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Award-Winning ABMC Education Website Premiers New Teacher Resources

In honor of Veteran’s Day, 19 new World War II lesson plans are being released on the award-winning, ABMCeducation.org. This free resource for teachers was produced out of a partnership between National History Day®, the American Battle Monuments Commission (ABMC), the National Cemetery Administration, and the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media. Designed to reinvigorate the study of World War II in American classrooms, the site features lesson plans on a variety of subjects from art to science and everything in between. The new lesson plans were created by 19 exceptional educators chosen to participate in the 2017 Understanding Sacrifice program.

Participants chose one American service member from their hometown or state who made the ultimate sacrifice and is buried or memorialized at an American cemetery located near the Pacific Ocean. Teachers spent a year uncovering the life story of their fallen heroes. Concurrently, teachers developed in-depth lesson plans utilizing their research that focused on one element of World War II. Because immersive experiences create richer teaching materials, the group then journeyed to San Francisco, Honolulu, and Manila to walk in the footsteps of history to see first-hand the places that influenced the outcome of the war. At each American cemetery, participants delivered powerful graveside eulogies to their fallen heroes. These eulogies are viewable on ABMCeducation.org.

Using this experience, the teachers designed lesson plans specific to their teaching discipline. These lesson plans are a free resource designed to help American students better understand the sacrifices that American service members made during World War II. Designed for middle and high school classrooms, the lesson plans are multi-disciplinary and can be applied in history, art, math, science and English classrooms. Using primary and secondary sources, videos, and hands-on activities, students are transported from the modern-day home front to the war front of the past. They are asked to debate island hopping strategies considering the geographic challenges posed by the vastness of the Pacific Ocean, explore the experience of prisoners of war, and gain an understanding of the roles of women and minorities. Students will walk away with a vivid understanding of the vast scope of World War II history and the men and women who risked everything.

 “This partnership with the American Battle Monuments Commission, the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media at George Mason University, and the VA National Cemetery Administration (NCA) has allowed us to take 19 extraordinary educators to battlefields and memorials of the Pacific,” said National History Day Executive Director Dr. Cathy Gorn. “Their unique experiences can now help teachers around the world bring history to life with the materials added to ABMCeducation.org.”

The following educators participated in the 2017 Understanding Sacrifice program.

Name

School

City, State

Greta Bartley-Hamilton

Assistant Director, Riverside National Cemetery

Riverside, California

Jennifer Camplair

Lorena High School

Lorena, Texas

Jose Cumagun

Deer Valley High School

Antioch, California

Walt Davis

Edisto High School

Cordova, South Carolina

Ellen Davis

Ramblewood Middle School

Coral Springs, Florida

Katie Hoerner

Belleville East High School

Belleville, Illinois

Daniel Jocz

Downtown Magnets High School

Los Angeles, California

Scott Johnson

Battle Ground Academy

Franklin, Tennessee

Whitney Joyner

Northeast Middle School

Clarksville, Tennessee

Ryan Kaiser

The Mt. Washington School

Baltimore, Maryland

Leif Liberg

James Monroe Middle School

Ridgecrest, California

Jeremy Miller

Cambridge-Isanti High School

Cambridge, Minnesota

Gena Oppenheim

Saint Ann's School

Brooklyn, New York

Catherine Phillips

Olive Peirce Middle School

Ramona, California

Matthew Poth

Park View High School

Sterling, Virginia

Amanda Reid-Cossentino

Garnet Valley High School

Garnet Valley, Pennsylvania

Ine Marion Touzel

Ocean Bay Middle School

Myrtle Beach, South Carolina

Kevin Wagner

Carlisle High School

Carlisle, Pennsylvania

Nicole Winter

Cosby High School

Midlothian, Virginia

Each lesson plan is based on solid scholarship, integrated with Common Core Standards, and makes use of interpretive materials provided by the ABMC and NCA. They are accompanied by research and eulogies about fallen heroes of World War II who are honored at American cemeteries and memorials in San Francisco, Honolulu, and Manila.

About National History Day®:
National History Day® is a non-profit education organization based out of College Park, MD. Established in 1974, National History Day® seeks to improve the teaching and learning of history through a variety of curricular and extra-curricular programs that engage over half a million secondary students around the world each year. More information is at nhd.org.

About ABMC:
Established by Congress in 1923, the American Battle Monuments Commission commemorates the service, achievements, and sacrifice of U.S. armed forces. ABMC administers 26 overseas military cemeteries, and 29 memorials, monuments, and markers.

About VA National Cemetery Administration:
Established in 1974, VA’s National Cemetery Administration (NCA) operates 135 national cemeteries and 33 soldiers’ lots and monuments sites. More than 4.3 million Americans, including Veterans of every U.S. war and conflict, are buried in VA’s national cemeteries. For Veterans not buried in a VA national cemetery, VA provides headstones, markers, or medallions for placement in private cemeteries around the world.

About the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media:
The Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media at George Mason University uses digital media and computer technology to democratize history— incorporating multiple voices, reaching diverse audiences, and encouraging popular participation in presenting and preserving the past. For more information, visit http://rrchnm.org.