians—sifting through the records
for facts and artifacts—as well as the work of anthropologists—searching for the meanings that
people attribute to particular events and specific experiences. By doing both, and then some, oral
historians gather together the factual and the meaningful.
The focus of oral history, like the focus of great teaching, is always the space between: between
history and anthropology, happening and narrative, fact and meaning, past and present, remember-
ing and forgetting, student and teacher, interviewer and subject. Oral history is not an adjunct or a
poor cousin to “real” history. Nor is it pure fiction, an imaginary tale spun out with no relationship
to any external referent whatsoever. Rather, it is a necessary third thing with its own integrity, de-
mands, traditions, and base: it is engaged in a history of moments, as well as interested in a history
of memory.
For the oral historian, like the teacher, the task is to question, question, question—and after
that, to question some more. The approach to teaching oral history found in this book and in the
Voice of Witness series offers a break with the tendency in American culture toward narcissism
and passivity.
It is outward looking. It seeks answers in the wisdom of others. It also inspires us to examine
what makes people tick, what makes our complex world so exciting and confusing, who we are,
where we have come from, and where we are headed.
The oral history interview is always a dialogue: someone is telling a story to someone else. Like
any other dialogue, and like teaching at its best, it depends on relationship more than technique.
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The interview is not an interrogation or an intrusion, or a designated therapeutic moment; it is
rather the opening of a narrative space that people may choose to enter or not. It is an invitation,
not a destination. The interviewer, like the engaged teacher, is the student, the learner, the one who
brings a lack of knowledge and a certain ignorance into the conversation; the subject of the inter-
view, or the narrator, is the teacher, the recognized authority, and an entire universe of meaning-
making energy. For the interviewer, listening actively and attentively is the main idea; learning from
the stories of a range of participants is the payoff. For the narrator, the conversation is another occa-
sion to perform an account of events and experiences for an audience, a chance to reveal meanings,
and in the process discover something valuable and possibly new.
When we think of oral narratives as performances, we allow a different order of response. Some-
one in the United States says, “I don’t remember those bad times,” and we note that forgetting can
be psychologically understandable, even when politically unstable. Someone begins a commentary
by noting, “I’m a black man,” or “I’m a woman,” or “I’m transgendered,” or “As a refugee.” In some
settings this may invite critique or correction, but for oral historians it provokes a primary question:
Why begin from that standpoint? What is the meaning of this positioning to what is to follow? What can we
learn that we do not know from the decision to utter that very sentence?
Oral history is the poetry of the everyday, the literature of the streets, the subjective experiences
and personal perspectives of the extraordinary ordinary people—not a substitute but an essential
piece of any accurate record of human events. The creators of the Voice of Witness series, and the
approaches offered in this guide, allow students as oral historians to reject the dispassionate stance of
traditional social science, adopting instead a capacity for empathy and identification, for greater joy
and immense indignation and, above all, a willingness to be changed in the process.
The stories people tell and share can become powerful tools against propaganda, political
dogmas, and all manner of impositions and stereotypes. Seeking honesty and authenticity in stories
means becoming attuned, as well, to contradiction, disagreements, silences, negation, denials, incon-
sistencies, confusion, challenges, turmoil, puzzlement, commotion, ambiguities, paradoxes, disputes,
uncertainty, and every kind of muddle. Oral historians, like teachers, dive headfirst into the wide,
wild world of human experience.
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INTRODUCTION
TRANSFORMATION THROUGH
THE STORIES OF OTHERS
by Lola Vollen, cofounder, Voice of Witness
Fatima’s story changed my life. I met her by chance in 1996, a year after the end of the war in
Bosnia—a war in which her son went missing. My life has never been the same since she told
me what happened to her family in the final days of the war. The Voice of Witness book series
harnesses the transformative power of such first hand accounts in order to powerfully illuminate
the human rights and social justice issues of our time.
Our education program is not only a teacher resource for using such accounts in meaningful
ways, but also a comprehensive guide for teachers who want to enable their students to elicit and
document meaningful narratives through a thoughtful interviewing process and create powerful
oral history projects of their own.
Fatima’s son had been a victim of the 1995 ethnic cleansing of Srebrenica—ironically the first
U.N. declared “safe haven”—in which nearly 8,000 Muslim men and boys had been summarily
executed by Serb forces. The response of the international community was to establish a war
crimes tribunal, which began unearthing the mass graves of Srebrenica’s victims for the sole
purpose of collecting evidence for the prosecution of those responsible for Europe’s worst atrocity
since the holocaust.
At that time, I was in Bosnia on a routine medical mission to rebuild its public health
system. I had read about the fall of Srebrenica, even visited the eerily deserted city and wandered
its empty streets still strewn with the remnants of the pillaging of its homes and storefronts. But
the plight of the missing and their survivors was not part of my Bosnian landscape.
Fatima still hoped to find her son alive. But if he was dead, she told me, all she wanted was
his bones so she could do in death what she could not do in his lifetime—care and protect all that
remained of him. What I learned from my encounter with Fatima and other women with missing
family was what these survivors needed to move on with their lives—they needed to know
with certainty the fate of their missing members and have their individually-identified remains
returned to them for proper burial.
Before Fatima, I had never spoken to a survivor from Srebrenica, much less wondered what
they needed to get on with their lives. After meeting Fatima, I assumed that in the aftermath
of such an unconscionable atrocity there would be an all-out endeavor to address the needs of its
survivors. But there wasn’t. No one was asking or listening to what the survivors had to say.
Because I did, I ended up staying in Bosnia from 1996 to 2000 with Physicians for Human
Rights, to work with the survivors from Srebrenica, developing and directing the largest-ever
mass grave exhumation and identification program for families whose loved ones went missing in
the war. What I heard from listening to Fatima and other survivors of Srebrenica made me stay
and do what I did.
I am not the first person to have their life transformed by personal accounts of injustice. Nor
was Fatima’s the first or last personal account to take me to places in my own life I had never
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imagined going. During my first summer off from college, it was Studs Terkel who brought first
hand narratives to my doorstep. I remember well the impact of one bundle of his stories that
arrived in the mail under the title Working.
House sitting, working as a waitress, busboy, and computer board assembler—the first-
person accounts in Working revealed the intricacies and richness of life in blue collar America.
This was hardly the vista I enjoyed from my perch just outside of Harvard Square, but, captivated
by the lives and life forces revealed in Working, the experience of reading the book was pivotal
for me: everyone Studs introduced me to—farmers, waitresses, taxi drivers, truck drivers—were
interesting people to me, and a new sense that the richness of life was omnipresent to those who
knew how to tap it began to take root. And Working gave me the framework to perceive the
richness, meaning, and pleasure of my own summertime gigs.
It was at a Studs Terkel event in 2003 that I met Dave Eggers. By that time, my life had
been snagged by yet another story—that of Herman Atkins, a man wrongfully convicted of rape
who spent twelve years in prison before he was finally exonerated. He was released with nothing
but the clothes on his back to join a growing and marginalized population of the formerly
incarcerated. By 2003, I had collected interviews of over 50 exonerated victims of our criminal
justice system, many of whom had been on death row. Once again, I was astounded to find that
what I came to view as a great injustice was largely being ignored.
Herman’s story, like Fatima’s story, made me want to do something and, as in Bosnia,
what I did was start a program—the Life After Exoneration Program—to address the needs
of this growing, but invisible, population of exonerees. As a public health physician, program
development was part of my repertoire—this is what public health people do. But I was frustrated
at my inability to harness on their behalf the very force that compelled my dedication to their
needs—the power of their stories. I carried their stories in my head, wishing others could share
the burden of knowing, until I met a man with the bullhorn ready to broadcast them. Dave was
eager and able to publish these stories and together we launched the Voice of Witness book series,
harnessing the transformational power of first person accounts to convey the profoundly unsettling
realities of life for today’s victims of systemic injustice and abuse.
Educational programming began in 2007, working initially with a handful of local teachers.
These teachers quickly discovered that they could engage their students in new and exciting ways by
incorporating the narratives from the Voice of Witness series into their curriculum. We took a giant
step forward when we partnered with Facing History and Ourselves, an international organization
known for innovative professional development and humanities education, to develop classroom-
based oral history projects In 2009, Cliff Mayotte brought his nearly 25 years of experience to bear
on these pilot projects that involved over 750 students. Cliff provided students and faculty the
framework, skills, and support necessary to responsibly tap into and document the rich reservoir of
human experience to be discovered through thoughtful interviewing and curated by skilled editing.
As a physician caring for patients, I consider myself lucky to have ongoing access to personal
narratives. Since medical school I have focused on the “art” and practice of the clinical interview.
Stories shared by my patients have provided me a broad view of human conditions in our times.
But even in medicine, the role of the clinical interview is fading fast in a high throughput
healthcare system, favoring diagnostic testing over detailed history taking.
Talking to people to help them talk about themselves is, fortunately, more like dance than
rocket science. The sure-footed with experience can help those with less find their footing on the
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dance floor. The interviewer with experience can help a narrator give voice to an authentic story
that arises through the dance of supportive dialogue. Unfortunately, beyond the professional
sphere, there are few opportunities to develop interviewing skills—and without formal support,
dancing dialogues rich in content are less likely to happen.
But, lo and behold, Voice of Witness has found that when students are provided with
guidance and a supportive framework to solicit, listen to, and make sense of the stories they
gather, not only do they eagerly take their partners out for a dance, they too are transformed in
a variety of ways by the power of the narratives they elicit. Since we launched the educational
program a few years ago, we have witnessed with regularity this student experience we have come
to call transformational.
What makes the personal narrative so powerful is a matter of speculation. Oral historians and
educators explain the effect as personalizing history, eliciting empathy, resonating personally, or
connecting to the listener.
Having experienced this dramatic effect myself and witnessed it in others countless times,
I, too, am prone to speculation. My own theory on the origins of the transformational power of
firsthand accounts is quite simple: just as we are wired for language, we are also wired to relate
to the raw reality of others that we are exposed to in meaningful ways. Such wiring makes sense
from an evolutionary standpoint and though it may no longer confer survival advantages, we
nonetheless remain susceptible to the meaningful effects of the raw ingredients of life conveyed in
firsthand accounts.
In this guide, we have begun to elucidate the types of transformations that oral history can
induce. They are not a matter of speculation, but rather a testament to the many transformations
we have witnessed among students engaged in our programming. Looked at as a whole, these
transformations provide a map of opportunity that we know will continue to expand as more
teachers invite students on oral history journeys.
What kinds of stories will place students on this map of opportunity? Stories from our own
backyards, our school corridors, our communities, and sometimes from those who sleep under the
same roof. Often the most suitable individuals for student interviews are local people who would
not commonly find themselves in the position of being asked to tell their stories. Our classroom
projects are designed to outfit a classroom with all the resources needed to enable students to
take local journeys into the lives of others—journeys that will often transform the way they see
and think about themselves and others. Almost invariably, if the student follows through with a
finished product, those interviewed are grateful for the opportunity to recount a part of their life
story—and are appreciative of how students derive meaning from it. This guide will help teachers
launch students on these well-defined journeys that will provide transformative experiences for
students, their teachers, and those whose story they help bring to light.
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THE
POW ER
OF THE
STORY
PA R T 1
GETTING PREPARED
W H AT I S O R A L H I S T O RY ?
The mission of Voice of Witness is “to depict human rights crises from around the world through
the stories of the men and women who experience them.” These stories are collected through a for-
mal interview process, edited for length and clarity, and shaped into first-person narratives that seek
to engender awareness, empathy, discussion, and advocacy. The oral history methods employed by
Voice of Witness are rooted in the best practices of the Oral History Association.
According to the association, “Oral history is a field of study and a method of gathering, pre-
serving and interpreting the voices and memories of people, communities, and participants in past
events. Oral history is both the oldest type of historical inquiry, predating the written word, and
one of the most modern, initiated with tape recorders in the 1940s and now using 21st-century
digital technologies.”
In Doing Oral History, Donald Ritchie explains, “An oral history interview generally consists
of a well-prepared interviewer questioning an interviewee and recording their exchange in audio
or video format. Recordings of the interview are transcribed, summarized, or indexed and then
placed in a library or archives. These interviews may be used for research or excerpted in a pub-
lication, radio or video documentary, museum exhibition, dramatization or other form of public
presentation. Recordings, transcripts, catalogs, photographs and related documentary materials
can also be posted on the Internet.”
Oral history is, therefore, an intentional and formal process for collecting and sharing stories
that would otherwise go unheard.
W H Y D O O R A L H I S T O RY ?
Growing up in the west of Ireland, I would watch my father, a doctor, go on rounds through the countryside to
visit sick families, families too poor to pay doctors’ fees. My father spent long days traveling from home to home,
sincerely and patiently listening to the stories of these families and administering care. Though I would often
impatiently wonder when he’d be done, I gradually came to appreciate the time he gave and the sense he had of
the dignity of each person.
When he returned, my father would recount the stories his patients told him. The stories were filled with suffer-
ing and sadness, yet many of them were also defined by courage and resilience in the face of great hardship… Since
then my belief in the power of stories to foster compassion and guide us as a society has only grown stronger.
—Mary Robinson (from the foreword to Nowhere to Be Home)
Oral history can deepen students’ understanding of how history is written, why it matters, and
how storytelling can illuminate issues and events in a deeply personal way. By allowing themselves
to be open to another’s experience, students nurture their empathy and compassion; at the same
time, their thinking is complicated in vital, necessary ways. Through participating in oral history,
students can improve their skills as critical readers and thinkers, as they literally interact with the
12
“text” on many levels. And doing oral history—engaging with unheard stories from outside the
classroom—can strengthen both students’ awareness and self-confidence.
Social justice and inclusion are the backbone of creating and sharing oral history. Oral history
is usually not history from the top down, as related to us by the “great people” or the “winners” of
history. It is, instead, history from the bottom up, told by individuals and communities that we
rarely hear from—stories that go mostly unreported in mainstream historical narratives. Oral history
expands our understanding of what is historical and who actually participates in creating history.
Both parts of the guide can be used individually or can become a connected sequence that culmi-
nates with student-conducted oral histories. The lessons in the first part of the book suggest projects
for the second. The lesson plans range from activities that can be done in a single class period or as
five-day units, going all the way up to six-week oral history projects. In many cases, the lesson plans
and narratives can be interchangeable with other narratives in the series. Our suggestions for doing
so are listed with each lesson plan.
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LESSON 1
MATERIALS: Copies of Studs Terkel’s quote and “Questions from a Worker Who Reads,” a poem by
Bertolt Brecht (both included below).
RELATED CORE CURRICULUM STANDARDS: Speaking and Listening L.9–10.1. Reading Literature
L.9–10.1, RL.9–10.2
O V E RV I E W
Renowned oral historian Studs Terkel once said, “I’m celebrated for celebrating the uncelebrated.”
Terkel’s ideas about oral history were inspired by the poem “Questions from a Worker Who Reads”
by German dramatist and poet Bertolt Brecht. Using Terkel’s quotation and Brecht’s poem, students
can begin to explore definitions of history, reconsider historical subjects, and imagine unvoiced
historical narratives.
You know, who built the pyramids? Ask anyone that question and they say something like ‘Everybody
knows who built the pyramids; it was the Pharaohs, right?’ Wrong. It was the Pharaohs that had the idea
of building the pyramids, for their own aggrandizement, to try to immortalize themselves…But they
didn’t actually build the pyramids themselves, they got peasants and slaves to do the actual work.
STEP TWO: Facilitate a brief class discussion based around student questions and responses to the
quotation.
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS:
STEP THREE: Read the Brecht poem (as a group or silently). Address questions (terms, historical
figures, etc). Use the discussion questions below as prompts for a conversation about history and
how it is reported.
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Questions from a Worker Who Reads
So many particulars.
So many questions.
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS:
15
To help teachers explore the multiple facets and advantages of engaging oral history in the
classroom, the Voice of Witness education program has developed a supportive framework for
teaching and learning oral history. The framework is formatted as a Critical Thinking Diagram,
allowing teachers and students to “unpack” oral history narratives and frame critical thinking and
active reading questions. The Voice of Witness Framework for Oral History resonates throughout
the guide and aligns with Common Core Curricular Standards (see Oral History and Core
Curricular handout in Educator Resources section, page 131).
How does the story humanize How does the storyteller interpret the events of the situation, considering the
facts, figures, and statistics? facts, figures, and statistics? What discrepancies do you observe between the
What should one consider about data of the dominant narrative and what the storyteller finds to be true? How
THE hHUMAN FACEv WHEN ANALYZING does the narrative foster empathy for the storyteller? At what point in the
the data? story might one be moved to compassion for the storyteller? Why? How do you
emotionally connect to the story?
AN OPPORTUNITY TO HONOR INDIVIDUALS ILLUMINATING IDENTITY AND CULTURE
Reading or conducting oral history is an opportunity Verbal expression articulates personal and
to honor a person. By conducting oral history, you ascribed identity, a sense of place, cultural
accept responsibility for sharing someone’s story norms, and conflicts. Oral history promotes
in an accurate, respectful way. By reading someone a detailed appreciation of these in a personal,
else’s story, you immediately bring that person into relatable way.
the room as an honored guest.
What aspect of the storyteller’s identity is il-
How can you best honor the narrator in creating the format luminated in the narrative? How does the region
of the project and in consideration of the audience? How or setting affect the storyteller? What cultural
can you best honor an individual during the interview? values are being highlighted? What cultural bi-
How did you honor the narrator during the interview and ASES EXIST OR ARE BEING BROKEN BY THE STORY IF ANY
after the interview? 7HAT CULTURAL CONmICTS EXIST IN THE STORY IF ANY
How did the interviewer practice empathic communication skills? How well did the questions
prompt the narrator to share his or her story? What type of communication skills might be
improved? What follow-up questions might be asked of the narrator? What were the most
powerful moments in the interview? Why? How does the edited oral history project utilize good
narrative structure compared to the original transcript of the interview?
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LESSON 2
MATERIALS: Patriot Acts, “Contracting” information from Facing History and Ourselves (page 134).
OBJECTIVE: Provide students with a discussion framework for a group exploration of the relevance
and impact of oral history.
CONNECTIONS: This activity can be done with any narrative from the Voice of Witness series.
NARRATIVE EXCERPT: “The first couple of weeks after 9/11, I would say people’s reactions were
“polite hatred.” People would see me in my hijab and give me the finger while I was driving. I’d
be shopping, pushing the baby in the cart, and then I’d hear somebody loudly make a comment to
somebody else about Afghanistan, terrorists, or whatever else.
This was totally new to me, because here we were in a lovely beach town, with our beautiful life,
and you don’t think that people are suddenly going to look at you like you’re the enemy. That’s how
naïve I was.” —Rima Qamri
STEP ONE: As homework, read Rima Qamri’s narrative from Patriot Acts (21 pages). Encourage
students to employ active reading strategies found in Educator Resource section (page 137).
STEP TWO: Explain to students that the class will be incorporating the “Contracting” framework
from Facing History and Ourselves (Educator Resources section, page 134) for the day’s discussion
about oral history (provided that you have done the contracting exercise in a previous class). In
framing the discussion, you can describe a Socratic seminar as a “collaborative, intellectual dialogue
facilitated with open-ended questions about a text or issue.”
STEP THREE: To get the Socratic seminar under way, begin with one or more of the following
prompts from the Voice of Witness Framework for Oral History:
$OES ORAL HISTORY PUT A hHUMAN FACEv ON THE FACTS lGURES AND STATISTICS OF HISTORY (OW
$OES ORAL HISTORY hHONORv THE IDENTITY OF INDIVIDUAL NARRATORS )F SO HOW
)S ORAL HISTORY A hLEGITIMATEv FORM OF HISTORICAL REPORTING 7HY OR WHY NOT
How do empathy and compassion relate to oral history?
#AN AN ORAL HISTORY NARRATIVE BE hTRANSFORMATIVEv (OW CAN A STORY ACCOMPLISH THIS
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As the discussion unfolds, encourage students to use specific quotes from the text. Refer to the Voice
of Witness Framework of Oral History as needed.
STEP FOUR: As the seminar comes to an end, resist any prescriptive or general conclusions,
acknowledge the various viewpoints represented, and genuinely thank all participants.
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PA R T 2
O V E RV I E W
Using narratives from the Voice of Witness book series, this section includes lesson plans,
activities, and writing/discussion prompts that can bring history and contemporary issues
vividly to life. Students will encounter an astonishing variety of narrators, from wrongly
convicted chemist Beverly Monroe to Sudanese refugee and teacher John Mayik. The overall
objective is to give teachers multiple options for introducing Voice of Witness and the power
of oral history to their students.
This section is divided into different lesson plans based on contemporary issues or themes in
the Voice of Witness book series: Immigration, Identity and Culture, Exile and Displacement,
U.S. Justice, Security, Women’s Rights, and Race, Class, and Democracy.
The section can either stand on its own, be part of a larger “issue” unit, or function as the first
of a two-part oral history project that culminates in students’ conducting their own oral histories.
Each lesson includes suggestions for potential oral history projects as well as various media
options to enhance student learning.
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IMMIGRATION
O V E RV I E W
The immigrant experience in the United States reflects a complex set of ideas
that lend themselves to critical thinking and analysis. Using the primary
source material from Underground America: Narratives of Undocumented Lives as a
foundation, students can develop and articulate their own responses and insights
into this challenging issue.
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LESSON 3
MATERIALS: Underground America, sticky notes, or bookmarks. Students can also organize the activity
in advance in a journal or binder.
OBJECTIVE: To divide reading content into smaller parts to help students better organize and
synthesize information in an oral history narrative.
CONNECTIONS: This activity can be done with any narrative from the Voice of Witness series.
NARRATIVE EXCERPT: “It wasn’t long after I got married the second time that a church from Houston
sent a letter to my pastor in the Eastern Cape. The American church was asking our church for
missionaries to volunteer. My pastor’s wife called me that Saturday. She said, ‘There’s a church in the USA
that needs a missionary. Are you still interested in going to America?’ I said yes right away because—to
tell the truth—I have a lot of debt at home. And, you know, we have the idea that everything in America
is perfect because that’s what we see on TV and in the movies. In America, you find dollars lying in the
grass, every leaf on a tree is a dollar. Right now, if you call somebody in South Africa and say, ‘Do you
want to come to America, even if it’s to wash my pig?’ I promise you that that person will say, ‘Oh yes,
please let me come and wash your pig!’ People will do anything to get here, to make money to send
home. So, even though missionaries don’t get paid, I was sure people in America would help me.” —Liso
STEP ONE: Use the chart on the following page to help students organize their thoughts as they read
Liso’s narrative (18 pp) from Underground America (30 minutes).
STEP TWO: Students work in small groups and share their results from the activity. They should
compare questions and predictions and make connections to other related readings and their own
lives (10–12 minutes).
STEP THREE (optional): If desired, questions, predictions, and connections can become the basis for
student personal essays.
POSSIBLE ORAL HISTORY PROJECT: Class creates an oral history project focusing on moments of
change or how specific choices have impacted their lives.
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HANDOUT
DIRECTIONS
CHUNK IT!: Break the text into bite-size pieces, e.g., a paragraph or two that you can read easily.
TALK TO THE TEXT: Think about any questions, predictions, or connections (to things you already
know) you have with the text. Mark these right on the text itself, or on sticky notes if you are reading
from a book.
REPEAT: Keep reading and Talking to the Text with the next chunks.
METACOGNITIVE REFLECTIONS
This is like…
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LESSON 4
TIME NEEDED: One class period and one homework session, or two class periods.
MATERIALS: Underground America, the American Civil Liberties Union’s Myths and Facts About
Immigration (2008), large pieces of butcher paper or large (poster-size) sticky notes, markers.
OBJECTIVE: Through reading, analysis, and discussion, students enhance their understanding of U.S.
immigration issues.
RELATED CORE CURRICULAR STANDARDS: Reading Literature RL.9–10.1. Reading History RH.9–
10.1, RL.9–10.2. Speaking and Listening SL.9–10.1, SL.9–10.3, SL.9–10.4.
CONNECTIONS: Lesson can also be used with the following narratives from Patriot Acts: Rana Sodhi,
Usma Naheed Abbasi, Anser Mehmood, Farid Rodriguez; /UT OF %XILE Panther Alier, Abuk Bak
Macham; Nowhere to Be Home: Law Eh Soe, U Agga Nya Na.
ESSENTIAL QUESTION:
How do the stories from Underground America complicate your thinking about immigration issues?
NARRATIVE EXCERPT: “The day before the hurricane arrived, I went to work at the casino as usual.
That day the management made us work like never before. We cleaned absolutely everything,
working extra hours. People were saying that Katrina was coming but I wasn’t sure what it was.
Where I’m from we’d never heard of hurricanes.
Everyone on the overnight cleaning crew was Hispanic. There were Americans who worked the
night shift, too, but my American coworkers didn’t clean. They did other jobs, like security and
food service. That day, some of them said to me, ‘Diana, what are you still doing here cleaning? Let’s
go! Katrina’s coming!’ But everyone on cleaning crew had been told by the supervisor to stay longer
than our usual hours that night, that there was going to be an inspection the next day. Everyone else
was leaving. They left us there to go on working: cleaning and cleaning.” —Diana
PREPARATION: Download and photocopy Immigration Myths and Facts from the ACLU’s Immigrants’
Rights Project for students (WWWACLUORGIMMIGRANTS RIGHTSIMMIGRATION MYTHS AND FACTS). Create
reading groups for nine of the narratives from Underground America (to correspond to the nine myths/
facts of immigration), using the following narratives: Diana (12 pp.), Mr. Lai (20 pp.), Roberto (19
pp.), Liso (18 pp.), Lorena (20 pp.), Jose Garcia (17 pp.), Farid (18 pp.), Edela (19 pp.), and Estrella
(16 pp.). Other narratives from the book can be substituted for the ones listed above.
STEP ONE: Hand out copies of Immigration Facts and Myths to be read during class or as homework
(20 minutes).
24
STEP TWO: Assign each group one of the nine selected narratives from Underground America. Groups
can read their narratives silently, aloud during class, or they can be assigned as homework. While
students are reading their assigned narratives, they should copy three to six direct quotes from their
narrators that seem to align with or contradict the nine myths and facts of immigration (45 minutes).
STEP THREE: Groups should be given time to discuss individual quotes. Each group should assign a
facilitator and should be prepared to discuss the following (10–15 minutes):
Why quotes were chosen and how they specifically connect to particular myths and realities of immigration.
s (OW CHOSEN QUOTES HELPED STUDENTS EMPATHIZE WITH THE PERSONAL EXPERIENCES OF THE NARRATORS
s How chosen quotes enhanced students’ understanding of immigration issues.
STEP THREE: On nine poster-size sticky notes or large pieces of butcher paper, write each
immigration myth at the top and the fact at the bottom. Hang them up in various places around
the room. Have several pens placed near each “station.” Give students time to move around the
room, writing their chosen quotes directly on the particular myth/reality of immigration that it
relates to (15 minutes).
STEP FOUR: Class silently examines the quotes at each station (5–7 minutes).
STEP FIVE: CIRCLE OF VOICES: Students return to their narrative groups. Using three minutes of
silent time, each group considers their responses and reactions to what they have just viewed at each
myth/fact station. Each group member then has three minutes of uninterrupted time to discuss his
or her responses, reactions and questions. Then, members may react to the comments that have been
expressed (15–20 minutes).
STEP 6 (optional): Using the Circle of Voices format, have groups consider the following questions
(courtesy of Teaching Tolerance):
POSSIBLE ORAL HISTORY PROJECT: Using quotes from the narratives and responses during the Circle
of Voices activity, students can craft potential interview questions for an oral history project focusing
on immigration issues.
25
LESSON 5
TIME NEEDED: One to two class periods and two to three homework sessions
MATERIALS: Underground America, butcher paper or poster-size sticky notes, pens, paper (student
journals), and computer.
OBJECTIVE: Use critical thinking, writing, and analytical skills to convey understanding of
immigration issues through first-person narratives.
CONNECTIONS: Lesson can also be used with the following narratives from Patriot Acts: Rana Sodhi,
Usma Naheed Abbasi, Anser Mehmood, Farid Rodriguez; /UT OF %XILE: Panther Alier, Abuk Bak
Macham; Nowhere to Be Home: Law Eh Soe, U Agga Nya Na.
ESSENTIAL QUESTION:
NARRATIVE EXCERPT: “The feeling that I had to find a way out for myself and my family grew
stronger and stronger over the next few years. We just couldn’t go on like this. This was no way to
live. And I had so much anger toward the government that I really got to thinking, if I didn’t get
out then I’d probably just end up in jail. I just had no faith in China. I didn’t know how I was going
to do it, but I knew I had to go to America.” —Mr. Lai
O V E RV I E W
This lesson can serve as a basic introduction to position papers, giving students an opportunity to
practice their critical thinking and writing skills.
D AY O N E
STEP ONE: Students respond to the following prompt in their journals or binders
(10 minutes):
26
STEP TWO: Write the words “American Dream” on the board and have students share out the
responses from their journals, while capturing their ideas on the board so everyone can see them.
(5–7 minutes)
STEP THREE: Based on student responses on the board, and from a brief analysis of the economic,
cultural and political factors of immigration, class comes up with a working definition of “American
Dream” (20–25 minutes). To aid in student analysis, have a class reading/brief discussion using the
Immigration Myths and Facts from the ACLU’s Immigrants’ Rights Project.
Have students discuss the myriad factors that determine their responses. Students may also re-
flect on differing family experiences, for either first-generation Americans or families that have been
in the United States for generations.
As an additional analysis tool, students may wish to explore the National Archives (www.
archives.gov) for speeches by U.S. presidents and members of Congress that reference the American
Dream. This may provide meaningful context regarding national political definitions of the term.
STEP 4: Introduce Underground America and assign the following narratives: Jose Garcia (17 pp.),
Elizabeth (18 pp.), and Mr. Lai (20 pp.). Use most of the remainder of the class period for students
to begin their reading. The rest can be done as homework and/or during the following class period.
Encourage students to use active reading strategies (10–15 minutes).
STEP FOUR: Before the end of class, write the class definition of American Dream on a large piece of
butcher paper or poster-size sticky note and hang it in an accessible location in the room. During the
remainder of the unit, students will write comments, quotations, and questions related to their reading
on this poster. What they write can help shape their ideas for their position paper (2 minutes).
D AY T W O
STEP ONE: If needed, give students additional time to finish their reading (15 minutes).
STEP TWO: Allow the class some time to write on the American Dream poster (5–7 minutes).
STEP THREE: Give students the Position Paper handout, discussing the format and answering any
questions about the assignment. The goal in introducing the assignment is to encourage students to
think deeply about their topic/writing and not to get too bogged down by format (15 minutes).
27
HANDOUT
POSITION PAPER
THE ASSIGNMENT: For your assignment, you must take a position on the following question:
I. INTRODUCTION:
Introduce the issue and provide background. The introduction should include your definition
of the American Dream (which can differ from the class definition). As with other essays, your
thesis should be the last sentence of your introductory paragraph.
II. BODY:
Assert your first claim, providing textual evidence or proof (but please do not fill your entire
paper with quotes). Explain how your evidence or proof supports your claim. You should strive
to make three claims with proofs and explanations.
III. CONCLUSION:
Restate the strongest points of your argument and provide a “plan of action” for addressing the
issues presented. Sample question: What needs to change in American society for the American
Dream to be realistic?
THE PROCESS:
Over the course of several days, here is how you should develop your position paper:
28
STEP FOUR: Have a brief discussion about student responses to the reading. Ask students if they can
connect any quotes to their definition of American Dream (5–7 minutes).
STEP FIVE: Students may find it helpful to have a class brainstorm session for creating a strong thesis
sentence. For this brainstorm session, pose the following questions (10 minutes):
STEP SIX: Any remaining class time should be used for students to create drafts of a thesis sentence
followed by a basic outline of their paper. If desired, students can work in small groups to develop
their ideas. For homework, students should finish their outlines and begin working on their rough
drafts.
D AY T H R E E
STEP ONE: As a warm-up activity, students should work in groups of three and share their thesis
sentences and any quotes from the narratives that back up their thesis. Encourage them to refer
back to the previous day’s questions about thesis sentences and to the American Dream definition
(7–10 minutes).
STEP TWO: Address any questions regarding thesis sentences, outlines, quotes, etc. (5 minutes).
STEP THREE: Create a class “writing lab,” allowing students to work on their position papers. Offer
assistance and ideas as needed (25–30 minutes).
STEP FOUR: Before the end of the class period, allow students to write on the American Dream
poster (5 minutes). For homework, students should revise and finish their final drafts.
29
D AY F O U R
STEP ONE: Select two opposing student position papers to be read or presented to the class
(students can also create two groups based on similar positions). Create an informal class debate
about immigration issues. Class can also do a “fishbowl” discussion.* Refer to Contracting or class
agreements if necessary (30 minutes). In conclusion, pose the following questions to the class:
(OW HAS THIS PROCESS hCOMPLICATEDv YOUR THINKING ABOUT IMMIGRATION ISSUES
s What quote from Underground America inspired your position most?
s Did your definition of American Dream change during the process? If so, how?
POSSIBLE ORAL HISTORY PROJECT: Create an oral history project focusing on different aspects of the
American Dream. Potential interview questions could include:
Define American: Define American brings new voices into the immigration conversation, shining
a light on a growing twenty-first century underground railroad: American citizens who are forced to
fill in where our immigration system fails. (www.defineamerican.com)
* A fishbowl is a teaching strategy that encourages students to both contribute to the discussion and be active listeners. It requires a small
circle of 6-8 chairs (or however many would best suit your classroom needs) to create the inner “fishbowl,” and an outer ring of students sitting or
standing around the inner circle. The students in the inner circle, or “fishbowl,” take turns responding to a prompt or discussion topic while the students
in the outer circle listen. After a designated amount of time (typically 10-15 minutes), the inner and outer circles switch. Fishbowls can be particularly
effective for challenging or difficult discussion topics.
30
IDENTITY
AND CULTURE
O V E RV I E W
This section will enable students to explore identity and culture through the
personalizing experience of reading oral history. The lessons in this section can
be used for examining personal and national identity as well as for gaining
new perspectives on global culture. The suggested narratives from the Voice
of Witness series can serve as strong “connecting points” for students to see
aspects of their own experience reflected in the lives of the narrators.
LESSON 6
TIME NEEDED: One homework session and one or two class periods.
MATERIALS: Patriot Acts, a small cardboard or paper box, various craft supplies (scissors, glue, fabric,
colored pens or pencils), and various easy-to-find household objects.
OBJECTIVE: To analyze and interpret identity through oral history and a personalized art project.
RELATED CORE CURRICULUM STANDARDS: Reading History RH.9–10.1, RH.9–10.4. Speaking and
Listening SL.9–10.1.
CONNECTIONS: This activity can be done with any narrative from the Voice of Witness series.
NARRATIVE EXCERPT: “My parents were from Polish-German descent. I grew up in Toledo, Ohio, in
a close, tight-knit family with three sisters and a brother. My given name is Edward, but my family
started calling me Zachary, my grandfather’s name, because my dad, my uncle, and his son were all
called Edward!
I met my second wife after I had converted to Islam. She told me that the name Zakariya exists in
Arabic. I said that was perfect, and so I changed my name legally to Zakariya. I also changed my middle
name to Muhammad. I wanted an attachment to the religion, and for people to know who I am, maybe
in a more subtle way. When I changed my name, and people at work asked me what they should call
me, I’d say, ‘you can still call me Ed,’ whatever they were comfortable with, because they’d known me as
Edward for so long. But everyone else is to call me by my chosen name.” —Zak Muhammad Reed
STEP ONE: Have the students create an Identity Worksheet. On a piece of paper, they should draw
two columns: one with the heading Ascribed Identity and the other with the heading Personal
Identity. Ascribed Identity describes how the world sees someone and Personal Identity describes
how that person sees him or her self (2 minutes).
STEP TWO: Students read Gurwinder Singh (11 pp.), Hani Khan (5 pp.), or Zak Muhammad
Reed’s narrative (13 pp.) from Patriot Acts. As they read, instruct them to write down all quotes or
references to the narrator’s ascribed and personal identity on their Identity Worksheet (30 minutes).
STEP THREE: Using the Identity Worksheet as a resource, have students decorate their small
cardboard or paper boxes to reflect the ascribed and personal identity of the narrator. The outside
of the box will contain words, images, symbols, and drawings that reflect the narrator’s ascribed
identity, and the inside of the box will contain objects, images, quotations, and individual words
that reflect the narrator’s personal identity. Objects and other items for the box should be items
easily found at home or in the classroom. To create personal connections, students should then create
a second identity box, using themselves as subjects (40 minutes).
32
STEP FOUR: Class divides into three groups (according to the narratives they read). Groups present
the contents of both of their identity boxes. During their presentations, they should be prepared to
discuss the following (35 minutes):
How their chosen quotes, images, and objects relate to the identity of their narrators.
s (OW SPECIlC TEXTUAL EXAMPLES ILLUMINATE AND EXPLAIN THEIR CHOICES
s 3PECIlC WAYS IN WHICH THE PROJECT HELPED THEM EXPLORE THE CONCEPT OF IDENTITY AND WHAT CONNECTIONS THEY
made to their own lives.
s How the project enabled them to personally connect with various aspects of the narrator’s identity.
POSSIBLE ORAL HISTORY PROJECT: Students create an oral history project based on personal and
ascribed identity by interviewing classmates, faculty, administrators, and staff. This can also be done
with family and community members outside of school.
MEDIA OPTION: If desired, students can create online versions of the Identity Box in the form of a
website, PowerPoint presentation, or a short digital video.
33
LESSON 7
TIME NEEDED: Five class periods (several can be done as homework if desired).
MATERIALS: Hope Deferred, Timeline of Zimbabwe (p. 467) Glossary (p. 462), and Political
Violence, the War Veterans, and the Land Invasions (p. 476); the Literature Circle Handout, the
New York Times online Country Profile on Zimbabwe, (TOPICSNYTIMESCOMTOPNEWSINTERNATIONAL
COUNTRIESANDTERRITORIESZIMBABWEINDEXHTMLSCPSQZIMBABWECOUNTRYPROlLESTCS),
magazines, newspapers, poster board, and glue sticks/tape.
OBJECTIVE: Use oral history, literary analysis, and research to examine the role of national identity in
connection with Zimbabwe’s land reform policies.
CONNECTIONS: Literature Circle activity can be used with any narrative in the Voice of Witness
series.
ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS:
How does Zimbabwean national identity influence ownership rights to the farmland of Zimbabwe?
7HO IS A hTRUEv :IMBABWEAN AND WHO HAS THE RIGHTS TO :IMBABWES FARMLAND
How has colonial history complicated the issue?
NARRATIVE EXCERPT: “Other farmers in the area harvested their tobacco and maize and then left.
They were not sure if they were safe from having their land invaded, with violence. A while after I
harvested, I was left alone there, still thinking that I was safe. I thought this pressure to give up our
land was short term and would not last. I also had some crops in the ground, so I had to stay longer
than everybody else. If you go into farming, you put all your money in the soil, and then it’s only
when it grows that you can see it. There was no way I would just uproot and quit.
I tried to appeal through Zanu-PF [the ruling political party] structures. Blacks were supposed
to benefit from this land invasion—that’s what I heard. I thought I was black enough! All I needed
was to make a claim and I would keep this piece of land.” —Tsitsi
O V E RV I E W
Zimbabwe’s recent history entails a detailed system of farm and land ownership, which includes
primarily white-owned commercial farms and many designated “rural area” farms, which fall under
the jurisdiction of tribal chiefs. In 2000, Robert Mugabe’s Zanu-PF government instituted a policy
34
of land reform and began taking over predominately white-owned farms and redistributing them to
war veterans and other black Zimbabweans.
Economics
s Politics
s Agriculture
s Colonialism
Maps, posters, articles, quotes and images will all provide a historical snapshot of Zimbabwe and
will reflect the various identities of its people (one class, one homework session).
STEP ONE: Groups present their research to the class. After each group concludes its presentation,
discuss the following questions (15 minutes):
STEP TWO: Create groups of four students and assign each group the following narratives from Hope
Deferred: Nicola (15 pp.), Tsitsi (18 pp.), Briggs (31 pp.), and George (26 pp.). Give each student a
copy of the Literature Circle handout. Read through the instructions together. Note: The activities
related to the Literature Circle can be completed during or outside class (15 minutes).
STEP THREE: At the conclusion of their fourth meeting, groups should decide how they would
like to “present” their Literature Circle findings to the rest of the class. Part of this process is
making choices about which Literature Circle job each member of the group will be responsible for
presenting (10 minutes).
STEP FOUR: Incorporating their chosen vocabulary words, passages, connectors, illustrations,
etc., groups will create posters (digital if available or desired) that feature the work done in their
Literature Circles. In addition to the information they have already gathered, encourage them to
“fill in” their presentations with images cut out of magazines, maps, and whatever else they feel
communicates their responses to the narratives. Can be done during class or as a group homework
assignment (60–70 minutes).
STEP FIVE: Each Literature Circle presents to the class. Presentations should be about five to seven
minutes each and incorporate time for comments and questions. Reflecting back on the discussion
questions of the unit may be useful, as well as considering the following (50-60 minutes):
(AVE ANY OF THE hCONNECTORSv TOUCHED ON LOCAL ISSUES )F SO WHAT ARE THE SIMILARITIES AND DIFFERENCES TO
issues in Zimbabwe?
Have groups chosen similar passages or quotes? If so, how do they reflect the particular identity of the
narrators?
Is there a fair way to resolve the land reform issue in Zimbabwe? What do you predict for the future of
the country?
POSSIBLE ORAL HISTORY PROJECT: Class creates an oral history project focusing on local examples of
potentially unjust policies or laws, and the complicated, personal struggles that result from them.
MEDIA OPTION: Documentary Film: Banished (dir. Marco Williams). Center for Investigative
Reporting/Two Tone Productions/CPB, 2007: A hundred years ago, in communities across the
United States, white residents forced thousands of black families to flee their homes. Banished tells
the story of three of these communities and their black descendants, who return to learn their
histories. The film contemplates questions of privilege, responsibility, denial, healing, reparations,
and identity. (WWWPBSORGINDEPENDENTLENSBANISHEDlLMHTML)
36
HANDOUT
Each member of the group will read the four assigned narratives from Hope Deferred. For each
narrative, one member of the group will take on one of the jobs mentioned below. While you read
your narratives, you will be responsible for completing the tasks described below.
Groups will get together on four separate occasions (in or out of class), and each member will
contribute what their individual job requires. Remember to save group work! It will be used to cre-
ate a presentation for the rest of the class.
DISCUSSION DIRECTOR: Your job is to write a list of questions that your group might want to
discuss about today’s reading. Don’t worry about small details; your task is to help people talk over the
big ideas and share reactions. Usually the best discussion questions come from your own thoughts,
feelings, and concerns as you read. Or you can use some of the general questions suggested to
develop topics for group discussions: Did anything surprise you? What are the most important ideas in the
READING 7HAT DO YOU PREDICT WILL HAPPEN NEXT You are the person who begins the group discussion.
You ask questions…get responses from ALL members…ask a question…get responses…etc.
PASSAGE MASTER/VOCABULARY BUILDER: Your job is to locate at least five special sections or quotations
from the reading that the group should examine. You want to help people notice the most interesting,
funny, puzzling, and important sections of the text. You decide and identify which passages or paragraphs
(note the page number) are worth reviewing and then write plans for how they should be shared with the
group. Write down why you think the passage is significant or should be discussed. You can read passages
aloud yourself, ask someone else to read, or have the group read them silently, then discuss. Then you
will share why you selected the passage and what it means to you. As Vocabulary Builder, your job is to
be on the lookout for at least five important words—new, interesting, strange, important, puzzling, or
unfamiliar words—words that members of the group need to notice to understand. Mark some of the key
words while you are reading, then write them down in the context of the sentence. Discuss these words
with your group and why the meaning of each word is important.
ILLUSTRATOR: Your job is to draw some kind of picture related to the reading. It can be a
sketch, cartoon, storyboard, diagram, flowchart, magazine cutouts, etc. You can draw a picture
of something that is discussed specifically in the text, something that the reading reminded you
of, or something that conveys any idea or feeling you got from the reading. Any sort of drawing
or graphic representation is okay—you can even label parts of the drawing if it helps. During the
Literature Circle discussion, show your picture and explain how it shows your interpretation and
understanding of the text or part of the text.
CONNECTOR: Your job is to find connections between the material your group is reading and the world
outside. This means connecting the reading to your own life or personal observations, to happenings at
school or in the community, to similar events at other times and places, to other people or problems that
you are reminded of, to other pieces of literature or films you have seen. Any connection you make with
the book is fine. Explain in writing your connections and be prepared to share them with your group.
37
LESSON 8
TIME NEEDED: Two to three class periods and one homework session.
MATERIALS: Nowhere to Be Home, journals or notebooks, Living Sculptures handout, the New York
Times online Myanmar (Burma) Country Profile (HTTPTOPICSNYTIMESCOMTOPNEWSINTERNATIONAL
COUNTRIESANDTERRITORIESMYANMARINDEXHTML), Human Rights Watch: World Report Burma (www.hrw.
ORGWORLD REPORT BURMA).
OBJECTIVE: To bring oral histories to life in order to better understand and connect with the lives of
youth in Burma.
CONNECTIONS: This activity can be done with any set of narratives from the Voice of Witness series.
O V E RV I E W
Borrowing techniques from theater arts training, this lesson will enable students to develop their
empathy skills through direct physical and emotional engagement with several youth narrators
from Nowhere to Be Home. Through collaborative group work and analysis, students will engage with
the stories of young people living in a police state, allowing them to experience “walking a mile in
someone else’s shoes.”
ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS:
(OW CAN ) USE MY BODY VOICE AND EMOTIONS TO hREAD BETWEEN THE LINESv OF HISTORY
s (OW CAN ) USE MY OWN INTERPRETATIONS AND EXPERIENCE TO CONNECT WITH THE LIVES OF THE BOOKS NARRATORS
s How can I connect the realities of a police state with my own life, community, and country?
NARRATIVE EXCERPT: “There was a special door for prisoners to walk through, and it was very hard
for us because we had to kneel down when we walked.
After that we had to take off our hoods, and I saw that it was all females in the room with me. I
was the youngest. Everybody knew each other from working in politics, and they said, ‘Don’t cry, don’t
be afraid. We can go back home one day. They can’t do anything to us, we will take care of each other.’
There were some old people, like sixty-five- and eighty-year-old women in our group.
I felt sorry for my father when I was at the prison, because they wrote my family name on a piece
of paper that I had to hold when they took my prisoner photo—one photo from the front, and one from
the side. I thought, I am the daughter in prison. But I hoped maybe my father would still be proud of me.
After that, they put me directly in a cell. It was in a special place, usually for people with a death
sentence or for people who break the prison rules—solitary confinement.” —Mau Su Mon
38
TEACHER PREPARATION: Take some time to become familiar with recent Burmese (Myanmar)
history. Among other sources, the New York Times Country Profile of Myanmar is a good place to
start (especially as it is constantly updated). Human Rights Watch: World Report Burma is another
good (and updated) resource. This information should be compiled into a one-page Burma Fact
Sheet for students.
D AY O N E
STEP ONE: Hand out Burma Fact Sheet. Present an overview of Burmese history, focusing on the
period of the military coup (1962) up to the present. Provide details as to what defines a police state
and specifically how it may affect the lives of youth (15 minutes).
STEP TWO: Introduce Nowhere to Be Home and break students into cooperative learning groups of four.
Each group will read one of the following four narratives: Byin Pu (26 pp.), Mau Su Mon (28 pp.),
Khine Kyaw (18 pp.), and Hla Min (15 pp.). Allow time for groups to begin reading their narratives
aloud to each other. Encourage them to employ active reading strategies. The remainder of the reading
should be done as homework or at the beginning of the next class period (25–30 minutes).
STEP THREE: Share the Living Sculptures and Inner Monologue handouts. Introduce the activity by
announcing that groups will be “walking a mile in their narrators’ shoes.” They will be reenacting
pivotal moments from their narrators’ lives by creating a series of “living sculptures.” Providing
a definition of “empathy” may be useful (see discussion questions). If needed, show examples of
sculptures to help students visualize the activity. Also introduce the Inner Monologue activity and
definition. If needed, provide literary or film/video examples of inner monologue or “subtext”
(10–12 minutes).
39
HANDOUT
INNER MONOLOGUE
Inner monologue is a term that describes the “voice” in each of our heads that represents the
thoughts and feelings we have but do not say. If our “outer monologue” is what we choose to
express out loud, then our inner monologue is the powerful stream of information we choose to
keep to ourselves.
During each of your sculptures, whoever is portraying the narrator will step out of the
sculpture and read a prepared inner monologue that begins with the phrase h3OMETIMES ) FEELxv
This inner monologue or speech should be no longer than a paragraph and should relate to the
quote that the sculpture represents. Think about what your narrator is feeling but not saying and
use it for your inner monologue. Whoever represents the narrator in each sculpture should write
the inner monologue.
Repeat this sequence four times. Each sculpture/reading should take about sixty seconds.
40
D AY T W O
STEP ONE: If needed, allow time for students to finish reading narratives (7–10 minutes).
STEP TWO: Answer any questions about the activity—living sculptures, supporting text, inner
monologue, “sometimes I feel,” etc. (5 minutes).
STEP THREE: Students get into their groups and put together their four living sculptures, which
include supporting quotes for each sculpture and an inner monologue paragraph (“Sometimes I
feel”). Groups will need consensus about the four “impactful” moments as well as the physical
composition of each sculpture. Each group member will also need time to compose his or her inner
monologue for the sculpture in which he or she represents the narrator (30–35 minutes). During this
work session, the following prompts or “side-coaching” may be helpful:
7HAT ARE THE DETAILS OF YOUR QUOTE (OW CAN YOU PHYSICALLY TELL THE hSTORYv BEHIND THE QUOTE
!LLOW YOUR ENTIRE BODIES TO BE EXPRESSIVE
9OU MAY lND IT HELPFUL TO WRITE THE h3OMETIMES ) FEELv PARAGRAPH AFTER YOU HAVE CREATED EACH SCULPTURE
Your body language will give you ideas about what your narrator is feeling.
-AKE SURE YOU hREHEARSEv ALL FOUR SCULPTURES QUOTES AND INNER MONOLOGUES SEVERAL TIMES )T IS A GREAT
way to check your work.
D AY T H R E E
STEP ONE: If desired, give groups time to do a final “rehearsal” before their presentations (7–10 minutes).
STEP TWO: Groups present their sculptures. Sculptures should be presented in chronological order
of the narrative. Some students may be testing their comfort zones, so remind everyone about any
“class agreements” that are used ( MINUTES).
STEP THREE: After each group has presented their sculptures, facilitate a debrief/class discussion that
enables students to respond to the activity. It may be useful to begin with each group describing
their experience (10–15 minutes). .OTE THAT THIS STEP CAN ALSO BE DONE AS A COMBINATION JOURNAL WRITING
discussion activity.
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS:
$ID CREATING PHYSICAL SCULPTURES TO REPRESENT YOUR NARRATORS EXPERIENCE ALLOW YOU TO BETTER UNDERSTAND
his or her life in Burma? How?
s The dictionary definition of empathy IS hBEING AWARE OF AND SHARING ANOTHER PERSONS FEELINGS
EXPERIENCES AND EMOTIONSv $ID THIS ACTIVITY ENABLE YOU TO DO THAT )F SO HOW
s 7HAT PERSONAL CONNECTIONS DID YOU MAKE WITH YOUR NARRATORS $O ASPECTS OF THEIR EXPERIENCE RESONATE
with you?
s h0OLICE STATEv IS A BASIC TERM THAT DESCRIBES A COMPLEX SITUATION (OW CAN YOU APPLY THE TERM OUTSIDE OF
Burma? Can you find any parallels in the community? In the United States?
41
POSSIBLE ORAL HISTORY PROJECT: Class creates an oral history project exploring local policies or
laws, examining the complications and sometimes unintended consequences resulting from them.
MEDIA OPTION: Video: 7ORDS OF +YAW :WAR (dir. Takaaki Okada). Short video of narrator featured in
Nowhere to Be Home: WWWVIMEOCOM
Organizational website: Albany Park Theater Project (APTP). APTP creates original theater
that shares the real-life stories of urban teens, immigrants, and working-class Americans. APTP
humanizes issues that impact real people but too often get discussed as abstract concepts. (www.
aptpchicago.org)
42
EXILE
AND DISPLACEMENT
O V E RV I E W
MATERIALS: /UT OF %XILE, the New York Times Sudan Profile (TOPICSNYTIMESCOMTOPNEWSINTERNATIONAL
COUNTRIESANDTERRITORIESSUDANINDEXHTM), Storyboards handout (on page 48), colored pencils and pencils,
magazines, and definitions of refugee and EXILE.
OBJECTIVE: Through literary analysis and visual storytelling, students increase understanding about
exiles and refugees while exploring the power of labels.
RELATED CORE CURRICULUM STANDARDS: Reading History RH.9–10.1, RH.9–10.2. Speaking and
Listening L.9–10.1, SL.11–12.1. Writing W.9–10.1, W.11–12.1.
CONNECTIONS: Other Voice of Witness narratives that can be used for this lesson: Abuk Bak
Macham, Panther Alier from /UT OF %XILE; Law Eh Soe and Khine Kyaw from Nowhere to Be Home; and
Farid from Underground America.
O V E RV I E W
This lesson allows students to personalize the realities of being an exile or refugee as they explore
the power of labels. Using narratives from /UT OF %XILE and utilizing a storyboard technique to
summarize their responses, students will creatively express the challenges of individuals who have
been removed from their homes and separated from their families.
ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS:
NARRATIVE EXCERPT: “The children come to school, and we feed them a meal every day now. They
are happy students, and they do very well. They read very well. They do very well on the national
exams every year—better than the national average. They like being at Sud Academy, because
Sudanese often get harassed in the Kenyan schools—their classmates will come up to them, poke
them, say, ‘Hey! You are a refugee. You create problems in your country and now you want to come
here to make trouble for us.’
“The kids will wonder, ‘What is a refugee?’ because most of the young ones were born here in
Nairobi. They’ll come home to their parents at night and ask about this word. And that’s not a good
way to find out.” —John Mayik
44
WHAT I KNOW WHAT I WANT TO KNOW WHAT I LEARNED
45
D AY O N E
STEP ONE: Use the KWL chart format on the previous page to begin a student journal activity and
discussion about their understanding of the labels refugee and EXILE. (5–7 minutes) The “W” (what I
learned), should be addressed at the end of each class period or the end of the unit. A large version
of the chart should be easily accessible to students in order for them to post responses and questions
throughout the lesson.
STEP TWO: Share the following definitions/explanations with the class and discuss them in
relationship to the KWL activity (5–7 minutes).
Refugee: Refugees are persons who have fled their homes and cannot return because they fear their
life is in danger. People become refugees when one or more of their basic human rights are violated
or threatened.
Exile: Exile is being forced to leave one’s country or home. Voluntary exile is the departure from
one’s country due to political strife or dissension.
STEP THREE: Use the New York Times Country Profile to briefly introduce Sudanese history and Out of
%XILE (15 minutes).
STEP FOUR: Assign students the following narratives: Nadia el-Kareem (13 pp.), and John Mayik
(22 pp). Students should begin reading the narratives on their own or in small groups. Encourage
them to employ active reading strategies. During their reading, students should post questions and
responses on the KWL chart, as well as look for quotes that reflect the narrator’s viewpoints on home,
FAMILY EXILE and the label refugee. (15 minutes).
The remainder of the reading should be done as homework and/or during the beginning of the
next class period.
STEP FIVE: Introduce storyboards as a tool to help visually express and summarize reading. If
students are unfamiliar with storyboards, provide examples (there are many appropriate examples
online). Give students a copy of the Storyboards handout, which includes definitions and a sample
storyboard format. Each student or small group can choose the narrative they would like to make a
storyboard from, or each student or group can do a storyboard for both (5–7 minutes).
46
D AY T W O
STEP ONE: If needed, allow time for students to finish their reading (10 minutes).
STEP TWO: As a warm-up activity, students should post any responses/questions from their reading
on the KWL chart (5 minutes).
STEP THREE: Working alone or in small groups, students begin work on their storyboards. Pens,
pencils, magazines (to cut images out of), tape and other classroom supplies should be readily
accessible. Allow students to share ideas and discuss text evidence that communicates their
narrator’s viewpoints regarding home, family, EXILE, and the label refugee. Remind students that they
are practicing their summarizing and storytelling skills and that art or drawing expertise is not
necessary to create a successful storyboard. If students need more time to complete their storyboards,
take time at the beginning of the next class period. If students are working individually, storyboards
can be completed as homework (35–40 minutes).
D AY T H R E E
STEP ONE: If needed, allow time for students to finish their storyboards (10 minutes).
STEP TWO: Have groups (or individuals) tape their storyboards around the classroom in museum or
art gallery-style. Narrators should have their own “section” of the gallery (5 minutes).
STEP THREE: Students do a “gallery walk” of the classroom, silently examining the storyboards.
During the walk, students may post questions and responses on the KWL chart (10 minutes).
STEP FOUR: Utilizing responses from the KWL chart, class has a discussion related to the
storyboards and how they reflect the challenges and complexities of the labels “exile” and
“refugee” (10–15 minutes).
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS:
(OW DO THE STORYBOARDS ALLOW YOU TO PERSONALIZE THE EXPERIENCE OF THE NARRATORS
s (OW DID THIS ACTIVITY HELP YOU TO UNDERSTAND THE LABELS hEXILEv AND hREFUGEEv
s Can you think of the power that labels have in your own life? What are they?
s What are some of the ways in which home and family are represented in the Storyboards?
s !RE THERE hINTERNALv EXILES OR REFUGEES WITHIN THE 5NITED 3TATES 7HO ARE THEY #AN YOU THINK OF ANY
EXAMPLES FROM 53 HISTORY
STEP FIVE: Conclude the unit by allowing students to fill in the “L” section of the KWL chart. They
should also feel free to add to the “K” and “W” sections (5–7 minutes).
47
HANDOUT
STORYBOARDS
DEFINITION OF A STORYBOARD: A consecutive set of panels on which images and words are
arranged to show the important changes of action and emotion in a series of “shots” (as for a film,
television show, music video, comic, graphic novel, etc.).
48
STEP SIX (optional): Essay or Journal Writing.
The storyboard lesson and accompanying KWL chart should yield many topics worthy of further
exploration and reflection. Class can consider several topics for a personal essay or journal entry
related to the unit (can be done during class or assigned as homework). Class may also want to read
other narratives from /UT OF %XILE (as suggested in Connections).
How do you define home? How many definitions directly apply to your life?
s Do the terms refugee or exile resonate with you personally? If so, how?
s )F YOU WERE EXILED FROM YOUR HOME OR FAMILY WHAT WOULD YOU MISS THE MOST
s #AN YOU COMPARECONTRAST THE NARRATORS EXPERIENCE WITH AN INDIVIDUAL OR GROUP YOU CONSIDER TO BE
hINTERNALv REFUGEES WITHIN THE 5NITED 3TATES
POSSIBLE ORAL HISTORY PROJECT: Class creates an oral history project focusing on definitions and
realities of home and family. Project can examine the myriad ways in which individuals construct
their own versions of both.
Lost Boys of Sudan (dirs. Megan Mylan and Jon Shenk). POV/P.B.S., 2004. Lost Boys of Sudan
is an Emmy-nominated feature-length documentary that follows two Sudanese refugees on an
extraordinary journey from Africa to America.
-USEUM OF %XILE !SSYRIAN 9OUTH IN #HICAGO (dir. Wonjung Bae). a twelve-minute HD documentary
film that tells the story of teenage refugees from Iraq who go to Niles West High School in
Skokie, Illinois. (VIMEOCOM
49
LESSON 10
MATERIALS: Emilia Gonzalez narrative from Throwing Stones at the Moon (p. 25–44), or excerpt
(p. 32–35), four pieces of butcher paper with quotes from the text, markers, dry erase board/pens.
OBJECTIVE: Through analysis, discussion, and a written visual imagery exercise, students will be able
to develop a deeper, empathic understanding of the text and the realities of being a displaced person.
Students will hone literacy skills through reading and analyzing text and writing original poems.
CONNECTIONS: Lessons can also be used with any narratives from Throwing Stones at the Moon in
addition to any narratives from /UT OF %XILE. Other Voice of Witness narratives that can be used for
this lesson: Zenzele, Amos, Violet, Boniface, John, and Alice from Hope Deferred; and Tan Htay,
Saw Moe, and Khine Su from Nowhere To Be Home.
NARRATIVE EXCERPT: “We spent the whole night with the doors open, as the paras had told us to.
We talked about what had happened, tried to account for other villagers and count the dead but we
spoke quietly since the paras were passing by all the houses. The paramilitaries came by the houses
and threw live chickens at us and said, ‘Here, eat this, it’s yours.’ We asked ourselves, What will become
of us? Where will we go?” —Emilia Gonzalez
O V E RV I E W
This lesson encourages students to develop deeper empathy with the narrators in Throwing Stones at
the Moon by recalling a time in which they, themselves, felt isolated, displaced, or disempowered.
Students will read and analyze the narrative through a lens of visual imagery while honing their
literary skills through a poetry exercise. By crafting precise, detailed images, students will connect
more personally to the issues they are writing and reading about.
D AY O N E
STEP ONE: As a warm up activity, students respond to the following written prompt (5 minutes):
s When you see police, military, or government officials, how do you feel—safe, protected, threatened,
SOMETHING ELSE %XPLAIN
STEP TWO: Pair Share: Assign each student a partner, with whom they will share and discuss their
responses to the prompt (5 minutes).
50
STEP THREE: Using popcorn reading* or another reading strategy that meets the needs of your class,
read Emilia Gonzalez’s narrative aloud. Ask students to highlight/underline exceptional imagery as
they are listening to the text. At the end of the excerpt, check for understanding, and ask students if
the passages they highlighted emphasized the emotion of the narrative (40 minutes).
STEP FOUR: On the board, give a brief lesson on imagery in writing (see following handout)
(10 minutes).
STEP FIVE: As a closing discussion, ask the students how Emilia’s narrative was strengthened
through the use of visual imagery (10 minutes).
D AY T W O
STEP ONE: Have a piece of butcher paper on each of the four walls, each with a short excerpt from
Emilia’s narrative that is rich with imagery. Suggestions:
Later, the villagers learned that the paramilitaries had killed five people in the park. They’d killed a
teacher who was still in her nightgown, a man and his son, and another boy.
s $URING THE THREE NIGHTS ) STAYED THERE WITH !LBERTO WE MADE A lRE AT THE DOOR FOR LIGHT AND TO lGHT
off the mosquitoes. I couldn’t sleep. I heard things. I thought I heard gunshots.
s One of them grabbed [the girl’s] long hair and wrapped it around his hand, like you wrap a towel,
and they dragged her away. They took her to an orange tree away from the court and killed her.
s 4HE lRST TO BE KILLED WAS A FRIEND OF #ARLOSS WHO WAS SITTING NEXT TO HIM 4HE PARAS GRABBED HIM
and lopped off his ear, and then they put a black bag over his head and started stabbing him and
asking questions. When he died, he fell into my son’s lap.
Divide students into groups of four, and have them walk around the room and respond to each piece of
imagery on the butcher paper. Give them the following prompts (15 minutes):
STEP TWO: After each group has visited all four pieces of butcher paper, ask students to return to
their seats. Have each student write a short poem—composed solely of lines of imagery—about a
time in their life when they felt threatened, displaced, or unprotected. If they are stuck, suggest
that they write a poem of five stanzas (a group of lines within a poem, set off from other groups of lines
by a space), each stanza drawing on one of the five senses (I saw ______, I heard ______, I felt _______,
) SMELLED ??????? ) TASTED ?????? MINUTES .
*
To use popcorn reading, call on a student to begin reading aloud, and ask her to read as long as she wants to.
When she’s ready to pass the reading onto someone else, she’ll say “popcorn” followed by another student’s name.
51
HANDOUT
Imagery can be defined as the use of descriptive language to form mental images in writing.
Imagery makes writing memorable and unique. Think about the five senses—seeing, hearing,
tasting, touching, and smelling—and how you can use them to incorporate imagery into your
writing.
Be as specific as you can! Below is an example of a five senses chart using the following prompt:
the ferris wheel is a the ride operator’s my funnel cake is I sit on a worn, the night air smells
kaleidoscope of voice sounds like thick with warmth sun-faded bench, bitter and sweet,
color car wheels driving as I bite through tracing a hole in like pennies and
over gravel its sugary crust the wood with my sugar
finger
Using the following prompt, fill out your own five senses chart:
52
STEP THREE: Ask for volunteers to share their poems with the class (10 minutes).
STEP FOUR: After students have shared their poems, facilitate a closing discussion based on the following
prompts: (10 minutes)
STEP FIVE (OPTIONAL): As homework, challenge students to collect five examples of word-images
(descriptive things people say, word-images they find in books or magazines, etc.) related to themes of
displacement, and bring them in to share with the class the following day.
POSSIBLE ORAL HISTORY PROJECT: Class creates an oral history project focusing on definitions and
realities of home and family. Project can examine the myriad ways in which individuals construct their
own versions of both.
1. Students identify refugees, immigrants, and/or anyone who has faced civil war or government
corruption (possible guest speaker opportunity). Working in groups, students brainstorm a list
of initial questions for the narrator, and work toward a group interview/oral history narrative.
2. Students identify a family member or friend to interview about a time in their life when they
felt isolated, displaced, or disempowered. Teacher leads students through a full oral history
project: interview, transcription, narrative editing, and final presentation.
MEDIA OPTION: Organizational Website: Forced Migration Online (FMO). Forced Migration Online
provides online access to a diverse range of resources concerning the situation of forced migrants
worldwide. The website is coordinated by a team based at the Refugee Studies Centre, Department of
International Development, University of Oxford. (www.forcedmigration.org)
53
LESSON 11
ASSIGNING LABELS
MATERIALS: Refugee Hotel (with selected images), sticky notes (2 colors), red markers, pencils,
whiteboard.
OBJECTIVE: To develop self-awareness and critical thinking skills by exploring assumptions and the
power of labels, using written and visual narratives from Refugee Hotel.
CONNECTIONS: This activity can be adapted for any narrative from the Voice of Witness series with a
set of related photographs or images.
ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS:
NARRATIVE EXCERPT: “To be called a refugee is bad. It means I have no country, no home, and that
I’ll always be running away . . . That’s why I came to the United States, in 2009, with my husband
and children. This is a good country for refugees; once I become an American I can get everything an
American has, and I will never be called a refugee again.” —Orenie Ndayishimiye
TEACHER PREPARATION: Take some time to become familiar with the recent history of Burma
(Myanmar). Among other sources, the New York Times Country Profile of Myanmar is a good place
to start (especially as it is constantly updated). Human Rights Watch: World Report Burma is another
good (and updated) resource. This information should be compiled into a one-page Burma Fact
Sheet for students.
D AY O N E
STEP ONE: As a warm-up activity, ask students to write silently in their journals, reflecting on the
following prompts (5 minutes):
What is an assumption?
s 7HAT ARE WAYS THAT WE MAKE ASSUMPTIONS ABOUT OTHER PEOPLE
s 7HY DO WE DO THIS
54
STEP TWO: Have a class conversation based on the warm-up activity, inviting students to “share out”
from their journal reflections (5–7 minutes).
STEP THREE: Introduce labels by facilitating a short class discussion using the following suggested
prompt (5–7 minutes):
When we encounter someone who seems different from us—different country, age, ethnicity, and personality—
we automatically try to understand them, so we fill in the blanks about who they are. This is natural—
but do we sometimes make assumptions that are wrong or unfair?
STEP FOUR: Have students do a “pair-share” in which they discuss the following with a classmate
(5–7 minutes):
Talk about a time when you have been LABELED—when someone made an assumption about you.
What happened? What was that like? What was your response?
Now talk about a time when you’ve labeled someone else, and have maybe felt badly about the label you put
on him or her. What was that like? Did you learn anything from that?
STEP FIVE: Have a short class discussion allowing students to share out from their pair-share
conversations. During the share out, encourage students to explore and investigate how and why we
label things, in order for them to transform and expand their understanding of people different from
themselves.
The following suggested prompts can be used during the discussion (10 minutes):
STEP SIX: Briefly introduce Refugee Hotel using information from the introduction and other sources,
if desired. Create a frame of reference for the book that centers on refugees being a group that
has been both socially and legally “labeled.” On the whiteboard, write the following quotes and
definitions (5 minutes):
h4O BE CALLED A REFUGEE IS BAD )T MEANS ) HAVE NO COUNTRY NO HOME AND THAT )LL ALWAYS BE RUNNING
AWAYv /RENIE .DAYISHIMIYE FROM Refugee Hotel
s $ElNITION OF A REFUGEE h! REFUGEE IS A PERSON WHO HAS mED PERSECUTION BASED ON HISHER RACE RELIGION
POLITICAL OPINION NATIONALITY OR MEMBERSHIP IN A PARTICULAR SOCIAL GROUPv
STEP SEVEN: In small groups, students reflect together on the differences and similarities between
the legal definition of a refugee, and Ndayishimiye’s experience of being labeled as a refugee.
(7 minutes) Suggested guiding questions:
55
s 7HAT IS PERSECUTION 7HAT MIGHT SOME EXAMPLES BE
s 7HAT IS THE CONNECTION BETWEEN BEING PERSECUTED AND BEING hLABELEDv
s 7HAT DOES /RENIE .DAYISHIMIYE MEAN WHEN SHE SAYS hTO BE CALLED A REFUGEE IS BADv
s 7HAT ARE LABELS WE OFTEN ASSIGN TO REFUGEES
STEP EIGHT: Have a short class discussion allowing students to share out from their small group
conversations. Possible discussion prompt (10 minutes):
Refugees have essentially been “labeled” as different, and persecuted because of that label. And then
they have been re-labeled as refugees. What else came up in your conversations?
D AY T W O
STEP ONE: Hang a dozen or so photographs from Refugee Hotel (from both parts of the book)
around the room. Class then does a “gallery walk,” examining and exploring the photographs. If
needed, remind students that these are images of refugees who have come to rebuild their lives in
the U.S. (5–7 minutes). As students engage with the photographs, encourage them to consider the
following:
STEP TWO: Each student is then given 3 or so sticky notes that will serve as “labels.” They will then
attach a one-word label to a photograph of their choice. Remind students that the activity requires
courage and honesty. Sharing examples such as “sad,” “confused,” “missing,” “alone,” etc., may be
useful in getting the activity started (5–7 minutes).
After students have placed all of their labels, the class does another gallery walk, reexamining the
images and the labels that have been assigned to them (5 minutes).
STEP THREE: In groups of 3–5, students are assigned to read aloud different narratives from
Refugee Hotel (10–15 minutes). Suggested narratives: Do Lian Zam (aka Elis); Tsehai Wodajo;
Heinay Moo; Orenie Ndayishimiye; Susil Ghalley.
After reading, groups discuss their stories using the following suggested prompts (7–10 minutes):
What are the ways in which the narrator has been labeled?
s 7HAT LABELS DID YOU ASSIGN TO THE NARRATOR AT THE BEGINNING WHEN YOU lRST STARTED READING $ID THESE
change by the end?
s 7HAT LABELS DID THE NARRATOR ASSIGN TO OTHERS IN THE STORY
7HAT LABELS DOES THE NARRATOR PUT ON HISHER HOMEON !MERICA
56
STEP FOUR: Re-labeling: After reading and discussing the narrator’s stories, students may feel that
their initial labels might be deepened or rounded by knowing more of their background. Using
different color sticky notes, encourage students to add additional “labels” to the photographs
(10 minutes). Before starting the activity, provide the following instruction:
STEP FIVE: Class does another gallery walk, silently reexamining the images and additional labels
(5 minutes).
STEP SIX: As a class, discuss the Assigning Labels lesson using the following suggested prompts
(10 minutes):
Did reading the stories change our opinions and assumptions about the photographs? If so, how?
s $ID THE STORIES MAKE US MORE OR LESS COMPASSIONATE TOWARDS THE PEOPLE IN THE PHOTOGRAPHS
s 7HAT DOES KNOWING DETAILS ABOUT SOMEONE CHANGE ABOUT OUR UNDERSTANDING OF THEM
STEP SEVEN: Written Reflection (can be done as homework assignment): Students reflect on the
lesson by responding to the following prompt (15+ minutes):
How can we be mindful about the labels we assign ourselves and each other?
POSSIBLE ORAL HISTORY/PHOTO ESSAY PROJECT: Students conduct oral history interviews with
friends, family, and members of their school community, creating interview questions that reflect
the essential questions of the labeling lesson. Students can build on themes from their pair shares,
group discussions, readings and written reflections. The project could also include a photo essay that
visually represents these themes.
57
LESSON 12
OBJECTIVE: To explore personal and political definitions of home, family, and resettlement through
an analysis of, and creative response to, the photographs and written narratives in Refugee Hotel.
CONNECTIONS: This activity can be adapted for narratives from /UT OF %XILE, Underground America,
Hope Deferred, and Nowhere to Be Home with a set of related photographs or images.
ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS:
(OW DO WE DElNE hHOMEv )S IT WHERE WE WERE BORN WHERE WE SPENT MOST OF OUR LIVES THE COUNTRY OF OUR
origin?
s Why is it that certain objects—artifacts, heirlooms, memorabilia—are irreplaceable, and carry with
them such strong feelings of home?
(OW IS HOME DElNED IN A POLITICAL OR INSTITUTIONAL CONTEXT
NARRATIVE EXCERPT: “Because we’d lost everything, it didn’t matter where we went, so we decided
to keep moving. Our family signed up, and it took one year to be called. Then we came to Fargo.”
—2UP +HATIWADA
D AY O N E
STEP ONE: As a warm-up activity, ask students to write silently in their journals, reflecting on the
following prompt (5 minutes):
s If you were forced to leave your country of origin and could only carry a small suitcase, what would
you carry with you and why? What would you deem as necessary? What would be crucial reminders
of home?
STEP TWO: Have a “pair share” conversation based on the warm-up activity, encouraging students to
share out from their journal reflections (5–7 minutes).
58
STEP THREE: Briefly Introduce Refugee Hotel using information/context from the introduction and/
or A Brief Guide to Resettlement from the back of the book. Suggested information includes:
Introduction: Please Pardon Our Dust, What is a Refugee (p. 290), Refugee Status (p. 290–291),
The Resettlement Process (p. 291), and Assurance and Arrival (p. 293). After reading this
background information, have a group discussion using the following suggested prompts
(15 minutes):
Using the Brief Guide to Resettlement as a jumping off point, how does the idea of home change during
the act of resettlement?
s 7HERE DO hHOMEv AND hRESETTLEMENTv CONNECT CONVERGE OR DIVERGE
s )N THE !SSURANCE AND !RRIVAL SECTION THERE IS A hLAUNDRY LIST OF NECESSITIESv $ID SOME OF THE ITEMS ON
THE LIST SURPRISE YOU 7HAT DO YOU THINK SHOULD BE INCLUDED OR EXCLUDED
STEP FIVE: Have students go through the first section again and write down what they notice in
the pictures—what they actually see (roads, beds, windows, illuminated signs, etc). Encourage them
to look for various themes or motifs (the American Dream, family, isolation, hope, etc.). Creating
a “T Chart” with what students see on one side and themes/motifs on the other will help students
distinguish between the two (15 minutes).
STEP SIX: Have a brief class discussion related to their observations, using the following suggested
prompts (7–10 minutes):
STEP SEVEN: For homework, have students read Rup and Prem Khatiwada’s narrative from
Refugee Hotel. Encourage them to use active reading strategies (15–20 minutes).
D AY T W O
STEP ONE: As a warm up activity, have students do a pair share discussion using the following
suggested prompt (5 minutes):
s Describe a time in your life when you felt disoriented, out of place, or needed to adjust to new
SURROUNDINGS 9OU CAN DESCRIBE THIS EXPERIENCE FROM A VARIETY OF PERSPECTIVESEMOTIONAL PHYSICAL
environmental, or spiritual, just to name a few.
59
STEP TWO: Have a class conversation based on the warm-up activity, inviting students to share
out from their pair share conversations. Encourage students to reference the Assurance and Arrival
section of Refugee Hotel and Rup and Prem Khatiwada’s narrative (10 minutes).
STEP THREE (PHOTO ESSAY PROJECT): Incorporating information from the prior share out, inform
students that they will be assigned to select and photograph 8–10 items in their homes that they
believe to be absolutely necessary in creating their own “laundry list of necessities” for resettlement
(10 minutes). Any kind of camera is acceptable (disposable, digital, phone, computer, etc).
Encourage students to consider how their choices will reflect the following themes:
Transition
s 2ESETTLEMENT
s &AMILY CULTURETRADITIONS
Home
The following narrator quotes from Refugee Hotel can inspire and help frame student work on the
assignment:
“To me, home is a place where you can stay forever: you don’t have to leave or move around.”
—Farah Ibrahim, p. 113
“I feel safe here. I can think about my future and my family’s future—I can plan for tomorrow, next
week, next month. In Iraq, all we cared about was surviving one more day.” —Farah Ibrahim, p. 116
“For me, it’s difficult because I have family in Iraq, so it will always be my home. But at the same
time home is where you feel safe, and where you find all that you love: family and friends.”
—Mahmmoud Dawoodi, p. 117
“My parents were born in Burma, and I was born in Thailand, but I’m not sure I belong anywhere. I
can’t go back and live in Thailand now that I’ve come to America. I live here in Charlottesville, but
I have no real home; lots of Karen people are leaving this place. But for now this is my destiny, it’s
what has happened to me. And you never know what will happen to you.” —Heinay Moo, p. 120
STEP FOUR: Once the assignment has been completed (time to complete the assignment will
vary), students will present a brief slide show of their selected photographs. After all students have
presented, have a class discussion using the following suggested prompts (15–20 minutes):
How did the photographs and narratives from Refugee Hotel inspire your photo essay?
#AN YOU CITE SPECIlC EXAMPLES
s 7HAT DIFFERENCES AND SIMILARITIES DID YOU SEE IN COMPARISON TO THE 2EFUGEE 3ERVICE CHECKLIST
s 7HAT SIMILARITIES AROSE AND WHAT DIFFERENCES APPEARED WITHIN THE PHOTO ESSAYS
(OW WERE THE THEMES OF THE ASSIGNMENT TRANSITION HOME ETC EXPRESSED IN THE PHOTO ESSAYS 0LEASE CITE
SEVERAL EXAMPLES
60
STEP FIVE: Written Reflection (can be done as homework assignment): Students reflect on the lesson
by responding to one of the narrator quotes used to frame the photo essay project (15+ minutes).
Encourage them to make personal connections to the narrators and reference photographs from the
book as well as their own, in addition to reflecting on themes and definitions of home, resettlement,
and the challenges that arise from adjusting to new environments while maintaining ties to family
culture and traditions.
POSSIBLE ORAL HISTORY/PHOTO ESSAY PROJECT: Students in the class can conduct oral history
interviews with friends, family, or community members who have recently resettled to the U.S.
Interview questions can be based on themes, motifs, and ideas from the lesson. Students can also
interview each other and share personal stories based on the images they photographed for the photo
essay assignment.
61
U.S. JUSTICE
O V E RV I E W
This unit explores the flawed and complicated nature of the U.S. criminal
justice system through the stories of wrongfully convicted and exonerated
individuals. It enables students to experience this system as an extension
of a society they have a personal stake in, rather than as a disembodied,
faceless bureaucracy. In the process, students can empathize with the plight
of each narrator, personalizing the details of how these human beings were
stripped of their identity.
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LESSON 13
SURVIVING JUSTICE
TIME NEEDED: Three to four class periods (five-day lesson plan available on website).
MATERIALS: 3URVIVING *USTICE !MERICAS 7RONGLY #ONVICTED AND %XONERATED narratives: Juan Melendez
(30 pp.), Gary Gauger (30 pp.), Joseph Amrine (36 pp.), Scenario for Surviving Justice, Exoneree
Worksheet, Stand Up/Sit Down Exercise, and Talk to the Text handout.
OBJECTIVE: Making personal connections to wrongful incarceration, the death penalty, and other
aspects of the U.S. criminal justice system
NARRATIVE EXCERPT: “When the trial first got started, I was like, ‘I can’t believe this. This has gone
on long enough now.’ The second day of the trial, my lawyer told me, he leans over and says, ‘We’re
halfway home.’ I’m looking at him saying, ‘Halfway to death row,’ because what I’d seen of the trial so
far, it didn’t look good for me. Because they had two guys who claimed they’d seen the murder, and I’d
committed the murder. They had Terry Russell, who claimed I told him I committed the murder. The
main thing I was thinking was, ‘How are they going to believe inmates over the guard?’ And that’s
one point I could never get past, that they actually took the inmates’ word over the guard. So that
was going through my mind. The guard was in the room when it happened. And the guard identified
another guy as the one who committed the murder.” —Joseph Amrine
D AY O N E
STEP ONE: Before reading any of the narratives, students should participate in the warm-up activity
on the next page (10 minutes).
63
HANDOUT
SURVIVING JUSTICE
Read the following scenario and completely answer the questions that follow.
One Saturday afternoon, you are arrested while you are walking down the block to a friend’s house.
You are charged with aggravated assault and robbery.
While the police are questioning you, you find out that, at 4 a.m. the previous evening, a
man stopped his car at a stop sign just one block away from your house and was pulled from his
car. He was brutally beaten and had fifty dollars in cash stolen from his wallet. He claims that his
assailant was wearing a mask, but your body and style of dress match his description exactly (it
also matches most of the people in your neighborhood). Coincidentally, the police find EXACTLY fifty
dollars in your wallet.
You repeatedly tell the police that you are innocent and that you spent the previous evening
sleeping, that you went to bed at 10 p.m. and woke up at 8 a.m. Since you were sleeping alone
and your parents were out of town, there is no one to prove you were home the entire time, and you
cannot provide an alibi for the time of the crime.
During your trial, the attorney assigned to you instructs you to remain silent, and when you
attempt to speak to defend yourself (since the attorney is not doing it), the judge silences you and
threatens to remove you from the courtroom entirely if you do not remain quiet.
You listen as the prosecution presents its case, and even you have to admit that it sounds
like you could have committed this crime. Despite the fact that there is not very much evidence
against you, the jury (which is made up of twelve people of a different race from you) very quickly
deliberates and finds you guilty as charged. You have never admitted to the crime and have continued
to vigorously insist that you are innocent. Because of your earlier outbursts, you are not allowed to
speak after your sentence is handed down: ten years in prison.
1. Given these circumstances, is there anything you could have done to prevent your incarceration?
2. How would you convince others of your innocence once you were in prison?
STEP TWO: Students do a “pair share” by sharing their answers with a neighbor (5–7 minutes).
STEP THREE: Ask pairs to share their ideas, and discuss them as a class (15 minutes). Possible
discussion prompts:
How did your opinions about your community influence your answers?
Did your beliefs about our justice system influence your answers?
$ID ANY DIRECT OR INDIRECT EXPERIENCES SHAPE YOUR ANSWERS
STEP FOUR: Introduce Surviving Justice and read pages 3–7 of the introduction as a class (10–15
minutes). Take time to answer any questions. Refer to the glossary of Surviving Justice for
vocabulary terms.
STEP FIVE: Ask pairs to share their ideas, and discuss them as a class (15 minutes). Possible
discussion prompts:
How did your opinions about your community influence your answers?
Did your beliefs about our justice system influence your answers?
$ID ANY DIRECT OR INDIRECT EXPERIENCES SHAPE YOUR ANSWERS
STEP SIX: Assign one of the following narratives to each student as homework: Juan Melendez
(26 pp.), Gary Gauger (26 pp.), or Joseph Amrine (31 pp.). Please add additional time for reading
(either as homework or during class) if needed. Students should use active reading strategies such as
the Talk to the Text handout on page 23 to generate questions for group discussion.
D AY T W O
STEP ONE: If needed, begin with additional time for reading and reflection (time will vary).
STEP TWO: Working in groups according to their assigned narratives, students discuss comments
from their Talk to the Text worksheets. Assign a facilitator and note-taker for each group. The
facilitator will be responsible for asking the group to share comments, opinions, potential answers,
and making sure to get feedback from each member of the group. The note-taker is responsible for
writing down the key points of the discussion. Each student should share at least five comments—
one of each type from the worksheet (20 minutes).
STEP THREE: Using the notes from their group discussion, facilitators report the key ideas and
comments to the entire class, encouraging students from other groups to comment on and answer
one another’s questions (10 minutes).
STEP FOUR: During class or as homework, students complete the attached Surviving Justice Exoneree
Worksheet (20–25 minutes).
65
HANDOUT
SURVIVING JUSTICE
EXONEREE WORKSHEET
NAME OF EXONEREE:
CRIME EXONEREE WAS CONVICTED OF:
HOW LONG WAS THIS PERSON IMPRISONED?:
1. Give some background about the person you studied, e.g., where they are from, what their
family or personal life was like. Be sure to mention details pertinent to the case.
4. How does the exoneree describe his or her experiences in prison? How did maintaining his
or her innocence affect his or her time in prison? Did it make it more or less difficult?
5. What was life like for this person after he or she was released from prison? How did the
label of “exoneree” affect him or her?
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D AY 3
STEP ONE: Have students write a one-paragraph response to the following prompt (5–7 minutes):
Do you think it is possible that you could be arrested for a crime you did not commit?
Why or why not?
STEP TWO: Ask the class to share their responses to the prompt. Make sure to refer back to the
exoneree’s narratives for counterexamples (5–7 minutes).
STEP THREE: Conduct the Stand Up/Sit Down Exercise. Instructions are below (5 minutes).
S TA N D U P / S I T D O W N I N S T R U C T I O N S
(adapted from Bay Area Police Watch, an organization
that assists survivors of police misconduct and brutality).
EXPLANATION OF THE ACTIVITY: The facilitator will read out a statement and if the statement is true
for you, then you stand up. If the statement is not true for you, stay seated.
STATEMENTS:
o Stand up if you feel like the laws in this country are set up to protect you.
o Stand up if you or someone you know has been falsely accused of a crime.
o Stand up if you feel the police will protect you if you need to call on them.
o Stand up if you feel the police only use force when necessary.
o Stand up if you or someone you know has been a victim of police misconduct.
o Stand up if you feel the police have the right to stop and search you with no warrant.
o Stand up if you feel community members should work in conjunction with the police when
it comes to policing their community.
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STEP FOUR: After the statements have been read out, break up the group into pairs to process out
any thoughts or feelings the exercise brought up. They can either choose to share a story that related
to one of the statements or else share general reflections (5 minutes).
STEP FIVE: Invite anyone to share with the entire group. During your discussion, consider the
following questions (15 minutes):
STEP SIX: Conclude the unit by referring back to the narratives from Surviving Justice. Ask students
to share their responses to the following questions (5–7 minutes):
STEP SEVEN: (optional): Have students respond to the following essay prompt:
“Men simply copied the realities of their hearts when they built prisons.”
—Richard Wright
In a well-developed essay, explain how the experiences of one of the narrators from Surviving
Justice support or refute this statement.
POSSIBLE ORAL HISTORY PROJECT: Class creates an oral history project focusing on wrongful
conviction and incarceration of youth, examining juvenile justice and youth violence in their
community.
68
SECURITY
h)T STANDS AS A CAUTION THAT IN TIMES OF INTERNATIONAL HOSTILITY AND ANTAGONISMS OUR
INSTITUTIONS LEGISLATIVE EXECUTIVE AND JUDICIAL MUST BE PREPARED TO EXERCISE THEIR AUTHORITY
TO PROTECT ALL CITIZENS FROM THE PETTY FEARS AND PREJUDICES THAT ARE SO EASILY AROUSEDv
—Judge Marilyn Hall Patel
+OREMATSU V 53
O V E RV I E W
The balancing act between civil rights and security in the United States has
always brought up complicated questions: is it necessary to suspend or ignore
our civil rights in times of crisis or upheaval in order to maintain security?
Or do these suspensions of rights make us less safe? There are many examples
from U.S. history to draw from: President Roosevelt’s executive order sending
Japanese Americans to concentration camps throughout the country, and
more recently, in the aftermath of 9/11, the controversies surrounding enemy
combatants, the War on Terror, and aspects of the USA Patriot Act.
The narratives in 0ATRIOT !CTS .ARRATIVES OF 0OST )NJUSTICE bring home
the realities of individuals who have found themselves subject to a wide range of
civil rights abuses, allowing students to grapple with the human costs that lie
at the heart of this pertinent contemporary issue.
69
LESSON 14
MATERIALS: Narrative of Adama Bah from Patriot Acts, and a list of civil rights.
OBJECTIVE: To analyze U.S. civil rights and security issues through the lens of personal narrative.
CONNECTIONS: This activity can also be done with the following narratives from Patriot Acts:
Yassir Alladin Afifi, Faheem Muhammad, Raed Jarrar. The following narratives from the series can
also be used: Patricia Thompson and Dan Bright from Voices from the Storm; Farid and Olga from
Underground America.
NARRATIVE EXCERPT: “The morning of March 24, 2005, my family and I were in the house sleeping.
Someone knocked on the door, and my mom went and opened it. These men barged in, waking
us up. I always sleep with the blanket over my head. They pull the blanket off my head, I look up, I
see a man. He said, ‘You’ve got to get out!’ I’m like, what the hell, what’s going on?
I saw about ten to fifteen people in our apartment and right outside our door in the hallway.
They were mostly men, but there were two women. Some had FBI jackets, and others were from
the police department and the DHS. We were all forced out of the bed and told to sit in the living
room. They were going through papers, throwing stuff around, yelling and talking to each other,
then whispering. I heard them yelling at my mother in the background, and my mom can’t speak
much English, and they were pulling her into the kitchen, yelling at her, ‘We’re going to deport you
and your whole family!’ —Adama Bah
STEP ONE: Examine and discuss the list of civil rights and address any questions. You may find it
helpful to refer to specific examples of these rights (10–12 minutes).
STEP TWO: Read pp. 29–41 of Adama Bah’s narrative. Reading can be done as a class or in small
groups. Encourage students to practice active reading strategies.
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STEP THREE: Compare the list of civil rights with the Adama Bah narrative. Discuss the following
questions (20 minutes):
Were the civil rights of Adama Bah violated? If so, which ones?
If these rights were violated, was it justified for the sake of security?
!DAMA "AHS EXPERIENCE WAS RELATED TO THE PASSAGE OF THE 53! 0ATRIOT !CT IN #AN YOU THINK
OF OTHER RELATED EXAMPLES FROM 53 HISTORY
In times of upheaval or crisis, is it necessary to suspend some of our civil rights in order to maintain
security? Why or why not?
What is your opinion of heightened airport security (body scans, searches, etc.)? Is it a necessary
precaution or a violation of an individual’s right to privacy?
POSSIBLE ORAL HISTORY PROJECT: Class creates an oral history project that focuses on security and
civil rights issues. Students conduct interviews with friends, family, local leaders and community
members, collecting a variety of stories that reflect this divisive issue. The discussion questions
above can be used as a basis for potential interview questions.
MEDIA OPTION: StandUP! is the ACLU’s website for students and young people. (WWWACLUORGSTANDUP)
Islamic Networks Group (ING) is a nonprofit organization whose mission is to counter prejudice
and discrimination against American Muslims by teaching about their traditions and contributions
in the context of America’s history and cultural diversity, while building relations between American
Muslims and other groups. (www.ing.org)
WOMEN’S RIGHTS:
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LESSON 15
MATERIALS: Patriot Acts: .ARRATIVES OF 0OST )NJUSTICe, poster-size sticky notes or large pieces of
butcher paper, tape, and large felt-tip markers.
CONNECTIONS: This activity can be done with any narrative from the Voice of Witness series.
NARRATIVE EXCERPT: “Sometimes I saw other Sikh kids being picked on at school. I felt really
bad because I wanted to help them, but usually I didn’t do anything. I had to look after myself.
Whenever I could help, the kids I helped would avoid me. They would tell me, “Just stay away.” I
think it’s probably because they were going through problems too. All of us were going through it.”
—Gurwinder Singh
STEP ONE: Read Gurwinder Singh’s narrative from Patriot Acts (11 pages) as a class or in small
groups. Encourage students to practice active reading strategies (20 minutes).
STEP TWO:
1. Hang large pieces of butcher paper or poster-size sticky notes on the wall.
2. Using individual words, quotations, questions, drawings, and symbols, have students post on
the “Graffiti Wall” their feelings, responses, and questions related to the narratives. If it is a
large class, you can split into two or more groups for this part of the activity (10 minutes).
3. Have the class silently “examine” the wall(s) (5–7 minutes).
Facilitate a class discussion based on what the wall communicates about students’ personal
responses to the narrative.
POSSIBLE ORAL HISTORY PROJECT: Take the main themes from the Graffiti Wall and use them as
the basis for oral history interviews within the class and school community.
72
WOMEN’S RIGHTS
O V E RV I E W
Using narratives from Inside This Place, Not of It: Narratives from Women’s
Prisons, this unit delves into the lives of women in U.S. prisons. It explores
gender bias, reproductive rights, and the ways in which race and class
contribute to the harsh realities for women caught up in the U.S. criminal
justice system.
73
LESSON 16
MATERIALS: Inside This Place, Not of It, large pieces of paper, and felt-tip markers.
CONNECTIONS: Body Stories and Letter Writing activities can be adapted for any narratives in the
Voice of Witness series. Other narratives from Inside This Place, Not of It can be substituted for the
ones listed below.
NARRATIVE EXCERPT: “I was there about a month before I actually saw a doctor. I didn’t have
vitamins there, and I had no prenatal care. I didn’t really complain if I was in pain or anything,
because the infirmary was real nasty. There was poo on the walls. It was just nasty. Then one day,
when I was seven months pregnant, the guards called me down. They shackled my stomach and my
feet and took me to see an OBGYN. I mean, you walk like this through the front door looking as if
you’ve murdered someone, and I just thought it was really degrading. I know I made a mistake, but
I don’t think I deserved to be ashamed or embarrassed in this way. And even once I’d got in the back
where the actual doctors’ offices were, the shackles didn’t come off. They took them off my feet, but
nothing else; the shackles stayed on my stomach.” —Olivia Hamilton
D AY O N E
STEP ONE: This warm-up activity focuses primarily on activating prior student knowledge of the
issue. Have students create written responses to the following prompts (5 minutes):
STEP TWO: Have students do a “pair-share” in which they discuss their responses to the prompts
(5 minutes).
STEP THREE: Introduce Inside This Place Not Of It. Read and discuss predetermined sections of the
Introduction (7–10 minutes).
STEP FOUR: Divide the class into groups of four to five students. Assign each group one of the
following narratives from Inside This Place, Not of It: Francesca Salavieri (14 pp.), Olivia Hamilton
74
(14 pp.), Irma Rodriquez (12 pp.), Emily Madison (16 pp.), and Taisie Baldwin (12 pp.). Have
each group read their assigned narrative. Groups can read aloud or silently. Encourage them to
employ active reading strategies. Whatever they do not finish in class can be done as homework
(30 minutes).
D AY T W O
STEP ONE: With large paper and markers, each group should draw a life-sized outline of a body.
This is the body of their narrator. Using the following questions, encourage each group to fill it in
according to how the narrator was affected by prison. Groups should also create five or six questions
of their own (25 minutes):
BODY
How is _____ treated by doctors and nurses?
Does _____ receive the medication she needs?
Does _____ have all the knowledge she needs to best take care of herself?
How is _____’s body different after prison?
HEAD
What kind of privacy does _____ have?
How is _____ treated by guards and wardens? How does that affect her?
Does _____ receive any counseling or therapy?
HEART
Does _____ feel comfortable expressing her feelings in prison?
Does _____ have many friends in prison?
Does ____ receive visitors? What is the visiting process like?
If _____ has children, how has prison affected her relationships with them?
STEP TWO: Each group should present their “body story” to the rest of the class, explaining how
they filled in their body and why. They should be able to refer to specific passages in the narrative as
evidence for why they filled in the body as they did (25 minutes).
D AY T H R E E
STEP ONE: Have students write a letter to their narrator. Through their oral histories, the narrators
have been talking to the students, telling them their stories. What do students want to say back?
How do they want to respond? Remind them the narrators spoke their stories, so they should focus on
writing an honest, heartfelt letter and not a formal essay (15 minutes).
STEP TWO: Returning to their narrative groups from the previous day, students read their letters
aloud to one another, and reflect on the following questions (15 minutes):
75
How did you feel after reading the narrative? Do you think your letter conveys these feelings?
Why did you choose to address the issues that you did?
How would you hope your narrator would respond?
If you were in your narrator’s position, would you appreciate a letter like this?
What else would you like to know about your narrator?
STEP THREE: Have the class come together to generate the following two lists, incorporating the
responses/findings from the previous activities (15 minutes):
STEP FOUR (optional): Ask each small group to choose one strategy from the list, research how it
might be implemented in the community, state, or country, and present their findings to the rest
of the class. To get started, refer to “Ten Ways to Learn More About Women in Prison,” in the
appendix to Inside This Place, Not of It (p. 270).
STEP FIVE (optional): Send (or email) your letters to Voice of Witness, where they will be forwarded
to the organization Justice Now, our Inside This Place, Not of It book partners. Justice Now supports
many of the women whose narratives appear in the book.
Voice of Witness
849 Valencia Street
San Francisco, CA 94110
Attn: Education Program
Email: cliff.mayotte@voiceofwitness.org
POSSIBLE ORAL HISTORY PROJECT: Class creates an oral history project focusing on gender bias in
their school community. Students craft interview questions based on their work in the Body Stories
unit and interview classmates, friends, and school faculty and staff.
MEDIA OPTION: Organizational Website: The Beat Within: A Weekly Publication of Writing
and Art From the Inside. Based in San Francisco, the Beat Within’s mission is to provide
incarcerated youth with a consistent opportunity to share their ideas and life experiences in a safe
space that encourages literacy, self-expression, some critical thinking skills, and healthy, supportive
relationships with adults and their community. beatwithin.org
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LESSON 17
MATERIALS: Inside This Place, Not of It, Station handouts, string, tape measure or yardstick, Satellites
Handout, paper, pens, large pieces of butcher paper or poster-size sticky notes.
OBJECTIVE: Using narratives from Inside This Place Not Of It, students analyze and explore the
challenges faced by women in prison while addressing larger issues within the U.S criminal
justice system.
RELATED CORE CURRICULAR STANDARDS: Reading History RH.9–10.1. RH.9–10.2. Speaking and
Listening SL.9–10.1. Writing W.9–10.2.
CONNECTIONS: This unit can be adapted for use with narratives from Surviving Justice. Other
narratives from Inside This Place, Not of It can be substituted for the ones suggested below.
O V E RV I E W
This unit explores the realities of women in U.S. prisons. It allows students to analyze and
personalize the experiences of incarcerated women as they examine the labels “criminal,” “victim,”
and “survivor.”
NARRATIVE EXCERPT: “After just coming out of a relationship where I’d fought for my life, I began
fighting for my life again in the judicial system. I don’t believe the system handled my case fairly. I
had neighbors testifying for me, I had family members testifying for me, I had police reports, I had
medical records, but none of that meant anything to the prosecutor. Their job was just to convict
me, it was like a show. The prosecutor was trying for a sentence of thirty years to life. I had to fight
to not go into a prison for life.” —Sheri Dwight
ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS:
PREPARATION: Devise a system for dividing students into groups and assigning appropriate readings.
The creation of the groups should be informed by efforts to solicit a diversity of perspectives and
ways in which members can contribute to their group.
77
D AY O N E
STEP ONE: The activities during the first day of the unit focus primarily on activating prior student
knowledge of the issue. Have students do a “pair-share” in which they discuss the following
questions (5 minutes):
)F YOU HAD TO SPEND THE NEXT EIGHT YEARS IN JAIL WHAT WOULD YOU MISS THE MOST
If you had to spend the rest of your life in jail, what would be the biggest challenges you would face?
STEP TWO: Introduce students to Inside This Place, Not of It. Provide a brief overview of the book and
the manner by which women’s stories were documented (5 minutes).
STEP THREE: Create a KWL chart for student reflection (or make a copy of the chart, found on page
45). The chart should be readily accessible, as students will revisit it during the course of the unit.
This activity will give students an opportunity to activate prior knowledge and reveal assumptions
they may have about women in prison. Conclude the activity by asking students what they would
like to learn about women in prison (10 minutes).
STEP FOUR: Divide the class into four groups. (These groups may or may not correlate with the
reading groups students will use for the remainder of the unit.) For larger class sizes, divide the
class into eight groups and simply reproduce each station twice. Inform groups that they will
rotate through four stations spread throughout the classroom. Provide students with instructions
as to when they need to rotate. Each station will have a unique prompt and set of instructions.
Students will record their insights for each activity on the Inside This Place, Not of It Stations
handout (35 minutes).
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STATION ONE: YOUR NEW HOME
Housing more inmates in a cell than what it is designed for is common in the U.S. and anywhere
else overcrowding is present. The average prison cell built today is at least 70 square feet (7x11 or
8x9), but only about 60 square feet are usable, resulting in 30 square feet per prisoner if double
celled. Some older prison and jail cells provide 40 to 56 square feet (5x8 or 7x8). Federal judges in
many states have ruled since 1977 that every prisoner deserves at least 60 square feet of cell space.
The fact is that cell size varies depending upon the type of facility. —Institutional Corrections, a
REPORT BY -ARK 3TEVENS !SSISTANT 0ROFESSOR OF #RIMINOLOGY #ALIFORNIA 3TATE 5NIVERSITY &RESNO
DIRECTIONS
Create a prison cell using the string and measuring tools provided. Your group’s cell must be at least
seventy but no more than ninety square feet.
Once you have constructed your cell, reflect on the questions below and record your insights on your
Inside This Place, Not of It Stations handout.
Though women make up only a small minority of the prison and jail population, slightly less
than 7 percent, their numbers are increasing at rates that far surpass men. In 1977, 11,212
women were in prison. As of 2007, that number had increased to 107,000. The number of women
in prison has grown dramatically since the 1980s due to several factors: mandatory minimum
sentencing for drug crimes which preclude judicial discretion, the dismantling of the U.S. mental
health system, and increased prosecution of “survival” crimes, which include check forgery and
minor embezzlement. Over the last four decades, hundreds of thousands of women have been
sentenced to jail and prison for nonviolent and first-time offenses, for offenses that arise from drug
addiction or mental health problems, or as a result of minor involvement in offenses perpetrated
by their husbands or boyfriends. —Inside This Place, Not of It, Introduction
DIRECTIONS
Discuss the questions on the next page with your fellow group members. Then, record your group’s
insights using your Inside This Place, Not of It Stations handout.
79
s (OW MIGHT THE hDISMANTLING OF THE 53 MENTAL HEALTH SYSTEMv INCREASE THE NUMBER OF PEOPLE IN PRISON
s "ASED ON ITS CONTEXT IN THE PASSAGE WHAT ARE hSURVIVAL CRIMESv
s 7OULD YOU EVER COMMIT A SURVIVAL CRIME 7HY OR WHY NOT
“Because women are a minority in the prison system, they face particular challenges. A prison
healthcare system designed for men that mandates, for example, shackling during transportation to
and from the hospital, suddenly rises from the unpleasant to the horrific when the transported prisoner
shackled at the ankles is a woman in the late stages of active labor, as experienced by Olivia Hamilton”
—Inside This Place, Not of It, Introduction
DIRECTIONS
With your fellow group members, reflect on the similarities and differences in the challenges men
and women face in prison. Record your group’s insights using the Venn diagram on your Inside This
Place, Not of It Stations handout.
DIRECTIONS
Briefly discuss with your group members the challenges people face once they are released from prison.
Then, using your Inside This Place, Not of It Stations handout, create a drawing or cartoon that
illustrates an example of one of these challenges.
For additional ideas regarding challenges people face after being released from prison, you may
want to consult Appendix VII: Post-Prison Consequences pp. 250–254 of Inside This Place, Not of It.
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HANDOUT
s (OW MANY SQUARE FEET DOES IT CONTAIN MULTIPLY ITS LENGTH BY ITS WIDTH
s 7HAT CHALLENGES WOULD YOU FACE LIVING IN SUCH A SMALL SPACE AND SHARING IT WITH ANOTHER PERSON
81
STEP FIVE: Revisit the KWL chart and ask students to add to the “Want to Learn” and “Learned”
sections of the chart (5 minutes).
D AY T W O
STEP ONE: As a writing warm-up, ask students to reflect on the following question (5 minutes):
h7HAT IS A CRIMINALv
STEP TWO: In a “pair-share,” students share their ideas with a partner and then discuss the following
questions (5 minutes):
STEP THREE: Working in their groups from the previous day, students read pp. 39–44 of Sheri
Dwight’s narrative (20 minutes). Groups can read aloud, or silently, using the Talk to the Text (p.
23) activity or reading strategies listed on p. 124. As students are reading, ask them to make a list
of people who have had a major impact on Sheri’s life—her parents, her children, her husband, etc.
Around each person’s name, students respond to the prompts below. Encourage them to add to their
initial insights as they continue to read.
STEP FOUR: Conclude the activity by asking students to share their insights. This can be done as a
class, in groups, or with partners (5 minutes).
STEP FIVE: Each (already established) group will be assigned one of the following four narratives
from Inside This Place Not of It: Teri Hancock (15 pp.), Emily Madison (16 pp.), Taisie Baldwin
(12 pp.), Irma Rodriguez (12 pp.). During this “Independent Practice” reading session, students
can read independently, with a partner, or with the entire group (15 minutes). Similar to the earlier
reading activity, as students read this story they will reflect on people who have had a substantial
impact on their narrator’s life. Remind students to include people that played a major role in the
narrator’s life before, during, and—when applicable—after her time in prison. Any reading and
reflections that students do not complete during class time become homework.
STEP SIX: Revisit the KWL chart introduced on the first day of the unit. For items not yet
addressed in the “Want to Learn” section, discuss how the class will work to include them in the
days ahead (5 minutes).
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D AY T H R E E
STEP ONE: As a warm-up activity, students do a “pair-share” for the following question (5 minutes):
STEP TWO: As a class, discuss themes that surfaced in the passages from Sheri Dwight’s narrative
that students read during the previous class period (7–10 minutes). Students may find it helpful to
have a working definition of themes:
Examples from Sheri Dwight’s narrative may include abuse, fear, injustice, survival, and violence.
STEP THREE: Introduce Inside This Place, Not of It Theme Satellites. This activity will enable
students to record quotes and details that support the development of themes from narratives in
the book. As a class, complete several sample Theme Satellites that identify themes that developed
in Sheri Dwight’s story (10 minutes).
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HANDOUT
1. On a separate piece of paper, using the example below, draw four bubbles, each containing a
theme from Inside This Place, Not of It.
2. Around each bubble, draw three boxes and connect them to your theme bubble with lines.
3. In each example box, provide a quote and/or a description of a detail from the story that
shows this theme.
4. At least one of these examples must include a quote from the text that shows this theme.
5. Include the relevant page number(s) with any quotes you use.
THEME
QUOTE/DESCRIPTION QUOTE/DESCRIPTION
QUOTE/DESCRIPTION
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STEP FOUR: Students work with a partner from their group to complete the Inside This Place, Not of
It Theme Satellites graphic organizer for the story they have read (20 minutes).
STEP FIVE: Students discuss the following questions in their groups (10 minutes).
What is justice?
What is injustice?
Can justice lead to injustice? If so, how?
STEP SIX: Revisit the KWL chart. For items not yet addressed in the “Want to Learn” section,
discuss how the class will work to include them in the days ahead (5 minutes).
D AY F O U R
NOTES: The Introduction to Dialectical Reading Journals handout (found on page 138) is designed
to provide students with an overview of reading journals. This lesson operates under the assumption
that students have experience using some type of reading journal with which they apply active
reading strategies (listed on page 137). If students have not yet used a reading journal, consider
facilitating a separate lesson on how to use a journal to employ active reading strategies.
STEP ONE: As a warm-up activity, ask students to reflect in writing on the following question (5 minutes):
Do you think society treats people differently if they have spent time in prison?
STEP TWO: Students share their ideas with a partner and then discuss the following questions (5 minutes):
STEP THREE: Divide students into their narrative groups. Assign groups one of the following
narratives from Inside This Place, Not of It: Olivia Hamilton (13 pp.), Francesca Salavieri (14
pp.), Marilyn Sanderson (13 pp.), and Charlie Morningstar (16 pp.). Provide students with the
opportunity to read independently or with a partner.
Students will employ active reading strategies by using the Dialectical Reading Journal handout
on page 138 of the Educator Resources section. Any reading not completed in class will be done as
homework (35 minutes).
STEP FOUR: As a class, conclude the period by briefly discussing the following questions (5 minutes):
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D AY F I V E
STEP ONE: As a warm-up activity, ask students to work with a partner to create a Prisoner’s Bill
of Rights. Imagine that it will be used to inform the policies, procedures, and facilities of future
prisons constructed in your state (10 minutes).
STEP TWO: Students will collaborate with their groups to create a “Life Map” for their narrator
(30 minutes). Their Life Maps should include the following items:
STEP THREE: Groups will hang their completed Life Maps in the classroom. Students should do a
“gallery walk” tour of the room to examine their classmates’ ideas (5–7 minutes).
STEP FOUR: Unit concludes by revisiting the KWL chart. For items that have not been addressed in
the “Want to Learn” section, discuss ways in which students or the class as a whole can pursue future
learning opportunities (5 minutes).
POSSIBLE ORAL HISTORY PROJECT: Class creates an oral history project using the discussion
questions of the unit, the writing /discussion prompts, and the Prisoner’s Bill of Rights to craft
interview questions for an exploration of gender isssues within in the U.S. criminal justice system
and beyond. Students can interview friends, family, teachers, and members of the community.
MEDIA OPTION: Voices Project / Public Secrets: Public Secrets is an interactive testimonial in which
women incarcerated in the California State Prison System reveal the secrets of the war on drugs,
the criminal justice system, and the prison industrial complex. Public Secrets was developed in
collaboration with Justice Now and with the support of Vectors: Journal of Culture and Technology
in a Dynamic Vernacular. This project contains strong language and graphic descriptions of prison
conditions. (VECTORSUSCEDUISSUESPUBLICSECRETS)
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HURRICANE KATRINA:
RACE, CLASS, AND
DEMOCRACY IN THE
UNITED STATES
O V E RV I E W
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LESSON 18
HURRICANE KATRINA:
CRITICAL READING LOG
MATERIALS: Voices from the Storm, and Critical Reading Log format.
OBJECTIVE: Using first-person narrative to build reading comprehension and critical thinking skills
through personal student reflection.
CONNECTIONS: This activity can be done with any narrative from Voices From the Storm and the other
books in the Voice of Witness series.
NARRATIVE EXCERPT: “Everybody in the Ninth Ward, down in that Desire project, where a brother
used to rock at, that’s where all the water was. Back there where I live at, it’s through, it’s finished.
You got a lot of people back there, man, already really didn’t have nothin’, you know? People back
there scufflin’ to keep the little bit they got. All they got now, as far as the black poor people are
concerned back there, is uncertainty. And mildew, they got plenty of that out there. They ain’t got
nothing but poor black people out there, gettin’ the stuff out their houses, breathing in toxins.
That’s real. That’s real, man.” —Anthony Letcher
Note: All information for this activity should be entered in the Critical Thinking Log.
STEP ONE: Read Introduction to Voices from the Storm (4 pp.) and the narrative of Anthony Letcher
from all four parts of the book (16 pp.). Encourage students to use active reading strategies (35–40
minutes).
STEP TWO: Have students write a 150-word summary of the people and/or events that occurred in
the passage (20 minutes).
STEP THREE: Have students select two quotations from the reading that they feel are important or
interesting and briefly explain why they chose each quotation (10 minutes).
STEP FOUR: Encourage students to make a connection between what they read and something they
have seen, experienced, heard, or read about. What did it remind them of? Why is this story/account
important? Have students write about both parts of the connection—something specific from the
oral history narrative, and something specific from outside the narrative (10–12 minutes).
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STEP FIVE: Have students create three to five oral history questions they would ask Anthony Letcher
if they were to conduct an oral history interview with him. Strive to “find the holes” in the story and
ask questions that could help students better understand his story/experience (7–10 minutes).
C R I T I C A L R E A D I N G L O G F O R M AT
TITLE OF BOOK/STORY:
AUTHOR:
SUMMARY:
QUOTATION:
EXPLANATION OF QUOTATION:
CONNECTION/REFLECTIONS:
STEP SIX (optional): Students do a “pair-share” with their reading logs, comparing quotes,
connections, and oral history questions (7–10 minutes).
POSSIBLE ORAL HISTORY PROJECT: Create an oral history project using the Critical Reading Log
format, with student-written biographies as the “text.”
MEDIA OPTION: Podcasts from Youth Radio/Open Society Foundations: Generation Katrina: Youth
Voices from New Orleans (WWWSOROSORGRESOURCESMULTIMEDIAKATRINAPROJECTS'EN+ATRINASTORY?
'EN+ATRINAPHP). A one-hour collection of personal narratives documenting the world of young
people in New Orleans after Katrina.
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LESSON 19
TIME NEEDED: Three to four days (5-day version available on Voice of Witness website)
MATERIALS: Voices from the Storm, large pieces of paper or poster-size sticky notes, markers,
handouts, and background information/images on Hurricane Katrina and New Orleans.
OBJECTIVE: Explore perceptions of class, race, and democracy through an examination of Hurricane
Katrina and multiple first-person narratives from Voices from the Storm.
CONNECTIONS: Worksheets for this lesson can be adapted and used for other narratives in the Voice
of Witness series.
NARRATIVE EXCERPT: “Katrina was truly a disaster, but for me Katrina was a blessing ’cause it turned
my life around. I’ve been wanting to leave New Orleans. You’re not treated right in New Orleans,
you’re not treated fair. New Orleans is the city that forgot to care, and the city that care had
forgotten about. You hear about the big easy, you hear about carnival. But man, we go through
hell in New Orleans.” —Patricia Thompson
ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS:
O V E RV I E W
Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath provide an opportunity to examine race and class in contemporary
American society as they are both perceived and acted upon. These lessons first encourage students to
consider their perceptions of their own selves in relation to the rest of the world, and then to apply
those differences to the catastrophe in New Orleans. Before Katrina, the perceptions New Orleans
residents had of themselves, their city, and their government were informed by racial and class
divisions, though largely unspoken or explicit. After the storm, these divisions became glaringly
apparent and were also echoed and distorted in the media coverage of the disaster.
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D AY O N E
STEP ONE: Set up poster activity, entitled Perceptions of My Community, as warm-up for the lessons/
readings that follow. It is an opportunity for students to reflect on the many sources that shape
perceptions in their community. If desired, have students reflect on the following prompts in writing
for a few minutes before beginning the activity.
Hang four pieces of large poster board or large sticky notes around the room. On each poster
write the following half sentences:
Students then circulate around the room and finish each sentence according to their perceptions of
their community. They should write at least one response for all four prompts (7-10 minutes).
STEP TWO: Students then do a “gallery walk” to examine all the completed sentences (5 minutes).
STEP THREE: At the conclusion of the “gallery walk,” students identify the top three themes/
perceptions from each poster. The class then charts the positive, negative, and neutral perceptions.
At the conclusion of this activity, discuss the following question (15 minutes).
STEP FOUR: Before providing students with necessary background information on Hurricane
Katrina, create a slightly altered version of the KWL activity for the class using the chart provided.
This chart should be centrally located in the classroom and used throughout the unit for student
questions and responses.
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WHAT I HAVE HEARD AND SEEN WHAT I HAVE COME TO BELIEVE WHAT I WANT TO KNOW
STEP FIVE: The remainder of the class period should be spent going over background material (maps,
time lines, reports) on Hurricane Katrina and New Orleans from the appendices of Voices from the
Storm (p. 261). Use the student questions from the KWL chart and the community perceptions from
the Poster Activity to frame and share information. (15–20 minutes).
STEP SIX (for homework): Create reading groups for the following suggested narratives from Voices
from the Storm:
Patricia Thompson
Dan Bright
Father Vien The Nguyen
Renee Martin
Abdulrahman Zeitoun
Ask students to read the intro and the story of their assigned individual. If students need additional
time to read, use some time at the beginning of the next class period. Students should do the Talk to
the Text activity or incorporate other active reading strategies.
D AY T W O
In each corner of the room, hang one of the following signs: strongly agree, agree, disagree,
strongly disagree. Then give the following instructions:
h7ELL BE DOING AN ACTIVITY IN WHICH YOU WILL BE MOVING AROUND THE CLASSROOM STATING YOUR OPINION AND
supporting your point of view. Bring your warm-up paper with you.
I’ll be reading the statements from the warm-up. After I read the statement, stand in the corner of the room
under the sign that represents your opinion—strongly agree, agree, disagree, or strongly disagree. After you move
THERE )LL BE ASKING DIFFERENT PEOPLE IN THAT OPINION GROUP TO BACK UP THEIR OPINIONS WITH EXPLANATIONSv
Depending on schedules and engagement, this activity can take longer and be even richer (10 minutes).
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HANDOUT
Read each of the following statements. On your own piece of paper, write whether you agree or
disagree with the statement, then write a sentence explaining your opinion. You do not need to copy
the statements on your paper:
1. If a huge natural disaster were to hit (your city or town) tomorrow, the city would be prepared
to handle it.
2. If a huge natural disaster were to hit (your city or town) tomorrow, my family would be prepared.
3. City, state, and federal government should be responsible for helping people deal with
natural disasters.
4. The government helps all people equally when it comes to things like natural disasters.
5. In a natural disaster, prisoners and undocumented immigrants do not deserve the same
assistance from the government as other people do.
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HANDOUT
7HILE TALKING WITH OTHER STUDENTS WHO STUDIED THE SAME +ATRINA STORY AS THE ONE YOU READ lLL IN THIS CHART TO
BETTER UNDERSTAND THE NARRATORS EXPERIENCES
1. What are three ways you can describe this person’s personality? Give evidence for each
description.
s
s
s
2. What are three ways you can describe this person’s life before the storm? Give evidence
for each description.
s
s
s
3. What are their perceptions of New Orleans? What do they say about living there? Give
evidence for each description.
THE STORM
4. Describe this person’s situation as the storm approached/hit New Orleans. Where was he or
she? With whom? How did he/she feel about the storm? Why was he or she still in the city?
(You may not have a lot of information for this one, depending on which person’s story you are studying.)
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5. Identify three major things that happened to this person or that this person did after the
levees broke (the morning of Monday, August 29) and in the following days (through
September 4). Include locations, if you can.
s
s
s
6. How did this person respond to those events? What was his or her state of mind?
7. What was life like for your narrator during the weeks after the storm? Where was he or she?
Why?
8. How did this person respond to these weeks? What was his or her state of mind? How was
he or she adapting to his or her environment?
LOOKING BACK
9. Where is the person you studied living at this point? How does he or she feel about living in
New Orleans? How have his or her perceptions of New Orleans been challenged?
10. Looking back, how does the person you studied seem the same and/or different because of
his or her Katrina experiences? How does your person view life now?
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HANDOUT
THE STORM
LOOKING BACK
Highlight—where is your person now? How has his or her life changed?
GOLDEN DESCRIPTION
What is the one story the rest of the class needs to know about the person you studied? If you
could only describe his or her experiences in two sentences, what would they be?
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STEP FIVE: For homework, students write reflections of the following questions (one page):
D AY T H R E E
STEP ONE: Students pair up and share written reflection answers. Each pair then shares their answers
with the class. Students should be encouraged to use direct quotes from their reading. (10 minutes)
After a short “gallery walk,” allow students to share their responses to the activity using New
Orleans as a model. Consider the following questions:
STEP TWO: Groups finish their Expert Worksheets and Presentation Chart from the previous day.
(10 minutes).
STEP THREE: Each group presents basic info on their assigned narrator while the rest of the class
takes notes on the Presentation Note-Taker Worksheet for comparing experiences. As presentations
unfold, the teacher asks groups probing questions, elicits comments/questions from class members,
and pulls out comparisons from class members. Students incorporate responses from their Note-
Taker Worksheets. (30 minutes).
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HANDOUT
NOTE-TAKER WORKSHEETS
As each group presents a little bit of the story of the person they studied, fill in the chart. In the left-
hand column, write how that person and his or her experiences during Katrina were similar to the
person you studied. In the right-hand column, write how that person and his or her experiences were
different from the person you studied. Cross out the chart for the person you studied.
PATRICIA
THOMPSON
ABDULRAHMAN
ZEITOUN
FATHER VIEN
THE NGUYEN
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STEP FOUR: Students revisit the KWL chart—adding to the W and L sections, in addition to
repeating the first step of the Poster Activity (on paper or whiteboard), with the following changes
(10 minutes):
Have your perceptions of New Orleans changed as a result of your reading? In what ways?
POSSIBLE ORAL HISTORY PROJECT: Class creates an oral history project exploring local examples that
reflect perceptions and realities of race, class, and democracy. Project could also have an environmental
justice framework, collecting stories from a variety of individuals in the community.
Trouble the Water (dirs. Tia Lessin and Carl Deal). Elsewhere Films, 2008 (www.troublethewaterfilm.com)
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PA R T 3
O V E RV I E W
Part 3 serves as the Voice of Witness “field guide” to conducting oral histories and creating oral history
projects with students. Beginning with time lines and checklists and ending with examples of “amplified”
oral history projects, it covers every step of the process. Through conducting their own oral histories
and opening themselves to the untold stories in their communities, students create an experiential and
civically engaged relationship to history—doing history as opposed to just learning about it.
The time it takes to complete an oral history project can vary greatly. It can be done as a single
five-week unit, or it can be part of a larger, integrated project or service learning opportunity
that can last an entire semester. The following time line reflects an approach that takes five to six
weeks. It is meant as a guideline and not a script. Depending on schedules, student needs, and
curriculum, teachers can expand or contract the time line as needed or desired.
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PHASE 4: DEBRIEF, LOGISTICS, AND LISTENING
CLASS PERIODS
After the interview(s), take a preliminary look at the material and think about how the
interview satisfied the goals for the project set up in Phase 2.
o Will a follow-up interview be necessary?
o Will an entirely different interview be necessary?
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HANDOUT
Choice 2 name:
s Do you have a recording device you can use to conduct your interview, or will you need to
borrow one?
Tonight, talk to one of the people you would like to interview, and write down dates and times
during which you could conduct your interview. Plan for about an hour to set up for and conduct
an interview.
Interview option 1:
Interview option 2:
Interview option 3:
s The next time our class meets, you will make a schedule with classmates so that each of you will
get adequate time with the recorders.
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HANDOUT
Follow-up interview
(Reinterview)
Print out draft (with reinterview info, if necessary) and take to interviewee
for fact-checking
Print final draft and hand in recording, transcript, and final draft
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PREPARING FOR YOUR
ORAL HISTORY PROJECT
ETHICS
A major component of the Voice of Witness Framework of Oral History is to honor people and
their stories. There are ethical (and legal) considerations to discuss with students before conducting
oral history interviews. This section will cover basic Voice of Witness principles, guidelines, and
practicalities of conducting oral history. For additional material on the topic, see the Oral History
Association’s website (www.oralhistory.org) for an extensive list of guidelines.
SEEK OUT NARRATORS WHO ARE ENTHUSIASTIC ABOUT TELLING THEIR STORY
A student may really want to interview someone because they are certain that person has amazing
stories to tell, but if that individual is ambivalent or reluctant about being interviewed, students
must respect that. Cajoling and pleading is not okay.
When selecting potential narrators for an oral history project, it is essential to remember that
everyone has a story and that an “unamplified” voice does not have to be someone who has been
victimized or is suffering through a crisis. Voice of Witness cofounder Lola Vollen describes this
as “celebrating the rich tapestry of everyday voices.” While there is no need to shy away from
stories of struggle or adversity, seeking narrators solely on the basis of “victim stories” can create an
unnecessary burden for both narrator and interviewer, putting students in an ethically compromised
position of ignoring deserving stories.
Narrators in the Voice of Witness book series share their stories related to human rights abuses,
but these narratives also contain many other aspects of the narrators’ lives. While students are
contemplating potential narrators, encourage them to be interested in the “whole person,” which
will enable them to create a multifaceted oral history portrait of their narrators.
RELEASE FORM
All narrators must read and sign a release form before their interview. The release form is permission
in writing for the interview and states that the subject understands and agrees to the use of her or
his edited interview for publication, broadcast, performance, or public presentation. This is not just
a courtesy but also a legal and ethical obligation. In some cases, when a signed release form is not
possible, narrators can have the release form read to them and verbally agree. This verbal agreement
should be recorded and saved with the audio file of the narrator’s interview. The sample release form
below can be adapted to suit your school or community.
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SAMPLE RELEASE FORM
I understand that I have complete control over how my interview can be used, and can choose to
remain anonymous if the interview is used in any form. (This includes, and is not limited to, text or
audio excerpts of the interview in newspapers, magazines, and the internet.)
I will receive a transcript and/or recording of my interview from Voice of Witness for my personal
use upon my request.
Voice of Witness will not publish anything without my consent, and will do everything to protect
my privacy. They will not share my identity or personal information with anyone else.
If I do not speak English, I will be provided with an interpreter who will explain this consent form
in my language.
_____________________________
Signature
_____________________________
Date
_____________________________
Address
_____________________________
City, State, Zip
_____________________________
Phone #
_____________________________
Other way of getting in contact
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method by reaching out to community organizations when in the planning stages of an oral
history project.
Student: Hi, my name is__________ and I’m a student at __________ School. I’m participating in an
ORAL HISTORY PROJECT AND )M LOOKING FOR INDIVIDUALS WHO MIGHT BE WILLING TO SHARE THEIR STORIES OR EXPERIENCES
ABOUT THE ???????????? EVENT OR OTHER EXPERIENCES WITH????????????? ) HEARD -S???????? MIGHT
know a lot about that. Might she be available to talk with me?
Person: Yes, that’s me. I’m happy to talk. Can you tell me a little more about this project?
Student: I’d be happy to. It’s an oral history project where each member of our class is finding someone
in their community whom they think have an unheard story to tell. The focus of the project is on
_______________ and I thought you would be a good person to talk with because _________________
and __________________. If you wouldn’t mind sitting down with me, I’d like to interview you for about
HALF AN HOUR ON YOUR EXPERIENCE DOING ????????????? ) WILL HAVE A SET OF QUESTIONS AND ALL YOU WILL HAVE TO
do is answer them.
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Then set up a time that works for both people at a place that will be both comfortable and convenient.
Make sure you give the person your contact information in case they need to reschedule. Also, before
you hang up, ask the person for a brief bit of biographical information (age, place of residence, school
attended, etc.) so that you will know a bit about them before going into the interview.
Students need to be flexible and willing to balance both patience and persistence when
attempting to make a connection with a narrator. If they do not hear back from their message,
email, or text within four to six days, they should try again. Expect that this part of the process will
take time. It’s a very good idea for students to have several potential narrators on their list in case
one falls through. Below is a handout for students to use as a reference when they are contacting
potential narrators.
N A R R AT O R C O N TA C T C H E C K L I S T
When first making contact with potential narrators, you should ask them the following:
What is their contact information: full name, telephone number, and email address?
Would they mind being recorded via an audio or video recorder?
Are they able to come to the school or meet off campus?
What are good dates and times for the interview?
What is the best way to follow up with them after the interview?
Record these details and submit them to your teacher for approval.
PHONE CALLS: Before you call, role play with a partner (who “answers” the call), stating your name,
what school/neighborhood group you are with, the goal of the project and how they might be able to
participate/how you need their help. Then, make the real call. If you need to leave a message, speak
slowly and clearly, and leave your contact email or cell phone number twice.
EMAIL: Clearly state who you are, which organization/school you are from, and what the goals
and intentions are for your project. If you have links to your school be sure to include those. Have
another person proofread the message before you send it.
FOLLOW-THROUGH: Sometimes people will need more than one email or phone call. Be persistent,
though do not harass. Following up with an email shows that you are serious. If you make an
appointment to meet someone, either for an initial visit or interview, be sure to show up on time.
This shows respect for the person you would like to interview. If you know you will be late or need
to cancel, communicate this as soon as possible. After the meeting or interview, always thank your
narrators for the opportunity.
CONTACTING NARRATORS YOU ALREADY KNOW: If you are planning on conducting an interview
with someone you already know (friend, family member, peer), follow the same basic procedures
as the ones listed above. The formality of the process will enable both the interviewer and the
narrator to focus on the details of that working relationship, which will facilitate a more authentic
oral history experience.
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L E A R N I N G A B O U T Y O U R N A R R AT O R
In order to be prepared for each interview, make sure students have conducted some research
regarding their narrators. If there is no information available in print or online, students can ask
their narrator to write a brief autobiographical sketch of themselves. This can be sent via email,
text, or collected in person. Students may want to exchange autobiographical sketches with their
narrators. If that is not possible or appropriate, it is essential that students ask their narrators, “Is
there anything you would like to know about me?” Ultimately, this process will enable students to
create informed interview questions.
While students are learning about their narrators, remind them to be open to, and mindful of,
any cultural norms or differences they will need to consider before conducting their interviews. For
instance, in some cultures, direct eye contact can be considered disrespectful. In other cultures, it
may be the norm. This information may influence how students create their interview environment.
C R A F T I N G T H E I N T E RV I E W
If we take time to listen, we’ll find wisdom, wonder, and poetry in the lives and stories of the people all
around us. —Dave Isay, Founder and President, StoryCorps
The next two sections of the guide focus on the heart of oral history: the interview. In this part,
various practical elements of conducting interviews are covered, some of which may include steps
in the process that may be obvious, and some of which may be more often overlooked. The focus is
on the “art” of the interview—qualities that move beyond journalistic functions and into the special
nature of practicing oral history.
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LESSON 20
OBJECTIVE: To help students understand the difference between “closed” and “open” questions, and
which ones are appropriate for an oral history interview.
RELATED CORE CURRICULUM STANDARDS: Speaking and Listening SL.9–10.1, SL.11–12.1, SL.9–
10.3, SL.11–12.3.
STEP ONE: Have students write down three questions they might like to ask you, the teacher. Draw a T
chart on the board, with “class” listed above one side, and your name written above the other.
Intro: We’re going to play a game today in which you can ask me questions, and I’ll answer them
(within reason). Now, I’m looking for certain types of questions. If you ask me the type of question I’m
looking for, you get a point. If you don’t, I get a point.
I’m not going to tell you anymore about what I’m looking for in the questions. You will start to see
WHAT THE hWINNINGv QUESTIONS HAVE IN COMMON
STEP TWO: Call on different students, listening to and answering their questions. If they ask
questions that require only a yes/no or factual answer, put a point in your column. If they ask a
question that requires an opinion, some thoughtfulness, a description, etc., put a point in their
column. It can be helpful to exaggerate this some, really going into a story with the first few open
questions volunteered.
As the game progresses, students will probably continue to ask closed questions. As they do, ask
their classmates what could be added to their questions so that the class gets a point. Usually they
will start adding “why” and “how” and “could you explain” to their peers’ questions.
STEP THREE: When they have won, stop and have students explain how you got points (what
those questions had in common) and then how they got points (what those questions had in
common). Write these ideas down on the board and have students recall how they changed some
questions with a few words to give the class points.
STEP FOUR: Label the questions “open” and “closed.” Tell students they want to ask mostly open
questions in their interview so that their interviewee will tell stories, not just give facts. But also let
them know that a few closed questions at the beginning (to get the interviewee comfortable and to
get some basics, like name spellings and place of birth) can be really helpful.
STEP FIVE: Give students a few minutes to write a couple of open questions for the interview they are going
to do. Do a check for understanding with pairs and with the whole class to make sure they understand.
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STEP SIX: For homework, assign a full question-writing exercise for the students’ interviews.
SAMPLE STUDENT AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH (Courtesy of Mission San Jose High School, Fremont, CA)
“I was born on February 5, 1996. My first Christmas was spent in the hospital for lung malformation,
which I continued to have until I was two. I attended preschool and went to kindergarten at Mission
Valley. My brother was born February 8, 2002. I finished K-6 at Mission Valley. I attended Hopkins
for seventh and eighth grade. Currently, I attend Mission San Jose High School as a sophomore. I enjoy
piano (which I’ve been playing since first grade), distance running, and watching movies.”
After they have finished their sketches, students exchange them with a classmate and practice
creating interview questions based on the information provided in the sketches.
This activity can be directly followed by a short practice interview and the longer practice interview
listed on page 117.
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LESSON 21
MODELING AN INTERVIEW:
THE “MYSTERY GUEST” INTERVIEW
RELATED CORE CURRICULUM STANDARDS: Reading Literature RL.9-10.1, RL.9-10.2. Speaking and
Listening L.9-10.1. Writing W.9-10.1.
O V E RV I E W
In this exercise, students will have the opportunity to hone their ability to generate and ask
interview questions. When conducting an interview, it is always difficult to ask the right questions,
the questions that will prompt the interviewee to really open up, and tell an unexpected story,
something more interesting than just standard biographical information. Learning to create these
questions both before the interview and while the interviewee is talking takes practice. This exercise
lets students practice these skills. In addition, students will feel a better connection and deeper
understanding of their school administrators and vice versa.
P R E PA R AT I O N
STEP ONE: Ask three of your school administrators to each write an autobiographical sketch. Tell
them not to spend more than ten to fifteen minutes on their sketches. To honor their busy schedules,
allow them at least four weeks to complete their “assignment.”
STEP TWO: Once sketches are submitted, compile the stories onto one page, front and back. Label
each administrator -YSTERY 'UEST , 2, 3, and so on.
STEP THREE: After you and your administrators have all agreed on a date for “Mystery Guest”
interviews, the administrators can decide among themselves which classes/periods each will visit.
The interviews should only last approximately fifteen to twenty minutes, so they should not need to
worry about time constraints or being out of the office for too long. Fortunately, your classes will be
prepared for each administrator, so it will not matter who shows up.
In the meantime, during one class period, have your students write their own autobiographical
sketches in their notebooks. Again, allow them only ten to fifteen minutes to write their sketches.
Have students work in pairs and practice creating questions based on each other’s sketches. If there
is time, they may even interview one another.
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D AY O N E
STEP TWO: After each sketch, have students develop five questions for each guest. Encourage them to
create questions that can “fill in the gaps” of the guest’s sketch.
STEP THREE: Give each student an index card. Have students write their favorite question for
each guest on card. Alternative: Have students work in small groups to develop questions for each
Mystery Guest.
STEP FOUR: Read submitted questions and select which ones you feel will be most effective for
the Mystery Guest interviews. Alternative: You and the students can choose the most effective
questions together.
STEP FIVE (optional): It can be helpful to model interviews with students so that they can get a feel for
what the process is like. To practice, have students write questions for each other and interview in pairs.
Get some feedback from them about what made them most comfortable, what made them want to talk a
lot and tell stories, etc. Then have a few students interview each other in front of the class. Interrupt them
occasionally to have the class analyze the interviewer’s use of open questions, the order of questions, etc.
D AY T W O
STEP ONE: Before the interviews begin, tell students to take out their notebooks. The notebooks are
not for writing down their Mystery Guest’s answers. Instead, students are to write down additional
questions they may have for their guest as the interview takes place.
STEP TWO: An administrator arrives for each period. Have your guest sit in front of the class and ask
them selected questions. Alternative: Students ask administrator selected questions. If there is time,
students may ask their additional questions.
STEP THREE: Thank the administrator for coming. You may want to consider having your students
write thank-you notes to their guest.
A D D I T I O N A L S T R AT E G I E S F O R C R A F T I N G I N T E RV I E W Q U E S T I O N S
Level one questions are more general, such as “Where did you grow up?” or “What was your favorite
subject in school?”
Level two questions become more specific, but also more open-ended. Questions such as “What do
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you do to prepare for a math test?” Or “Describe what it feels like to ace a math test.”
Level three questions narrow the focus to a particular instance or event: “Tell me the story of the day
you were accused of cheating on a math test.” This approach can help students develop “flow” during
their interviews and respond to their narrators in a more natural way. It can also steer students away
from asking “yes” or “no” questions.
FOLLOW-UP QUESTIONS
Sometimes the most powerful questions students can ask during an interview are the ones they did
not prepare in advance. As students are listening to their narrator during the course of the interview,
they may hear something they would really like to go back to or hear more about. Not only will
their narrator appreciate hearing details of their story reflected back to them, but this also creates an
opportunity for students to “go deeper” with their questions. For example:
h9OU HAD MENTIONED YOUR EXPERIENCES WITH ??????????? A FEW MINUTES AGO #OULD YOU DESCRIBE THE
DETAILS OF THAT EXPERIENCEv
Being in the moment and letting follow-up questions occur to students during the interview can
enrich and enliven the experience for both parties.
C O M M U N I C AT I O N S K I L L S A N D C O N D U C T I N G T H E I N T E RV I E W
“I feel that attentive listening is by far the most important skill in conducting oral histories, and
it doesn’t necessarily come naturally to most of us. It’s very easy to get ahead of your narrator and
to lose attention as you get ready to ask new questions or shift focus…In normal conversations we
are accustomed to breaking in with our own opinions and experiences, but in the course of an oral
history I’ve found that I need to stay completely focused on my interviewee, to stay on the same
wavelength and be ready to follow-up at every turn. That requires some serious listening skills.”
—Joell Hallowell, Voice of Witness Interviewer, Underground America
Many of the skills required for a successful oral history interview have been covered in the previous
section. This section focuses on communication skills necessary for an “authentic” oral history
experience and ultimately will allow both student interviewer and narrator to “be in the moment”
and find connection. This section will also discuss the details of creating an ideal environment for
the interview to take place, and provide activities and handouts for practice interviews.
COMMUNICATION SKILLS
Addressing the communication skills required for an oral history interview is a good place to begin
when preparing students for their interviews. It can be intimidating for students to think of it in
these technical terms, so you can frame it in a way that reminds them of something they already
know. At Voice of Witness, we have framed this in the form of a question:
h)F YOU NEEDED TO HAVE AN IMPORTANT DISCUSSION WITH A FRIEND OR FAMILY MEMBER WHAT WOULD YOU NEED FROM
THEM IN ORDER TO FEEL SAFE SHARINGv
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LESSON 22
COMMUNICATION BRAINSTORM
OBJECTIVE: Create opportunities for students to connect personal experience with essential oral
history interview skills.
STEP ONE: Write the following question on the classroom whiteboard or in students’ journals or
notebooks (feel free to adapt the question to suit your students):
h)F YOU NEED TO DISCUSS AN IMPORTANT MATTER WITH A FRIEND OR FAMILY MEMBER WHAT WOULD YOU NEED FROM THEM IN
ORDER TO FEEL SAFE SHARINGv
STEP TWO: Students call out or write down their responses to the question. Make sure they write
down everyone’s response. Encourage them to be specific, with prompts like:
SAMPLE SKILLS:
Trust
Respect
Listening
Genuine interest
Understanding
Eye contact
Attentive body language
STEP THREE: After sharing, remind students that the communication skills they have been
discussing are not only essential skills to practice in preparation for their interviews, but also
valuable life skills.
STEP FOUR: Provide the following handout for students, which can be used in conjunction with any
practice interviews or read and filled out as homework.
Students should keep a copy of these guidelines in their project binders.
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HANDOUT
Here are a few pointers that will help you prepare for your oral history interview. Practice them with
friends and family.
2. DO NOT INTERRUPT YOUR NARRATOR BECAUSE YOU HAVE THOUGHT OF A GREAT QUESTION.
If your narrator is in the middle of a story or finishing a thought, do not interrupt. You will
probably be able to ask that great question as a follow-up sometime during the interview.
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LESSON 23
MATERIALS: Pens, paper, pencils, interview questions from the Autobiographical Sketch activity (p.
98), and digital voice recorder (optional).
OBJECTIVE: Develop speech and communication skills through the oral history interview process.
RELATED CORE CURRICULUM STANDARDS: Speaking and Listening SL.9–10.1, SL.11–12.1, SL.9–
10.4, SL.11–12.4.
O V E RV I E W
While students may have had opportunities for short practice interviews during earlier “modeling”
activities, the following practice interview activity will enable students to really “dig in” and hone
their skills during a longer interview session.
STEP ONE: Students should pair up with their partners from the Autobiographical Sketch activity.
Allow each student to add or rewrite any interview questions. Remind students about the three
levels of inquiry and follow-up questions (5–7 minutes).
STEP TWO: Depending on classroom space, have students either spread out in the room or have pairs
work in different rooms (if the pairs are too close to each other, they can get “pulled in” to another
pair’s interview). Each pair then decides who will be interviewed first (5 minutes).
STEP THREE: Before starting their practice interviews have interviewers introduce themselves and
their narrators (1 minute).
SAMPLE INTRO: “This is an interview with (narrator name), conducted by (interviewer’s name) on
(today’s date, month, and year).”
STEP FOUR: Each pair then begins their practice interview. After fifteen minutes, interviewer
and narrator switch and the next practice interview begins. Interviews can be shorter for younger
students if desired. During practice interviews, let pairs know when they have five and then two
minutes left (20–30 minutes).
STEP FIVE: Class comes together for a short “debrief” from their practice interviews. Among other
responses, some questions to consider (10 minutes):
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What will you take away from this practice that you would like to incorporate during your
project interview?
STEP SIX (optional): An additional practice interview can be done as homework, following the
guidelines of the Autobiographical Sketch activity.
I N T E RV I E W L O G I S T I C S : R E C O R D I N G A N D L O C AT I O N
O N C E T H E I N T E RV I E W I S C O M P L E T E D
“Imagining what it is like to be someone other than oneself is at the core of our humanity. It is the
essence of compassion, and it is the beginning of morality.” —Ian McEwan
THANK-YOU NOTES
After you have finished your interview, make sure you follow up with your narrator to thank them.
People’s time is precious and interviews can be taxing and time-consuming. Thank-you letters, emails,
and phone calls are all appropriate. Make your narrator feel appreciated. That is the point after all!
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LISTENING AND EAR TRAINING
The first class meeting after students have conducted their interviews can be very enjoyable. There is
usually a mixture of excitement and relief as they are eager to share their experiences. It is a good idea
to begin by acknowledging their courage and professionalism. Many of them have come far out of their
comfort zones! Allow time for students to share the challenges and rewards of the interview experience.
During this “debrief,” students should play back short portions of their interview for the entire
class to hear. It provides practice listening for the sections of the interview that sound compelling
and energized—moments when narrators felt unself-conscious and were able speak freely about their
experiences. This “ear training” will help students make strong choices as they begin to transcribe
and edit their interviews.
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PA R T 4
O V E RV I E W
Editing oral history is where commitment to accuracy in retelling someone else’s story and
creating a readable, compelling narrative becomes technical. It is the most time-consuming part
of the process because it includes transcribing—but shaping an oral history can also be the most
rewarding. This section will provide the resources to guide students through the written process
of editing oral history. It may be helpful to think of the task in terms of three steps: transcribing,
editing, and proofing.
The transcribing phase of the oral history process is challenging on many levels. It helps to
be explicit with students about the value of attending to this phase arduously. While they have
probably heard expressions like “every word counts,” now they have a chance to see firsthand how
important it is to “weigh words.” We also offer a few suggestions for bringing this part of the
assignment down to a manageable period of time.
Two editors from the Voice of Witness book series offer the following comments about the
biggest challenges of editing oral history:
“At the editing stage, making decisions about what’s at the heart of the story—and having to
make difficult edits/cuts that are interesting in themselves but which don’t serve the story as a
whole.” MIMI LOK %XECUTIVE $IRECTOR 6OICE OF 7ITNESS
“I think to do a very effective oral history you have to respect the story the person is telling you.
And that means realizing they probably haven’t spoken about this publicly, and this is the first
time someone has asked them to tell their story.” —Sandra Hernandez, Interviewer, Underground
America
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HANDOUT
There is no getting around it: transcribing is a time-consuming process. Make sure you give yourself
plenty of time to write out everything you need. A general rule of thumb: it usually takes about four
to five hours to transcribe an hour of audio.
PREPARATION
Find a quiet place to work with your recorder or computer (if you have downloaded your interview),
earphones, and/or notepad.
TRANSCRIPTION METHODS
There is no standard method for transcription. Some people press play, listen to six words, press
pause, write down the words, and repeat. Others will listen to the whole tape, taking as many words
as they can, and then return to the beginning and go through more slowly, filling out their initial
notes. In both approaches, make sure you record the time-code periodically (every few minutes) so that you
have an easy reference point later between the hard copy transcript and the audio files.
Your transcript should include the interviewer’s questions, even though you will probably edit
them out later. If you want, you can note other aspects of the interview in brackets within the text. For
example, if the interviewee begins to cry at some point, it might be prudent to include [begins crying]
in the transcription. Later, when you edit, you can decide if this should be part of the narrative.
ACCURACY
The foremost concern when transcribing an interview is accuracy. This means that you will have
to listen to some sections a few times to get them right. It is important to keep the speaker’s word
usage, syntax, and idiosyncrasies intact. It is also important that you watch your grammar, so that
the sentence maintains its original meaning. Some examples:
OR:
I ran from house to house, everyone’s house, even Ray’s, couldn’t find a cornbread recipe.
If you hear “everyone,” don’t type “everybody.” If you are not sure what you are hearing, rewind
and check it again. If you are not sure about how to punctuate a sentence, use periods to separate
thoughts. Even if it is incorrect, readers will get the idea.
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HANDOUT
EXAMPLE
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SELECTIVE TRANSCRIBING
The selective transcribing process allows students to hone their narrative and ear-training skills by
just transcribing sections of the interview that feel compelling, energized, conflicted, or otherwise
interesting. It can also keep the time spent on this phase of the process to a manageable length. Keep
in mind that this process can be problematic if used too liberally, but very helpful if used wisely.
Students have a knack for knowing a good story when they hear one. They have a solid grasp
of the elements of storytelling: humor, suspense, emotion, juxtaposition, and conflict. Find ways
to honor their skills in this area. Allow students to get second opinions from teachers, parents,
and peers.
Have students identify one or more passages of the interview, say ten minutes from a thirty-
minute interview, that really capture the essence of the speaker’s story and simply transcribe that
section. Just make sure there are not other places that could be integrated to this passage that have
been overlooked. When in doubt, more is better! Students can always cut it out later, but it is much
harder and more time consuming going back through audio files to find passages you thought you
would not need.
EDITING
This section will be devoted to the skills and choices of editing an oral history narrative, providing
students with strategies and guidelines. Oral history stories are different from fiction or even
nonfiction, but they are still stories. As an editor, the goal is to help the narrator tell his or her story
in the best possible way. Editing is both an objective exercise (grammatical rules must be observed)
and a subjective one (the order of the narrative is the editor’s choice). Ultimately, this is about
telling a good story. But editors do not actually tell the story, they facilitate it. Editing takes practice
so do not be afraid to try different things!
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HANDOUT
EDITING BASICS
1. Remember the basics of creating a good story: chronology, style, interesting characters,
exciting events, and emotion.
2. Make sure that the narrator’s “voice” is never lost or compromised! (Remember your goal of
honoring them.)
3. Edit your transcript so the narrative has a clear beginning, middle, and end. Reorder the
chronology of the narrator’s recollection if necessary.
4. Take out the interviewer’s questions and comments.
5. Clean up typos, break up run-on sentences, change tenses for consistency, and cut words
and phrases that do not fit. You will have to make some important decisions about how
“polished” you are going to make the narrative. (Keep in mind consideration #1.)
6. Try to strike a balance between preserving the voice of the narrator and correcting any
grammatical errors that will distract from the telling of the story.
7. Do your best to reflect the narrator’s intelligence—for example, lack of fluency in English (or any
other language) certainly does not reflect a lack of fluency in the narrator’s thought process.
8. Occasionally, you may find that portions of your transcript do not make sense without some
information from your interview question. You can add some words from your questions to
make your interviewee’s answers clear, as long as you add these words in brackets [ ].
Here’s an example:
For this to make sense without the question, you would have to add some words like:
You can also add conjunctions (and, but, or) and articles (the, an, a) if they make the story clearer.
9. Since you are facilitating someone else’s story and cannot add characters or exciting events,
what can you do?
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HANDOUT
When students are finished editing (a process that may take several passes to get it right), it is
important to encourage them to proofread their work. Very often this step is taken lightly and
narratives are then published with mistakes. Not only does this reflect poorly on the student, but
also on the person whose story has been told. If one of the goals is to honor a person, it is crucial to
do everything possible to portray them articulately and well.
S H A R I N G W I T H Y O U R N A R R AT O R
Whenever possible, edited versions of Voice of Witness narratives are sent to narrators for their review
and approval. This practice is consistent with our framework of honoring individuals and wanting
to present their stories in an accurate, respectful way. Teachers should consider incorporating this
practice and adding it to the student oral history checklist.
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PA R T 5
“What is one of the greatest rewards of oral history? When you feel you’ve captured someone’s story
and voice accurately when a narrator looks at the final draft and says, Yes, that’s how it happened,
that’s how I told it. Also when the story’s been shaped in a way that engages and moves readers.”
MIMI LOK %XECUTIVE $IRECTOR%DITOR 6OICE OF 7ITNESS
O V E RV I E W
In many ways, a successful oral history project can end after the student submits the final draft
of the edited and polished narrative. A great follow up is to have students read their narratives to
each other. But to truly honor the people who have told their stories, it is important to share their
narratives in a broader context. Oral history is often most powerful when a voice can be perpetuated.
These are important stories, after all, and they make no difference unless we share them.
An evening of dramatic readings can be a great “amplification” of your oral history project.
Some teachers use the narratives as a springboard for other public performances: poetry, drama,
dance, and music. Many students are eager to put their narratives online.
As your students are creating their oral history projects, encourage them to be thinking about
how they plan to share their stories from the beginning. This decision might change the way a
project is carried out. For instance a project that will eventually be part of a website might include
more audio and video, which a narrative art piece wouldn’t. If you are going to do a community
sharing, how can you make an engaging presentation from oral history transcripts?
D E L I V E RY S Y S T E M S
Ways to Feature the Narrative
ONLINE
The most common ways to share oral histories is online. Encourage your students to create websites
using interfaces like Wordpress, Weebly, Tumblr, or Google Sites. These are simple, easy-to-use, and
free website design services where students can post video, audio, images, and text. Have students
use Facebook and other social networking sites to encourage their friends and family to visit their
sites. Transom and Soundcloud are particularly useful for learning how to download and share audio.
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They Don’t Understand: A Photo Essay Book
(Courtesy of Nancy T. and Mayra R., Envision Academy of Arts and Technology, Oakland, CA)
VIDEO
Examples of video work from a pilot project by Voice of Witness and Facing History and Ourselves
can be viewed on the Facing History and Ourselves website: WWWFACINGHISTORYORGABOUTWHOPROlLES
voice-witness-students-build-di
LIVE PERFORMANCE
The following is a sample “script” from The OMI Project, created by students at Lick-Wilmerding
High School in San Francisco about the history of the neighborhood surrounding the school.
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Woody LaBounty: The houses were supposed to be a certain price and they had to have a
certain amount of lawn around them. They wanted no businesses in there, no chicken farms, no
anything. It had to be a high-class residential park. Another thing about this residential park:
no minorities. Minorities couldn’t buy. They couldn’t rent. They could only be there as servants
for the people that owned it. This was the whole idea to make it exclusive. So not only do you
not have to worry about having a chicken farm or a grocery store next to your house, don’t
worry. There won’t be any people of color to bother you either.
Margie Whitnah: My mother’s Mexican, born in Mexico and moved here when she was young to
Ocean Ave. and lived a little bit in Mission Beach with her sister—five sisters and one brother in the
family. “You sit in the back of the streetcar, I’m going to be in the front, because it looks bad to have
that many children now in the United States. She’d do things that were kind of unusual like powder
their faces to make them look more Anglo and put long socks on my mom so her hairy legs wouldn’t
show. Things like that. She was trying to fit in and the kids had this double message.
NARRATIVE PAINTING
Taking the oral history narrative as inspiration, have students represent their narrator through an
original and creative visual art piece. Students can use their encounters and interviews, along with
photographs as the foundation for the art piece. Using technical skills and creative approaches, students
can generate high-quality pieces of art using a variety of materials and filled with visual metaphors.
Encourage students to think about who, what, and where their subject has come from.
This can be done in two parts, including 1) a Narrative Art Piece in which students represent
someone’s identity and “story” in a dynamic art piece layered with portraiture, metaphor, and
symbolism, and 2) the Artist Statement. This is a typed statement that complements the art piece
and explains its reasoning in great detail.
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GRAPHIC NOVELS AND COMICS
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PA R T 6
C U R R I C U L U M S TA N D A R D S F O R O R A L H I S T O RY
While it is not the aim of Voice of Witness to provide the means of “teaching to the test,” we aim to
provide teachers with materials and pedagogy that are engaging, historically relevant, intellectually
challenging, and civic minded. Rather than teaching to the test, we are teaching to the skills.
Nonetheless, we realize that there are standards and guidelines that teachers must follow. The
following lists the standards from the Common Core Standards that our curriculum satisfies.
R E A D I N G H I S T O RY
RH.9–10.1. Cite specific textual evidence to support analysis of primary and secondary
sources, attending to such features as the date and origin of the information.
RH.9–10.2. Determine the central ideas or information of a primary or secondary source;
provide an accurate summary of how key events or ideas develop over the course of the text.
RH.9–10.3. Analyze in detail a series of events described in a text; determine whether
earlier events caused later ones or simply preceded them.
RH.9–10.4. Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in a text, including
vocabulary describing political, social, or economic aspects of history/social science.
RH.9–10.5. Analyze how a text uses structure to emphasize key points or advance an
explanation or analysis.
RH.9–10.6. Compare the point of view of two or more authors for how they treat the same
or similar topics, including which details they include and emphasize in their respective
accounts.
RH.9–10.7. Integrate quantitative or technical analysis (e.g., charts, research data) with
qualitative analysis in print or digital text.
RH.9–10.8. Assess the extent to which the reasoning and evidence in a text support the
author’s claims.
RH.9–10.9. Compare and contrast treatments of the same topic in several primary and
secondary sources.
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RANGE OF READING AND LEVEL OF TEXT COMPLEXITY
RH.9–10.10. By the end of grade 10, read and comprehend history/social studies texts in
the grades 9–10 text complexity band independently and proficiently.
SL.9–10.5. Make strategic use of digital media (e.g., textual, graphical, audio, visual, and
interactive elements) in presentations to enhance understanding of findings, reasoning, and
evidence and to add interest.
WRITING
“These standards emphasize historical narrative, highlight the roles of significant individuals
throughout history, and convey the rights and obligations of citizenship.” —History-Social Science
Content Standards for California Public Schools
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“Through literature, moreover, students experience the unique history of the United States in
an immediate way and encounter many cultures that exist both within and beyond this nation’s
borders.” —English Content Standards for California Public Schools
O R A L H I S T O RY S K I L L S E T S A N D L E A R N I N G O U T C O M E S
In the course of an oral history project, students have an opportunity to develop academic and arts-
based skills in the following areas (which can vary given the scope of individual projects):
HISTORY/SOCIAL SCIENCES
Empathic listening
Public speaking/oral communication
Creative collaboration
Interview techniques
Transcription
Vocabulary building
Editing and shaping literary narratives
The basic tenants of journalism and reporting
Choosing to participate
Building community partnerships
Service learning/immersion
Team building
Cultivating cultural awareness and global citizenship
MEDIA/TECHNOLOGY
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VISUAL/PERFORMING/LITERARY ARTS
Photography
Drawing/painting
Graphic novels
Book making/publishing
Performance: theater, music, dance
CRITICAL THINKING
T E A C H I N G S T R AT E G I E S
CONTRACTING
Reading and discussing oral history can bring up challenging and complicated emotions, concepts,
and issues for students. Before engaging any of the Voice of Witness narratives in class, teachers
may find it useful to use the following framework for creating a safe, respectful environment for all
participants, courtesy of Facing History and Ourselves.
A classroom that explores oral history and issues of social justice must be a place where explicit
rules and implicit norms protect everyone’s right to speak; where differing perspectives can be heard
and valued; where members take responsibility for themselves, each other, and the group as a whole;
and where each member has a stake and a voice in collective decisions. Facing History calls these
spaces reflective classroom communities. Reflective classroom communities often do not happen
by accident; rather, they are deliberatively nurtured by students and teachers who have shared
expectations about how classroom members will treat one another.
One way to help classroom communities establish shared norms is to discuss them openly in
a process called “contracting.” Sometimes this involves drafting and agreeing to a formal
contract of behavior as well. The following are some tips for facilitating conversations and
activities about contracting.
STEP ONE: Define the word contract. A contract implies that all parties have a responsibility in
upholding the agreement, and an individual stake in the collective. Students can think about what it
means for a classroom to have a contract.
STEP TWO: To prepare students to develop a class contract, ask them to reflect on their experiences as
students in a classroom community. You might use a prompt to structure students’ reflection:
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Give an example of a time either inside or outside the classroom when you have felt
comfortable sharing your ideas or questions. What were the circumstances? What made you
feel comfortable?
Identify when you have felt comfortable sharing your ideas and questions in the classroom.
What happened in those moments to help you feel comfortable?
Identify when you have had ideas or questions but have not shared them. Why not? What
was happening at those moments?
STEP THREE: Useful class contracts typically include several clearly defined rules or expectations,
as well as consequences for those who do not fulfill their obligations as members of the classroom
community. There are many ways to proceed with developing a classroom contract. For example,
you can ask small groups of students to work together to write rules or “expectations” for the
classroom community. We suggest keeping the list brief (e.g., three to five items) so that the norms
can be easily remembered. As groups present, you can organize their ideas by theme. If there are
any tensions or contradictions in the expectations that have been suggested, you can discuss them
as a class. While the process includes students’ ideas, ultimately it is the teacher’s responsibility to
ensure that the final contract will nurture a safe learning environment.
You can also share with students a list of norms, rules, or expectations that have been used
in other classrooms. Ask students to discuss what they think about these norms. Which ones do
they think would help the group create a safe, respectful, productive learning environment? Invite
students to edit this list by deleting, revising, or adding to it. Here is a list of norms that have been
used in previous Facing History classrooms:
Listen with respect. Try to understand what someone is saying before rushing to judgment.
Make comments using “I” statements.
If you do not feel safe making a comment or asking a question, write the thought in your
journal. You can share the idea with your teacher first and together come up with a safe way
to share it with the rest of the class.
If someone expresses an idea or question that helps your own learning, say “thank you.”
If someone says something that hurts or offends you, do not attack the person.
Acknowledge that the comment—not the person—hurt your feelings and explain why.
Put-downs are never okay.
If you do not understand something, ask a question.
Think with your head and your heart.
Share the talking time—provide room for others to speak.
Do not interrupt others while they are speaking.
Write thoughts in your journal if you do not have time to say them during class.
Journal responses do not have to be shared publicly.
Another way to help students develop a classroom contract is to have them envision what they
would like to have happen during certain scenarios. Scenarios could be drawn from students’ own
experiences. They might include situations such as:
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When we have an idea or question we would like to share, we can…
When we have an idea, but do not feel comfortable sharing it out loud, we can…
When someone says something that we appreciate, we can…
When someone says something that might be confusing or offensive, we can…
To make sure all students have the opportunity to participate in a class discussion, we can…
If we read or watch something that makes us feel sad or angry, we can…
To show respect for the ideas of others, we can…
STEP FOUR: To initiate the classroom contract, you can have students participate in a celebratory
signing ceremony. Students can sign their own copies or a large copy that is posted in the room. You
might allow for brief remarks from students about how they think the contract will help provide a
safe, productive learning community.
A C T I V E R E A D I N G S T R AT E G I E S
The following active reading strategies can be applied to any narrative in the Voice of Witness series
and are designed to help students better understand what they are reading and become actively
engaged with a story. Another active reading strategy (Talk to the Text) can be found on page 23.
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HANDOUT
SUMMARIZING While reading and at the end of sections or chapters of the story, restate
the important information that has happened. A good summary answers
the who, what, where, when, why, and how questions.
MAKING CONNECTIONS Based on the material and what is happening in the text, do you have
any personal experiences that are similar to the story, the situation, or the
characters? Is it like a story you have heard, a movie you have seen, a book
you have read?
ASKING QUESTIONS While you are reading, periodically stop to ask questions about why
characters are doing what they are doing, what certain things mean, and
how elements within the story compare to each other.
MAKING PREDICTIONS Stop periodically and make guesses about what you think will
happen next in the story and why.
EVALUATING Evaluate the text, the characters, and what is happening in the story. Why
do the characters act the way they do? Do you understand their actions?
VISUALIZING As you read, picture the images the author creates. Make a
movie inside your head based on the author’s words in the text.
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HANDOUT
Think of your dialectical reading journal as a dialogue with the text in which you ask questions and
then find answers to them through closely examining and studying the text.
The journal consists of two major columns. On the left-hand side summarize details or include
quotes from the text that you find interesting, important, challenging, surprising, or worth thinking
about further (include the text page number as well). You need to put each passage into one of three
categories on the left-hand side of the journal. These categories consist of three symbols: R, !, and ?
R ROW: In the left-hand side of the R row write down a passage or quote from the text that
reminds you of something. On the right-hand side of the R row explain what the
passage reminds you of and how this helps you better understand the text.
! ROW: In the left-hand side of the ! row write down a passage or quote from the text
that surprised you. On the right-hand side of the ! row explain how and why this
passage surprised you and what you now better understand about the text.
? ROW: In the left-hand side of the ? row write down a passage or quote from the text that
you have a question about. On the right-hand side of the ? row explain how you
can attempt to answer this question and how it will better help you understand the
text. Answering these questions will help you better understand the text.
EXPECTATIONS
Your journal will be most effective if you stop periodically as you are reading to record your
thoughts. For each row (R, !, and ?) you will need at least two passages written in the left-hand side.
For each of these passages, you need to write a well-developed paragraph in the right-hand side. A
well-developed paragraph makes connections by interpreting facts and their significance—not just
stating facts.
Although dialectical journals focus on reading, it is important for you to put significant energy
and time into making connections and communicating clearly and effectively in your observations
and writing. Do not simply state facts from the text—interpret these facts and state their significance.
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PA R T 7
O R A L H I S T O RY O R G A N I Z AT I O N S / A R C H I V E S
ORAL HISTORY ASSOCIATION: The Oral History Association, established in 1966, seeks to bring
together all persons interested in oral history as a way of collecting and interpreting human
memories to foster knowledge and human dignity. (www.oralhistory.org)
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS: WPA American Life Histories from the Federal Writes Project, and
Recordings (LCWEBLOCGOVWPAINTROWPAHOMEHTML). Oral History for Educators (lesson plans, etc.)
(LEARNINGLOCGOVLEARNLESSONSORALHISTOHHOMEHTML)
COLUMBIA CENTER FOR ORAL HISTORY: The Columbia University Center for Oral History is one of
the world’s leading centers for the practice and teaching of oral history. Its archive, located in the
Columbia University Libraries and open to the public, holds more than 8,000 interviews, in audio,
video, and text formats, on a wide variety of subjects. (LIBRARYCOLUMBIAEDUINDIVCCOHHTMl)
CENTER FOR DIGITAL STORYTELLING: The Center for Digital Storytelling is a California-based
nonprofit arts organization rooted in the art of personal storytelling. They assist people of all ages
in using the tools of digital media to craft, record, share, and value the stories of individuals and
communities. (www.storycenter.org)
CHICAGO HISTORY MUSEUM: THE STUDS TERKEL / WFMT ORAL HISTORY ARCHIVES: Audio
recordings of interviews, readings, and musical programs aired during Studs Terkel’s tenure at
WFMT Radio from the early 1950s through 1999 are part of the museum’s collection. Over
five decades, Terkel interviewed individuals from every walk of life. These interviews narrate the
cultural, literary, and political history of Chicago and the United States. (WWWCHICAGOHSORGRESEARCH
ABOUTCOLLECTIONARCHIVESMANUSCRIPTS)
139
BOOKS
Terkel, Studs. Working: People Talk About What They Do All Day and How They Feel About What They
Do. The New Press, 2003 (reissue).
Terkel, Studs. Hard Times: An Oral History of the Great Depression. The New Press, 2005 (reissue).
Zinn, Howard, and Anthony Arnove. Voices of a People’s History of the United States. Seven Stories
Press, 2004.
Griffin, Joanne. Redefining Black Power: Reflections on the State of Black America. City Lights
Publishers, 2012.
Isay, David. Listening Is an Act of Love: A Celebration of American Life from the StoryCorps Project.
Penguin Books, 2007.
Jones, LeAlan, Lloyd Newman, with David Isay. Our America: Life and Death on the South Side of Chicago.
Washington Square Press/Pocket Books, 1997.
Taylor, Craig. Londoners: The Days and Nights of London Now —As Told by Those Who Love It, Hate It,
Live It, Left It, and Long for It. Ecco/Harper Collins, 2012.
Ritchie, Donald. Doing Oral History. Oxford University Press, 2003 (second edition).
O R A L H I S T O RY – B A S E D P L AY S
Smith, Deavere Anna. Twilight: Los Angeles, . Anchor Books, 1994.
Blank, Jessica, Erik Jensen. 4HE %XONERATED. Faber and Faber, 2003.
Blank, Jessica, Erik Jensen. Aftermath. Dramatists Play Service, 2010 (acting edition).
140
E D U C AT O R R E S O U R C E S
FACING HISTORY AND OURSELVES: Facing History and Ourselves is an international educational and
professional development organization whose mission is to engage students of diverse backgrounds
in an examination of racism, prejudice, and anti-Semitism in order to promote the development of a
more humane and informed citizenry. (www.facinghistory.org)
TEACHING TOLERANCE: A place to find thought-provoking news, conversation, and support for those
who care about diversity, equal opportunity, and respect for difference in schools. (www.tolerance.org)
THE FRED T. KOREMATSU INSTITUTE FOR CIVIL RIGHTS AND EDUCATION: The mission of the Fred T.
Korematsu Institute for Civil Rights and Education is to advance pan-ethnic civil rights and human
rights through education. (www.korematsuinstitute.org)
THE CHOICES PROGRAM: The Choices for the 21st Century Education Program is a national
education initiative developed at Brown University’s Watson Institute for International Studies.
The Choices Program provides teaching resources on historical and current international issues,
offers professional development for classroom teachers, and sponsors programs that engage students
beyond the classroom. (www.choices.edu)
STRATEGIC LITERACY INITIATIVE: The Strategic Literacy Initiative is a professional development and
research project of WestEd. The project serves middle- and high-school teachers and administrators,
literacy coaches, and teacher educators nationally. (WWWWESTEDORGCSWEVIEWPJ)
ZINN EDUCATION PROJECT: The Zinn Education Project promotes and supports the use of Howard
Zinn’s best-selling book A People’s History of the United States and other materials for teaching a
people’s history in middle- and high-school classrooms across the country. The website offers more
than one hundred free, downloadable lessons and articles organized by theme, time period, and
reading level. (www.zinnedproject.org)
TEACHING FOR CHANGE: Teaching for Change provides teachers and parents with the tools to
transform schools into centers of justice where students learn to read, write, and change the world.
(www.teachingforchange.org)
NATIONAL COUNCIL FOR THE SOCIAL STUDIES (NCSS): Social studies educators teach students
the content knowledge, intellectual skills, and civic values necessary for fulfilling the duties of
citizenship in a participatory democracy. The mission of National Council for the Social Studies is to
provide leadership, service, and support for all social studies educators. (www.socialstudies.org)
141
NATIONAL COUNCIL OF TEACHERS OF ENGLISH (NCTE): The Council promotes the development
of literacy, the use of language to construct personal and public worlds and to achieve full
participation in society, through the learning and teaching of English and the related arts and
sciences of language. (www.ncte.org)
142
OTHER TITLES IN THE VOICE OF WITNESS SERIES
SURVIVING JUSTICE
!MERICAS 7RONGFULLY #ONVICTED AND %XONERATED
Edited by Lola Vollen and Dave Eggers
Foreword by Scott Turow
These oral histories prove that the problem of wrongful conviction is far-reaching and very real. Through a series
of all-too-common circumstances—eyewitness misidentification, inept defense lawyers, coercive interrogation—
the lives of these men and women of all different backgrounds were irreversibly disrupted. In Surviving Justice,
thirteen exonerees describe their experiences—the events that led to their convictions, their years in prison, and
the process of adjusting to their new lives outside.
UNDERGROUND AMERICA
Narratives of Undocumented Lives
Edited by Peter Orner
Foreword by Luis Alberto Urrea
They arrive from around the world for countless reasons. Many come simply to make a living. Others are flee-
ing persecution in their native countries. But by living and working in the United States without legal status,
millions of immigrants risk deportation and imprisonment. They live underground, with little protection from
exploitation at the hands of human smugglers, employers, or law enforcement. Underground America presents the
remarkable oral histories of men and women struggling to carve a life for themselves in the United States. In
2010, Underground America was translated into Spanish and released as En las Sombras de Estados Unidos.
OUT OF EXILE
The Abducted and Displaced People of Sudan
Edited by Craig Walzer
Additional interviews and an introduction by Dave Eggers and Valentino Achak Deng
Millions of people have fled from conflicts and persecution in all parts of Sudan, and many thousands more have
been enslaved as human spoils of war. In /UT OF %XILE, refugees and abductees recount their escapes from the wars in
Darfur and South Sudan, from political and religious persecution, and from abduction by militias. They tell of life
before the war, and of the hope that they might someday find peace again.
143
HOPE DEFERRED
Narratives of Zimbabwean Lives
Edited by Peter Orner and Annie Holmes
Foreword by Brian Chikwava
The sixth volume in the Voice of Witness series presents the narratives of Zimbabweans whose lives have been
affected by the country’s political, economic, and human rights crises. This book asks the question: How did a
country with so much promise—a stellar education system, a growing middle class of professionals, a sophisti-
cated economic infrastructure, a liberal constitution, and an independent judiciary—go so wrong?
NOWHERE TO BE HOME
Narratives from Survivors of Burma’s Military Regime
Edited by Maggie Lemere and Zoë West
Foreword by Mary Robinson
Decades of military oppression in Burma have led to the systematic destruction of thousands of ethnic minor-
ity villages, a standing army with one of the world’s highest number of child soldiers, and the displacement
of millions of people. Nowhere to Be Home is an eye-opening collection of oral histories exposing the realities
of life under military rule. In their own words, men and women from Burma describe their lives in the coun-
try that Human Rights Watch has called “the textbook example of a police state.”
PATRIOT ACTS
.ARRATIVES OF 0OST )NJUSTICE
Edited by Alia Malek
Foreword by Karen Korematsu
Patriot Acts tells the stories of men and women who have been needlessly swept up in the War on Terror. In their
own words, narrators recount personal experiences of the post-9/11 backlash that have deeply altered their lives
and communities. Patriot Acts illuminates these experiences in a compelling collection of eighteen oral histories
from men and women who have found themselves subject to a wide range of human and civil rights abuses—
from rendition and torture, to workplace discrimination, bullying, FBI surveillance, and harassment.
144
THROWING STONES AT THE MOON
Narratives from Colombians Displaced by Violence
Edited by Sibylla Brodzinsky and Max Schoening
Foreword by Íngrid Betancourt
For nearly five decades, Colombia has been embroiled in internal armed conflict among guerrilla groups, paramilitary militias,
and the country’s own military. Civilians in Colombia face a range of abuses from all sides, including killings, disappearances,
and rape—and more than four million have been forced to flee their homes. The oral histories in Throwing Stones at the Moon
describe the most widespread of Colombia’s human rights crises: forced displacement. Speakers recount life before displace-
ment, the reasons for their flight, and their struggle to rebuild their lives.
REFUGEE HOTEL
Compiled and edited by Juliet Linderman and Gabriele Stabile
Refugee Hotel is a groundbreaking collection of photography and interviews that documents the arrival of refugees in the
United States. Evocative images are coupled with moving testimonies from people describing their first days in the U.S.,
the lives they’ve left behind, and the new communities they’ve since created.
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FROM OUR DONOR
Dear Readers,
First of all, thank you. As educators and community leaders, you have a calling to bring
greater meaning and humanity into your classrooms and homes, bringing immeasurable value
to the community.
We see how challenging it is for young people to be fully engaged in their classes, their
school communities, and in the world around them. This is a disconnection of the heart. And
we feel that a critical purpose of education is to develop the heart, and its ability to deeply
see, understand, and feel kinship with others. From this comes the urge to become authentic,
confident, and to offer our gifts to the world.
Storytelling has always been a powerful way to learn about ourselves, develop empathy
with others, discover our reasons for being, and to build community. We are proud to provide
seed funding for the Voice of Witness Education Program, as it shares this way of knowing
with you and so many others. We believe that the Voice of Witness team’s passion, and their
deep understanding of the power of stories, will foster awakening and constructive change in
the world.
Caroline Pfohl
Founder
Hemera Foundation