New Free Resource Seeks to Invigorate World War II Teaching in the Classroom
National History Day (NHD), the American Battle Monuments Commission (ABMC), and the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media is launching a new, free digital resource for teachers on Veterans Day: www.ABMCeducation.org. This website includes 21 lesson plans created by American teachers who took the trip of a lifetime this summer to discover the stories of World War II fallen heroes buried and memorialized overseas as part of the Understanding Sacrifice education program.
Teachers selected local American service members who lost their lives in northern Europe. Through months of intense study and in-depth research, the teachers uncovered the story of their fallen hero while developing a broader understanding of the campaigns and battles in which they fought. The group then traveled through northern Europe, from the United Kingdom to France to the Netherlands and Belgium to visit America’s overseas cemeteries and to walk the battlegrounds where these men gave their lives.
Using this experience, the teachers designed a lesson plan specific to their teaching discipline. These lesson plans are hosted at ABMCeducation.org and are a free resource designed to increase the understanding of sacrifices made in World War II among American students. Designed for middle school and high school classrooms, the lesson plans are multi-disciplinary and can be applied in history, as well as art, math, science and English classrooms. Through the use of primary and secondary sources, videos, and hands-on activities, students are transported to the war front and home front. From role-playing difficult family decisions at home to designing new war memorials and exploring military tactics utilized in France, students will walk away with a vivid understanding of the high cost paid by all Americans during this war.
“National History Day is always looking for new and engaging ways to demonstrate the power of history,” said NHD Executive, Director Dr. Cathy Gorn. “This partnership with the American Battle Monuments Commission and the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media at George Mason University allowed us to take 18 extraordinary teachers to battlefields and memorials of northern Europe. Their experience can now aid teachers around the world through 21 engaging lesson plans about a variety of topics.”
Each lesson plan is based on solid scholarship, integrated with Common Core, and makes use of interpretive materials provided by ABMC. They are accompanied by research about fallen heroes of World War II who are honored at ABMC cemeteries in northern Europe.
The following teachers created lesson plans to invigorate the teaching of World War II in America’s classrooms.
- Alan Birkemeier - Central Middle School in Columbus, IN
- Joseph Boyle – Morrison R. Waite High School in Toledo, OH
- Maile Chow - Mid-Pacific Institute in Honolulu, HI
- Donald Davis - George Washington High School in Chicago, IL
- Matthew Elms - Singapore American School in Singapore
- Brendan Gallagher - Carroll County Career & Technology Center in Westminster, MD
- Gayla Hammer – Lander Middle School in Lander, WY
- Julie Heintz - Mississippi School for Math and Science in Columbus, MS
- Melanie Hunt - Morristown East High School in Morristown, TN
- Amanda Kordeliski - Irving Middle School in Norman, OK
- Katherine Lorio - Westfield High School in Chantilly, VA
- Christina O’Connor - Hingham High School in Hingham, MA
- Cherie Redelings - Francis Parker School in San Diego, CA
- Patrick Slowey - Steamboat Springs High School in Steamboat Springs, CO
- Erica Swenson – Bruce M. Whittier Middle School in Poland, ME
- Brian Weaver - Central Bucks High School – West in Doylestown, PA
- Kamilah Williams - Suitland High School in Forestville, MD
- Pren Woods - Alston Middle School in Summerville, SC