As the Witnesses Fall Silent: 21st Century Holocaust Education in Curriculum, Policy and Practice 2015
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-15419-0_10
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Mind the Gap: Holocaust Education in Germany, between Pedagogical Intentions and Classroom Interactions

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Cited by 9 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Currently, in well -developed countries, we can observe that public education is becoming less influential. Nevertheless, various case studies show that it can still serve as an effective instrument in the government's remembrance policy: it is used to establish emotional relationships between citizens and the interpretation of the past (Dror 2001); to promote a selection of events which are significant for national identity (Yablonka 2009); to associate past experiences with preferred behaviours (Meseth -Proske 2010); to shape political preferences (Bukh 2008;Fukuoka 2011) and even to mobilise young citizens and involve them as an additional force in ongoing political conflicts (Wang 2008). 4 The organisation of time results in an official calendar of political holidays and it informs citizens about the past events which are to be commemorated or celebrated.…”
Section: Figure 1: Relationships and Interdependencies Among Instrumementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Currently, in well -developed countries, we can observe that public education is becoming less influential. Nevertheless, various case studies show that it can still serve as an effective instrument in the government's remembrance policy: it is used to establish emotional relationships between citizens and the interpretation of the past (Dror 2001); to promote a selection of events which are significant for national identity (Yablonka 2009); to associate past experiences with preferred behaviours (Meseth -Proske 2010); to shape political preferences (Bukh 2008;Fukuoka 2011) and even to mobilise young citizens and involve them as an additional force in ongoing political conflicts (Wang 2008). 4 The organisation of time results in an official calendar of political holidays and it informs citizens about the past events which are to be commemorated or celebrated.…”
Section: Figure 1: Relationships and Interdependencies Among Instrumementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Qualitative and ethnographic research can shed much light into how meanings are co-constructed between teachers and students, and much of the most compelling research we have captures some of these micro-level interactions (e.g. Jennings, 2010;Meseth and Proske, 2010). In doing so, we may identify a series of unexpected but positive outcomes that can inform future practice.…”
Section: Bringing Advocacy and Research Into Dialoguementioning
confidence: 91%
“…Without this, many teachers are entering their classrooms pedagogically and methodologically unprepared to educate students about this complex topic in an inclusive way with a direction towards tolerance. Recent research (see Meseth and Proske, 2010;Proske, 2012;and Pettigrew, Foster, Howson, & Salmons, 2010) highlights the challenges teachers face when attempting to present the subject and respond to students without adequate preparation or guidance. Without comprehensive and consistent training, teachers lack the skills and confidence to approach the Holocaust as something other than a dark event from the past, thereby reducing it to a historical event rather than a manifestation of radical sentiments that are still very much alive in the present (Short & Reed, 2017;Macgilchrist & Christophe, 2011).…”
Section: German Curriculum and Education Plansmentioning
confidence: 99%