Possible Applications of a Unit on the Holocaust to the Wyoming Social Studies Content and Performance Standards: grade 11

A Color Key:
Blue:  A link to the USHMM teacher’s guide web page.
Black: Directly quoting a state’s social studies standard.
Red:  The correlation of studying the Holocaust to the standards.
Brown:  Other information.
If a secondary teacher would decide to teach a unit on the Holocaust, it would be highly recommended to first read "Guidelines for Teaching about the Holocaust" created by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum which can be found at <http://www.ushmm.org/education/foreducators/>

Content Standard 1. Citizenship/ Government/ Democracy
Students demonstrate how structures of power, authority, and governance have developed historically and continue to grow.
Grade 11 Advanced Performance Standard
11th grade students at the advanced performance level describe and analyze the basic rights and responsibilities of a democratic society, including multiple examples of how they have participated in the political process. Students compare, using precise examples, the U.S. civil and criminal legal systems. Students make complex connections between the historical development of the U.S. Constitution and the government systems of Wyoming and the United States. Students apply the principles of the Wyoming Constitution to real life scenarios.
 

The Holocaust can be incorporated into a study of government in order to demonstrate how the development of public policy can become directed to genocidal ends when dissent and debate are silenced.

Inclusion of Holocaust studies in a government or a history course helps students compare governmental systems, study the process of how a state can degenerate from a democracy into a totalitarian state, examine how the development of public policy can lead to genocidal ends, examine the role of Nazi bureaucracy in implementing policies of murder and annihilation, examine the role of various individuals in the rise and fall of a totalitarian government, and recognize that among the legacies of the Holocaust have been the creation of Human Rights organizations and declarations.
 
Inclusion of a study of the Holocaust into a U.S. history or a U.S. government course can encourage students to:
•examine the dilemmas that arise when foreign policy goals are narrowly defined, as solely in terms of the national interest, denying the validity of universal moral and human priorities. •understand what happens when parliamentary democratic institutions fail.
•examine the responses of governmental and non-governmental organizations in the United States to the plight of Holocaust victims.
•explore the role of American soldiers in liberating victims from Nazi concentration camps and killing centers. •examine the key role played by the U.S. in bringing Nazi perpetrators to trial at Nuremberg and in other war crimes trials.
•understand the consequences of mass murder. Example: The attitude of the United States government to the anti-Semitism before 1939; the inaction and actions of the United States government during the war; the immigration of survivors to the United States in the post war period.

Content Standard 2: Culture/ Cultural Diversity
Students demonstrate an understanding of different cultures and how these cultures have contributed and continue to contribute to the world in which they live.
Grade 11 Advanced Performance Standard
11th grade students at the advanced performance level identify and demonstrate sophisticated analysis of how cultural influences and diversity have influenced groups, institutions, and world events.
 

A look at the anti-Semitism within this nation and in Europe before 1939 is to be compared and studied. The actions of a government and society that carried out genocide is to be studied. The consequences of the mass murders in the post 1945 world is to be realized: from the founding of the United Nations, to the Declaration of Human Rights, to the center of Jewish culture no longer in East Europe, but now in Israel and the United States.
 
In a study of the Holocaust the basic tenets of Christianity and Judaism should be understood. These both are part of the history of the Holocaust as a student studies the issue of anti-Semitism.
 
Music and the arts of the perpetrators and victims can help students understand the cultures of the people of Europe at the time of the Holocaust.
 
Analysis of Nazi racial doctrine and how it moved from racial laws to the "final solution" is to be made.
 
The shift of the center of Jewish culture from eastern Europe to Israel and the United States as a result of the Holocaust is to be understood.

Content Standard 3. Production, Distribution, and Consumption
Students demonstrate an understanding of economic principles and concepts and describe the influence of economic factors on societies.
Grade11 Advanced Performance Standard
11th grade student at the advanced performance level compare and analyze the market, command, and mixed economic systems by answering the five questions (What, How, Who will produce? Who will consume? Where produced?) and provide detailed explanations of how people organize for the production, distribution and consumption of goods and services as part of a global economy.. Students identify problems that arise from the imbalance of wants, needs, and scarcity of resources. Students demonstrate an u nderstanding of banking, credit and financial regulations.
 

Specifics of the performance standard are met with a study of the Holocaust. Students are faced with the economics of the Nazi regime and their wartime production. This included mass use of slave labor. Questions of transportation of war supplies and human transportations to death camps are to be faced. The economics (answering the five questions) of the ghettos and the death camps themselves serves as an example of what happens when civilized morals become warped.
 
The policies of governments (creating an imbalance) in the post World War I, Versailles Treaty era can show students how the economy in Germany led to the rise of Hitler .
 

Content Standard 4. Time, Continuity, and Change
Students demonstrate an understanding of the people, events, problems, ideas, and cultures that were significant in the history of our community, state, nation, and world.
Grade 11 Advanced Performance Standard
11th grade students at the advanced performance level effectively provide complex analysis of the interaction and interdependence of science and technology on history and world cultures. Students provide extensive evidence of the impact of key people, places, and events that have shaped history and continue to impact today's world. Students analyze and synthesize the impact of current events on the world today without teacher assistance and demonstrate the interdependence of these events throughout history. Students use problem solving techniques to generate insightful solutions.
 

In Holocaust studies, a complete understanding of the chronology of events is an absolute must. One must take the student back to the origins of anti-Semitism, the development of racial theories in all corners of the world including the United States. The time line of events in the 1930s and 1940s is to be completely understood.
 
If a teacher centers in on an individual's story in the Holocaust, the context of that story in time is a must. If a teacher assigns research to a specific person or event, the context of the time is to be understood. The Holocaust is one of the major events of the modern period that has had its effects on the world and the United States. The event must be fully analyzed to comprehend that effect from what it did to the culture of the Jewish peoples, to the culture of Europe, to the impact on the United States.
 
In the study of the Holocaust, multiple sources are available that the teacher can make available for the student. Questions of how and why, questions of interpretation such as who did what, who knew what when, questions of reactions of victims, etc. all can be formulated with the vast availability of primary sources and secondary sources that range from personal testimony of survivors, to photographic archives, to diaries and memoirs, to the records of the period, to the arts and literature, to historians interpretations.
 
The teacher who teaches a unit on the Holocaust has an opportunity to make the period of that time come alive with the real stories of people who survived, who did not survive, who were victims, who were rescuers, who were bystanders. The resources are readily available and multiple. The best is a survivor to speak with students if one willing to present to students is available. Both written and video sources are plentiful.
 
The horror of the Holocaust is an example of science and technology gone wrong. This is to be compared to the hopes for science, and technology. Example: The technological, industrial mind set of the Nazis is to be viewed by the student as it led to the industrialized murder factories located in eastern Europe.

Content Standard 5. People, Places, and Environments
Students demonstrate an understanding of interrelationships among people, places, economics, and environments.
Grade 11 Advanced Performance Standard
11th grade students at the advanced performance level construct and use complex mental maps and geographic tools to organize information about people, places, and environment. Students explain with sophistication how the relationship of geography and civilization has impacted the development of societies, cultures, and individuals.
 

Holocaust studies require the knowledge of and use of maps: the chronology of war fronts, the location of the various types of camps, the transportation systems, etc. The maps of camps are needed to understand how they operated and for what purpose. The maps of ghettos are needed to understand the events that occurred in the ghettos. The Holocaust created unnatural environments. Students will become aware of how humans modified and responded to the horrors they faced: racial laws, ghettos, camps.

Content Standard 6. Social Studies Processes and Skills
Students access, organize, synthesize, evaluate, and interpret information using appropriate resources and technology to collaborate, make decisions, solve problems, and report results in any of a variety of formats.
Grade 11 Advanced Performance Standard
11th grade students at the advanced performance level read and follow complex directions, work independently and cooperatively, conduct research utilizing diverse multiple resources and interpret and evaluate information. Students demonstrate sophistication in examining cause and effect relationships in problem solving and decision making. Students provide extensive evidence to demonstrate the techniques of persuasion, compromise, debate, and negotiation in communicating personal convictions and beliefs.
 

In the study of the Holocaust, multiple sources are available that the teacher can make available for the student, and that the student can seek out on his/her own. Questions of how and why, questions of interpretation such as who did what, who knew what when, questions of reactions of victims, etc. all can be formulated with the vast availability of primary sources and secondary sources that range from personal testimony of survivors, to photographic archives, to diaries and memoirs, to the records of the period, to the arts and literature, to historians interpretations.
 
The teacher who teaches a unit on the Holocaust has an opportunity to make the period of that time come alive with the real stories of people who survived, who did not survive, who were victims, who were rescuers, who were bystanders. The resources are readily available and multiple. The best is a survivor to speak with students if one willing to present to students is available. Both written and video sources are plentiful.
 


Content Standard 7. Technology
Students demonstrate the ability to use the appropriate technology to access and process information applying a variety of resources to the study of history, geography, economics, and social institutions.
Grade 11 Advanced Performance Standard
11th grade students at the advanced performance level independently and effectively use integrated technologies to research, process analyze, interpret, evaluate and creatively present, with confidence, information in various formats.
 

Internet sources on the Holocaust abound. Students must be trained on how to evaluate the usefulness of sources, especially in the study of the Holocaust. Presentation with the use of integrated technology must be carefully and tastefully considered with the topic of the Holocaust.