available programs
Keynotes & interactive lectures
Trainings for teachers and informal educators
School and youth workshops
Public and community events
Program Topic Examples Many of these topics can be combined or sequenced into one package. We can also work together to create tailor-made programs for your community. UNSILENCE INJUSTICE Through storytelling and group activities, explore why and how certain narratives of human rights and social justice become hidden, and how can we unsilence them. OVERLAPPING TRIANGLES Explore why and how some voices of the Holocaust - of the Roma, the disabled, LGBTQ people, political dissidents, and many other victims of Nazism - are marginalized and even omitted from Holocaust memory. Consider how the inclusion of taboo narratives changes lessons of Holocaust and genocide education. TRAIN: THE ACCIDENTAL NOVELIST How was the historical novel TRAIN inspired by hidden Holocaust histories? And how was it written by accident? Through storytelling, explore the process of writing about atrocity, and consider the limits of human rights fiction. THE HIDDEN HISTORY OF EUGENICS Explore how Nazi ideology was inspired by the global eugenics movement of the early 1900s, consider connections between British, American, and German eugenists in the early stages of the Holocaust, and confront the post-war continuation of government-led mass-sterilizations of people of color and people with disabilities in the United States. THE 19TH WINDOW Experience a choose-your-own-pathway-mystery, inspired by real events, about intergenerational memory and hidden Holocaust histories. Explore questions about investigating history and collective memory today. PROMISES BROKEN Become familiar with the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), apply the United Nations document to social injustices today, and explore why the 30 articles of UDHR are not well known across the United States, even though the U.S. signed it and even helped to write it. THE SON Navigate a choose-your-own-pathway-testimony about intergenerational trauma, Holocaust history, and LGBT rights. Consider the use of technology in the future of human rights education. MICKEY MOUSE & THE HOLOCAUST Through historical photographs that illustrate the contemporary relevance of Holocaust history, explore the victim-rescuer-perpetrator paradigm and discover a connection to pop culture today. DENYING THE HOLOCAUST Explore the history of Holocaust denial and how to confront atrocity denial in our world today. HIDDEN PAGES Navigate a live webquest - a series of puzzles - of hidden histories to unsilence the voices of disabled, Roma, homosexual, and political victims of the Holocaust. MIS-REMEMBERING THE HOLOCAUST Explore common misconceptions about Holocaust history, the writing and rewriting of human history, and the implications for Holocaust and human rights education. OXYGEN Participate in an interactive conversation on how to talk about different forms of violence and how to help others, especially young people, navigate their emotional responses. GHOSTS OF AUSCHWITZ Explore fragmented stories of Holocaust history, the road blocks and dead ends of familial memories, and our struggle to search for, find, and then unsilence hidden injustices today. A TOUR GUIDE AT AUSCHWITZ Experience an interactive, true story about taboos of genocide, sexual violence and homosexuality, and consider the censorship of injustices today. A WAR OF WORDS: WRITING ABOUT ATROCITY Through structured discussion and a series of activities, explore the goals and challenges of writing about extreme violence, mass-murder, atrocity, and traumatic memory. Consider the problems, pitfalls, and power of human rights fiction. LAUGHING AT THE HOLOCAUST Consider the boundaries of Holocaust humor and the censoring of our emotional responses to atrocity. HOLOCAUST TIME TRAVEL? Through photographs, explore the dos and don’ts of anti-genocide education, including the use of simulation and role play and how to support students’ emotional responses to learning about atrocity. HOLLYWOOD'S HOLOCAUST Explore the history of Holocaust cinema and its implications for collective memory and public learning. Audiences EDUCATORS Elementary School Teachers; Middle School Teachers; High School Teachers; Informal Educators; Museum Docents; Youth Workers & Social Workers; College Professors & Instructors; Medical Teams YOUNG PEOPLE Middle School Students; High School Students; University & College Students; Youth Center Participants ADMINISTRATORS & TEAMS School Administrators; Museum Leaders; University & College Administrators; Nonprofit Teams; Government Workers and Policymakers PUBLIC Parents & Caregivers; Congregations of Faith; Community Leaders; Volunteer & Civic Groups; Corporate Teams; General Public Group Size & Program Depth Intimate group 5 to 14 people Classroom 15 to 39 people Small group 40 to 74 people Medium group 75 to 149 people Large group 150 to 249 people Auditorium 250 to 1,000 people and above Short Session 30 minutes to 1 hour Full Session 1.5 to 2 hours Half Day 2.5 to 4 hours Full Day 4.5 to 8 hours Extended Day 8.5 to 12 hours Multi-Day Tailored to your community |