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Teaching 9/11

By Jon Wiener, The Nation. Posted September 12, 2005.


Assuming 9/11 is even on the curriculum, what you learn depends on the textbook you're assigned.

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9/11 is history -- but how is it being taught to students in history courses? George Bush and other conservatives maintain that the attacks were acts of evil; liberals, while they condemn the attacks, see them as having a social and political context that we need to understand. These differences are reflected in the debate over the textbooks written in the past three years.

Conservatives complain that the teaching of 9/11 has been "simplified and sanitized" in an effort "not to...upset special interest groups," in the words of Chester Finn, assistant secretary of education in the Reagan Administration, who wrote the foreword to A Consumer's Guide to High School History Textbooks, by Diane Ravitch, assistant secretary of education in the Bush Sr. Administration. Finn and Ravitch, who based their conclusions on a reading of six of the most widely assigned textbooks in high school history courses, complained that students reading the textbooks "would scarcely learn that anybody in particular had organized these savage attacks...much less why."

Finn and Ravitch are right about some of the texts. America: Pathways to the Present, by Andrew Cayton et al., says in its 2005 edition that the "prime suspect" in the attacks was Osama bin Laden, but he is described only as "a wealthy Saudi dissident." "Saudi dissident" is hardly the right term -- a student might get the impression he was fighting for Saudi women's rights. The book goes on to say that bin Laden had been granted sanctuary by the Taliban in Afghanistan, but the Taliban are described only as a "group" that "sought to set up their version of a pure Islamic state, banning such things as television and music." From the perspective of an American tenth grader, this is typical of tyrants everywhere -- starting with their own parents, punishing them for bad grades. As an explanation of the "who" and "why" of 9/11, the discussion in Pathways might best be termed "incoherent."

Several other leading texts do much better. The American Republic, by Joyce Appleby et al., has a section on 9/11 in its 2005 edition, written by Alan Brinkley of the Columbia University history department, that provides a wonderfully clear and thorough explanation of the "who" and "why" of 9/11, starting with bin Laden's role in the resistance to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. "Bin Laden's experience in Afghanistan convinced him that superpowers could be beaten. He also believed that Western ideas had contaminated Muslim society. He was outraged when Saudi Arabia allowed American troops on Saudi soil after Iraq invaded Kuwait." He therefore began a series of attacks seeking to drive Americans out of the Middle East. 9/11 was the most spectacular in this series of attacks.

A different approach can be found in The American Promise, by James Roark et al., an introductory college text that is the most widely adopted textbook in the market. It is assigned in dozens of high schools, public and private, including public schools in Atlanta, Newark and Chicago. A section written by Susan Hartmann, who teaches history at Ohio State, identifies bin Laden's goals and then explains the "why" of his finding supporters: "High levels of poverty ignored by undemocratic and corrupt governments provided bin Laden a pool of disaffected young Muslims who saw the United States as the evil source of their misery and the supporter of Israel's oppression of Palestinian Muslims." A companion volume of historical documents, edited by Michael Johnson, includes the famous President's Daily Brief from August 6, 2001: "bin Laden Determined to Strike in the US"; the text of Bush's address on September 20, 2001: "they hate us...[because] they hate our freedoms"; and an Al Qaeda training manual posted on the Justice Department website.


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Is there a "Big Truth" to go along with the "Big Lie"?
Posted by: Sojourner on Sep 12, 2005 8:25 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Public schools are supposed to educate us for citizenship. That's not easy to do in a historical time when 'privatization' is opposed to "the common welfare." (What a scandal that the word "welfare" appears in the Preamble to the U.S. Constitution, eh? That's reason enough to hate and fear government.)

Who educates us after we have finished school? The polls usually show that a substantial percentage of Americans believe that it was Saddam Hussein of Iraq who was responsible for the attack on the Twin Towers. Someone is doing a lousier job of educating adults than our kids.

Or maybe it's brainwashing (sorry, advertising?) that's preferred to education. Get the facts straight? Not my job. I just work here.

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Interesting
Posted by: Olympiada on Sep 12, 2005 10:22 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am glad people are paying more attention to high school history text books.

I dropped out of my high school's AP US History because the textbook was so Eurocentric. I joined a remedial class where I learned more about US History then I had ever learned in my whole life. I still remember that class, that bungalow, that teacher, that curriculum, that experience, to this day.

Now about No Child Left Behind. It has produced some good literature. And we did discuss this in a college class entitled Orientation to Education.

When I am done raising my daughter, I intend to become a public school teacher. I am glad to see these issues being discussed, for her sake, and for the children of the United States.

Thank you.

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» Public school teacher Posted by: nickptar
» RE: Public school teacher Posted by: Basenjis
History "lessons"
Posted by: fedupamerican on Sep 13, 2005 8:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just the other day I was talking with someone about what I was taught to 'believe' in history classes--be they grade school, high school, or even college classes. It all depends on who wrote the books and who taught the class. Even in college on history exams we were expected to be able to write down exactly the analysis of the teacher/the ideas of the teacher, the same old same old history rhetoric. Bad grades if you strayed from the 'approved path of knowledge.' No matter the founders of "our" country came over here under the guise of 'Religious Freedom' and then proceeded to remove the American Indians tribe by tribe!! Oh we reek of rightousness and truth, don't we!
So I give you this link--read and do some thinking, some pondering, some looking-back over the REAL HISTORY of "our" America. We have so much dirty laundry (like every other country) that we have no right to think we are the 'rightest' of all the world!!

http://911research.wtc7.net/index.html

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» RE: History "lessons" Posted by: theywillknowusbyourabsurdity
» RE: History "lessons" Posted by: nickptar
» RE: History "lessons" Posted by: nickptar
» Conspiracy Theory ... Posted by: AdamSelene11726
» RE: History "lessons" -- and reality Posted by: AdamSelene11726
gypsy55
Posted by: gypsy55 on Sep 13, 2005 9:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
read Howard Zinn's Peoples History of the United States for the real history...that may not be the exact title - at the information desk or library the will get it for you.

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Teaching Pearl Harbor ...
Posted by: AdamSelene11726 on Sep 13, 2005 2:43 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In High School, they taught us that "Japan attacked America in retaliation for oil and steel embargos earlier in 1941. "


Question 7: What happened on December 7 1941 ?
Answer: The attack on Pearl Harbor ... a day that will live in
Infamy.

... ok close enough for 11th Grade. Extra credit for the FDR quote.

But while all the facts as presented are quite impeccably true: what is being taught is something of a romantic fantasy that assigns the United States the central role in what is actually a much wider conflict.

"It's always about Us."

The attack on Pearl Harbor isn't the only thing that happened on December 7. A few hours later, Hong Kong was invaded, Japanese troops began to land in Malaya and the Phillipine Islands The "Southern Project" ... the conquest of all the French, Dutch and British positions in South Asia had begun

However, for the sake of the Narrative ...the American base at Pearl Harbor is attacked on Sept 7, while the British Colony at Hong Kong, on the other side of the International Date Line isn't attacked until December 8, several hours later. Indeed, the Encyclopedia Britannica uses the same reckoning ... but quietly adding the clarification "local time" to the "December 8" date.

I'm sure future generations will learn about The Twin Towers in much the same way. In fact, it will be exactly the same story: "Just as World War II began with the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, the Global War on Terror began on Sept. 11, 2001 when Terrorists struck the Homeland without warning."

The trick with Pearl Harbor is to make the Japanese "Southern Operation" ... the naval blitzkreig against French, Dutch and British positions in South Asia ... disappear. With '9/11' it is to make 100 years of Islamic Fundamentalist armed resistance movements vanish. It isn't hard to do.

But does it matter ? Past history doesn't affect the final outcome. So why nitpick?

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» RE: Teaching Pearl Harbor ... Posted by: Basenjis
» RE: Teaching Pearl Harbor ... Posted by: AdamSelene11726
Teaching 9/11 in 2nd Grade
Posted by: Hawksana on Sep 14, 2005 2:15 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This Diary by ColdFusion04 was on the Recommended List on DailyKos for a while this afternoon. It reports on a second grader's experience:

http://www.dailykos.com/story/2005/9/14/113431/385

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Teaching the truth as a "many spendored thing"
Posted by: metamind on Sep 15, 2005 3:03 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My favorite truism about the truth is:

"Truth is a many spendored thing."

The word "splendored" is missing from my dictionary, but
"splendor" means "Something grand or magnificent."

Therefore, "splendored" would be the result of making
something grand or magnificient. The difference between
"splendor" and "splendored" might be related to the
difference between "redesign" and "redesigned."

Indeed, the Truth of 9/11 has been "redesigned" many
times. How is it that the majority of Americans believe
that Saddam Hussein had something to do with it? That's
an example of how the truth of 9/11 has been "redesigned"
and is a "many splendored thing."

But we have yet to do the final re-design of the truth of
9/11. Look into any of the many sites linked to
Presidential Candidate Karl Schwarz's web site.

There's a lot of re-designing of the truth still to be done.

One of the best sources of truth in our day is Wikipedia.

Examples:


Michael Moore's film "Fahrenheith 9-11"


September 11th terrorist attacks

or for a really good appreciation of the "splendor" of the truth:


9-11 Conspiracy Theories

So what is the truth? It's a many splendored thing and we really need better technology and techniques for appreciating its true magnificience.

I remember how my opinion of my nation's history changed
when I read

Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee

The book of comparable impact regarding 9-11 might be

The New Perl Harbor

We need to explore the human propensity to search for "certainty" in regards to truth. This can be seen in religion, politics, and history.

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