Educators


By
Charles (Chip) Hauss


August 2003
 

One can argue that education -- and hence educators -- provide the best opportunities to both prevent and de-escalate intractable conflicts. Educators can prevent intractable conflicts by teaching tolerance and critical thinking, as well as teaching students about multiple views of any difficult conflict situation. Although it is harder, educators also play a key role in de-escalating conflicts that already exist, by helping to break down stereotypes, increase mutual understanding, and help students develop new, and broader images of the world and possible solutions to their current dilemma(s).

Who Are the Educators?

Educators fall into two main categories. First, of course, are the traditional educators who work in classrooms from the pre-school through university level. The last generation has seen what can only be described as an explosion of interest in teaching conflict resolution and the related field of peace studies at all of these levels, from pre-school on up. The second broad area of education does not involve formal classrooms, but is carried out in the course of other activities by parents, peers, community, political, and religious leaders, the mass media, and entertainment industries. All of these people and institutions shape our images of ourselves, of others, and the world around us -- profoundly affecting our approach to conflicts we become involved in.

University Educators

Peace studies began as a formal academic discipline after Word War II, and grew considerably (at least in the U.S.) during and shortly after the Vietnam War. There are now several hundred such degree programs in the U.S. and many more abroad. In the 1980s, conflict resolution degree programs were started as well. Though fewer in number than peace studies programs, conflict resolution degrees are now offered at universities on every continent, save Antarctica.

The curricula vary tremendously. Some focus only on international conflict. Some cover international, domestic political, and interpersonal conflict. Those housed in law or business schools tend to concentrate on conflict in organizational settings and draw heavily on organizational development and other fields in which conflict is a central issue.

Perhaps even more encouraging is the fact that conflict resolution has been "mainstreamed" into the curricula of conventional academic disciplines such as political science. Thus, I make conflict resolution a central component of the introductory and intermediate level comparative politics courses I teach. Similarly, at least some mainstream academics have included elements of conflict resolution in their texts on such topics as international relations.[1]



Additional insights into the educator role are offered by Beyond Intractability project participants.

K-12 (Primary and Secondary) Education

Conflict resolution has also made its way into the educational system below the university level. In what we in the United States call the K-12 grades, conflict resolution is not often part of the formal curriculum. More commonly, schools help students develop skills that would allow them to settle the conflicts in their daily lives nonviolently.

 

With younger children, this can be as simple as calling a "time out" when two or more students are arguing so that they don't start fighting. Among older children, the programs can be much more ambitious, including efforts to stop the shootings and stabbings which afflict many schools in the United States and beyond. Peer mediation programs are especially popular. Here students (usually 4th grade on up) are taught how to act as mediators for conflicts among their peers. They mediate playground conflicts at the elementary level and other interpersonal and intergroup conflicts among older students.

Three programs that are worth mentioning as examples.

In 2001, the Superintendent of Schools in Washington, D.C. (U.S.) decided to include some aspects of conflict resolution in every classroom in every school. A conflict resolution specialist was hired to supervise the work for, on average, six schools each. The program was widely applauded because of the widespread teen violence which has plagued the nation's capital for many years.

Some of these programs are born of tragedy, such as the Louis D. Brown Peace Foundation  which was established by his parents, Joseph and Clementine Chery. Brown was a talented fifteen year old who announced to his parents that he would be the youngest and first African-American president of the United States. Unfortunately, while on his way to a Christmas party (ironically given by a group opposed to teen violence), Brown was killed in a random drive-by shooting. To honor their son, the Cherys established the foundation through the Harvard University School of Public Health. The foundation has created curricula on peace education for students from kindergarten to high school, provides speakers and training for schools, and has Louis D. Brown fellows who publish a book on peace each year.

Many peace education programs exist outside the U.S. as well. Indeed, given the much greater damage caused by intractable conflicts elsewhere, the need for input by peace educators is even more important. Sometimes, the mere availability of education -- not what is taught -- is critical. Thus, in Bosnia, it is hard to imagine the more than two million refugees and internally displaced persons returning to their home towns if their schools (as well as their houses) are not rebuilt. The European Union has funded World Vision, a Christian relief, development, and peace building organization to do that. But World Vision and many other groups go a lot farther and take on more ambitious, long term projects whose impact is often hard to measure. For instance, throughout the Balkans, World Vision, Search for Common Ground, and others have begun establishing multi-ethnic schools so that children whose parents had gone to war with each other can literally learn to live together in peace.

Informal/Grassroots Education

The most ambitious grass roots educational effort was the Beyond War, which spanned most of the 1980s and thus reached its peak early in the history of the field of conflict resolution. Beyond War (now the Foundation for Global Community) started by developing a curriculum to address the global crisis it saw being created by the new arms race in the Cold War and the growing interdependence of life on the planet. As they saw it, the leaders of Beyond War argued that learning to deal with conflict better everywhere -- from the interpersonal to the international level -- was the best to respond to that crisis.

It was able to raise enough money for families to move to 14 American states (later reaching 30 states and a handful of other countries) to start its program of public education. Part of its work involved public meetings including such different events as talks to local Rotary Clubs to some of the world's first "space bridges" in which satellite technology was used to host meetings that brought people on all continents "together." Mostly, however, it did much less spectacular work, for instance, by hosting three-evening seminars or "orientations to a world beyond war" in which groups of ten to twenty people got an introduction to basic conflict resolution skills. No one knows for sure how many people participated in those sessions, but it certainly topped a quarter million.

Since then, other organizations have broadened the training options available to adult learners. Professional organizations such as Educators for Social Responsibility and the Association for Conflict Resolution provide resources to help educate teachers and conflict resolution practitioners respectively. Grass roots organizations such as the Montgomery County (Md.) Center for Conflict Resolution offers sessions in which average citizens can learn basic conflict resolution skills. For people who cannot attend such sessions, there are some projects people can go to for online training, although we clearly have a long way to go before we have truly mastered distance learning techniques.

There are even summer camps which emphasize peace and conflict resolution. The most famous of these is Seeds of Peace in Otisfield, Maine. During its first season in 1993, Seeds of Peace brought together 46 Israeli and Palestinian teens for a summer of "normal" summer camp and conflict resolution training. By the summer of 2001, campers had come from 22 war-ravaged countries. And in 2002, young Afghans were added. As with everything else, the summer camp phenomenon is moving beyond the United States. In summer 2001, the Benetton Company brought nine National Basketball Association stars and 40 teenagers from the various republics of the former Yugoslavia together for two weeks of training in basketball skills and peace building. Oasis of Peace (Neve Shalom/Wahat al-Salaam) has been conducting training for Jewish and Palestinian teenagers since 1979.

Perhaps most importantly of all, educators have to develop programs to integrate the more than 300,000 child soldiers who have been combatants in many of the world's intractable conflicts. Some were forced to fight before they were 10. Many have had no formal education and have no social or occupational skills -- other than fighting. Many have no remaining family members and are stuck living in squalid refugee camps or on the streets. Successful reintegration projects will have to help these (mostly) young men learn how to reconcile with their former adversaries, help the communities they move into prepare for them, and help provide opportunities for them to find meaningful lives and careers in societies which, for the most part, have shunned them. American readers will probably be struck by the similarities between the situation facing child soldiers and that of the more then 100,000 offenders who are released from prison each year, most of whom will end up back in jail.

Finally, it should be noted that very little is known about how effective any of these educational programs are. There is scattered evidence from the Middle East and elsewhere that programs that bring together teenagers for brief periods may not have much of a lasting impact. However, there is also evidence that some people undergo profound transformations in such sessions, especially those that last for an extended period of time. What we don't know is how to design these programs so that they can produce the kind of personal development that makes stable peace and reconciliation of intractable conflict possible.

 


[1] See, for instance, the evolution of Joseph Nye's, Understanding International Conflict. 4th ed. (New York: Longman, 2003). The first edition does not mention conflict resolution. The fourth edition gives it quite a bit of attention. That is true, by the way, of Nye's career in general. He has served in both the State Department and the Pentagon, but in another recent book, Nye talks about the importance of "soft" power in which the United States tries to use diplomacy and negotiation to solve international problems.


Use the following to cite this article:
Hauss, Charles (Chip). "Educators." Beyond Intractability. Eds. Guy Burgess and Heidi Burgess. Conflict Research Consortium, University of Colorado, Boulder. Posted: August 2003 <http://www.beyondintractability.org/essay/educators/>.

Sources of Additional, In-depth Information on this Topic

Additional Explanations of the Underlying Concepts:

Online (Web) Sources

Facing History and Ourselves.
Available at:
http://www.facinghistory.org.
This organization is based around helping people to understand the present and future by educating them about the past. It seeks to develop programs that would allow students to think critically about the past by emphasizing morality in history. The website has links to new articles discussing current world events and also provides resources for understanding these events. There are also resources like academic articles, films, books, and teaching tools provided at this site.

Boyden, Jo and Paul Ryder. Implementing the Right to Education in Areas of Armed Conflict.
Available at:
http://www.essex.ac.uk/armedcon/story_id/000021.htm.
This extensive online publication deals with many aspects of the problem of providing education to children in regions where violent conflict is ongoing. It not only discusses why this is important in terms of the well-being of children and in terms of peace education and post-conflict recovery, but also provides suggestions on how to deal with many of the logistical and administrative obstacles that will inevitably be encountered.

Sandy, Leo R and Ray Jr. Perkins. "The Nature of Peace and Its Implications for Peace Education." The Online Journal of Peace and Conflict Resolution , April 2002
Available at:
http://www.trinstitute.org/ojpcr/4_2natp.htm.

This article focuses on what people mean when they say peace, and how that is affected by peoples' ideas of violence and war. The authors encourage a view of "positive peace," that is not just the absence of overt violence. In part, positive peace is defined as, "A pattern of cooperation and integration between major human groups." Following a discussion of the importance and implications of developing a solid definition of peace, the article concludes with "Lessons for Peace Education."

The Third Side.
Available at:
http://www.thirdside.org/index.cfm.
"ThirdSide.org is sponsored by the Global Negotiation Project (formerly the Project on Preventing War) at Harvard University. The Project develops and encourages the use of effective negotiation processes to reduce the risk of war. In addition, the Project is also committed to the development of negotiation theory and practice in a wide range of related areas, such as international mediation and designing dispute resolution systems to contain violence and resolve conflict." The site provides access to a variety of information regarding William Ury's concept of the Third Side including a definition and examples of third siders in action.

The Two Faces of Education in Ethnic Conflict: Towards a Peacebuilding Education for Children.
Available at:
http://www.unicef-icdc.org/publications/pdf/insight4.pdf.
This insightful report explores the importance of ethnic identity and how education plays into the formation of ethnicity. It then examines the negative and positive sides of education as it relates to conflict situations. The paper goes on to discuss strategies for developing "peacebuilding education" curriculum for children directly exposed to conflict.

Offline (Print) Sources

Raviv, Amiram, Louis Oppenheimer and Daniel Bar-Tal. How Children Understand War and Peace: A Call for International Peace Education. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, July 1999.
This wark examines how children's notions of war and peace develop in different contexts around the world. The authors believe that conscious efforts toward peace education in the world's school systems will lead to a more peaceful world.

Stomfay-Stitz, Aline. Peace Education in America, 1828-1990. Metuchen: Scarecrow Press, 1993.
This work provides a chronological account of the history of peace education in the United States by examining available peace education and curriculum literature. It also discusses prospects for the future of peace education as they were viewed in the early 1990s.

Harris, Ian M. and Mary Lee Morrison. Peace Education, 2nd Edition. McFarland & Company, December 13, 1998.
This work provides a thorough explanation of what peace education is. The work discusses various conceptions of peace, and how peace education can help move society toward alternatives to violence. The authors also discuss ways to institute peace education in schools as well as some key issues and obstacles facing peace educators.

Johnson, Marcia L. "Trends in Peace Education." , 1998.
This ERIC Digest reviews the development and current status of peace education in the United States. After briefly surveying the peace education movement from its origins with a small group of educators in New England in the 1800s through its stigmatization as being anti-American during periods of hot and cold war, the Digest devotes more attention to recent trends of the 1980s and 1990s. (Note: This document often exists in libraries on microfiche.)

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Examples Illustrating this Topic:

Online (Web) Sources

Arabs, Palestinians, Islam and Peace in Israeli School Textbooks. Center for Monitoring the Impact of Peace.
Available at:
http://www.edume.org/reports/8/toc.htm.
"This report examines the way in which Arabs, Islam and the Israel- Arab conflict are presented in the new textbooks introduced in school years 5761 (2000-2001) and 5762 (2001-2002) for use in Israeli schools in State Schools, State Religious Schools and the Ultra Orthodox Schools. The books surveyed are in the following subjects: History, Civics, Literature, Geography, Language and the Scriptures...The purpose of both reports is to examine whether attitudes and facts relating to the Arabs, developments in the Israel-Arab conflict and Islam are presented in the textbooks in such a way as to promote peace, tolerance, mutual recognition and respect." This page offers access to all parts of the report.

College Level Teaching Programs-- CRInfo Resource Page. University of Colorado: Conflict Research Consortium.
Available at:
http://www.crinfo.org/menu/education_college.jsp.
This resource page provides links to information on over two hundred higher education programs in the fields of conflict resolution and/or peace studies.

Curriculum Change and Social Cohesion in Conflict-Affected Societies: Proposal of Mozambique. International Bureau of Education (IBE).
Available at:
Click here for more info.
This paper provides a look at the re-organization of the school curriculum in an independent Mozambique, in the wake of colonialism and decades of violent conflict.

Groiss, Dr. Arnon. Jews, Israel and Peace in the Palestinian Authority Textbooks: The New Textbooks for Grades 3 and 8. Center for Monitoring the Impact of Peace.
Available at:
http://www.edume.org/reports/11/toc.htm.
This report is a survey of the latest school textbooks that were issued in 2002 by the Palestinian Authority, mainly for grades 3 and 8. Thirty-five books in various school subjects were examined. The material contained therein was carefully scrutinized in the light of two sets of criteria: 1) The image of other peoples and communities. Are they recognized? Are they accepted? Or are they presented in a stereotyped and prejudiced way?; 2) Peace and the peace process. Does education, as reflected in the textbooks, foster peace? Does it support the peace process? Is there any room for improvement in this respect?

K-12 Programs--CRInfo Resource Page. University of Colorado: Conflict Research Consortium.
Available at:
http://www.crinfo.org/menu/education_k-12.jsp.
This resource page provides links to information on over 100 conflict resolution and peace programs associated with primary and secondary schools.

Offline (Print) Sources

"Children Teaching Children in Israel: Investing in Future Decision Makers." In People Building Peace: 35 Inspiring Stories From Around the World. Edited by European Centre for Conflict Prevention, ed. Utrecht: European Centre for Conflict Prevention, 1999.
This chapter discusses a program in Israel which brings together Arab and Jewish children.

"Gandhi's Visions Are Millennium Proof." In People Building Peace: 35 Inspiring Stories From Around the World. Edited by European Centre for Conflict Prevention, ed. Utrecht: European Centre for Conflict Prevention, 1999.
This chapter discusses India's City Montessori School, which has been educating world citizens since 1959.

Feuerverger, Grace. Oasis of Dreams: Teaching and Learning Peace in a Jewish-Palestinian Village in Israel. Routledge Falmer, May 2001.
This book presents the results of a 9-year study of Neve Shalom/Wahat Al-Salam (the Hebrew and Arabic words for "Oasis of Peace"), which is a village that was established as part of an intercultural education experiment. The book tells the story of this village where Jews and Palestinians lived together in order to demonstrate the potential for breaking down walls of fear and mistrust, and living in peace. The work explores the psychological, social and personal dimensions of this intersting and inspiring educational endeavor.

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Teaching Materials on this Topic:

Online (Web) Sources

International Peace Bureau: Peace Education Program. International Peace Bureau (IPB).
Available at:
Click here for more info.
This site is associated with The Hague Appeal for Peace Global Campaign for Peace Education. It offers access to a variety of information and resources related to peace education. The two main goals of the global campaign are: "First, to build public awareness and political support for the introduction of peace education into all spheres of education, including non-formal education, in all schools throughout the world. Second, to promote the education of all teachers to teach for peace." -from website

Peace Education Foundation.
Available at:
http://www.peace-ed.org/.
"The Peace Education Foundation offers grade-level specific classroom-tested curricula for Pre-K through grade 12. The Foundation's user-friendly materials feature activities that foster school norms of cooperation and problem solving rather than violence and aggression. Through role-playing, group work and other interactive techniques, students are taught pro-social skills such as anger management, perspective taking, peer resistance, effective communication, and problem solving. Internationally, more than 20,000 schools use these materials. This site allows you to order PeaceWorks curricula online."

United Nations Cyberschoolbus: Peace Education. United Nations.
Available at:
http://www0.un.org/cyberschoolbus/peace/index.asp.
This page offers a gateway into an extremely well-done and helpful website focused on peace education, both the theory behind it as well as actual teaching materials. The "Teacher as Learner" section explains the foundational ideas of peace education and discusses the importance of educational environments, and the challenges and opportunities of peace education. The "Learner as Teacher" section offers 5 different peace education curriculum units, each for a different age group. The units are: 1) Ecological Thinking and Respect for Life, Ages 8-12; 2) Tolerance and Respect for Dignity and Identity, Ages 11-16; 3) Critical Thinking Active Nonviolence, Ages 12+; 4) Social Justice and Civic Responsibility, Ages 14+; 5) Leadership and Global Citizenship, Ages 14+. The site also includes a page of links to other informative resources.

Offline (Print) Sources

Barash, David P. Introduction to Peace Studies. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth Publishing Co., October 1998.
This is an introductory textbook to the developing academic field of Peace Studies.

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Beyond Intractability Version II
Copyright © 2003-2006 The Beyond Intractability Project
Beyond Intractability is a Registered Trademark of the University of Colorado
Project Acknowledgements

The Beyond Intractability Knowledge Base Project
Guy Burgess and Heidi Burgess, Co-Directors and Editors
c/o Conflict Research Consortium, University of Colorado
Campus Box 580, Boulder, CO 80309
Phone: (303)492-1635; Fax: (303)492-2154; Contact