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Cross-curricular resources from the Peace Education Network

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Cross-curricular resources from the Peace Education Network
The Atomic Scientists
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The Atomic Scientists

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In this lesson from Scientists for Global Responsibility, learners explore Physics, History and Citizenship. Bohr, Chadwick, Oppenheimer, Szilard, Fermi, Meitner, Einstein - What did the people who made possible the first atomic bomb want to happen? Scientists in the first half of the 20th Century were making strides in theory and experimentation to understand atoms: How are atoms structured? What forces hold atoms together? Can the atom be split? And what happens if we do? By the 1940s, the answers were a matter of life and death. In this lesson, learners will study the scientists, what they discovered, and what they wanted to happen with the atom bomb and what they did for peace. Covers the development of the model of the atom (common content with chemistry) The Atomic Scientists is a lesson from Teach Peace secondary, a pack of 50 lessons from the Peace Education Network.
A beginner's guide to nuclear weapons
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A beginner's guide to nuclear weapons

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In this Teach Peace lesson from Scientists for Global Responsibility, learners will combine ethics and the science to assess nuclear weapons. Using Nuclear weapons: a beginner’s guide to the threats from Scientists for Global Responsibility, learners gain an understanding of the science and the effects of nuclear weapons and use that insight to inform their moral reasoning. Using the six sections of the Beginners Guide, learners will explore 1. What is a nuclear weapon? 2. the basic science of nuclear weapons 3. How many nuclear weapons are there? 4. How much destructive power do the nuclear-armed nations have? 5. A nuclear attack: the immediate effects 6. A nuclear attack: longer-term and global impacts
Empathy and compassion
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Empathy and compassion

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A Teach Peace lesson from Peace Jam UK (peacejam.org.uk). Drawing on Peace Jam’s Compassion in Action Curriculum, for Creating Inclusive Communities, learners will discover the life and work of the Dalai Lama, a world leader for peace, and practise the empathy and compassion he teaches. Wellbeing | Religion and ethics
How does the arms trade work?
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How does the arms trade work?

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How does the arms trade work? Lesson 2 from Teach Peace comes from Amnesty Interational UK (amnesty.org.uk). Amnesty International campaigned successfully for a global Arms Trade Treaty (2014). Yet from London to Hong Kong, millions of weapons are bought and sold around the world, often to countries already fighting wars or attacking their own people. Students can investigate the roots and impact of the arms trade and how active citizens should respond. History & Society | Citizenship and action | Talking and listening
Jabiluka: What happened? Mining and human rights
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Jabiluka: What happened? Mining and human rights

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In this lesson from the London Mining Network, learners will find out about a situation in which nonviolent direct action succeeded. This is the story of the successful nonviolent direct action taken by the Mirrar people and their allies against the Jabiluka uranium mine which was to be built on their ancestral land dangerously close to the Kakadu National Park in Northern Territory, Australia. Learners will carry out a guided group research project on the topic. Citizenship and action | Geography
Youth refusing violence
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Youth refusing violence

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A Teach Pece lesson from St Etherlburga’s. Learners will understand what it means to ‘refuse violence’ and choose active nonviolence. They will explore different forms of violence in order to become equipped to deal with it and make the right choices. Talking and listening | Wellbeing | Religion and ethics
Exploring our roots and migration
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Exploring our roots and migration

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A Teach Peace lesson from Inscape animations. Follow the roots of our family trees down, down into the past, and eventually they join.” Using the animation from Inscape, explore how we are all connected across time, land and sea. Learners will explore terms like genealogy, refugee and migration and what it means to be connected today. Creative expression | Citizenship and action | STEM
Teach Peace Secondary Brochure - find your next lesson
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Teach Peace Secondary Brochure - find your next lesson

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Find your next lesson! Teach Peace Secondary contains over 50 lessons authored by diverse organisations, free to download via TES Resources. Use this brochure to select one for you and your students. The sequel to the award-winning primary pack, Teach Peace Secondary offers a huge range of cross-curricular lessons from Peace Education Network members including Amnesty International UK, War Child, Peacemakers, Values Based Education, Pax Christi, Facing History & Ourselves UK and more. Categorised by inner, interpersonal and global peace, the lessons cover themes including war and peacebuilding, violence and nonviolence, conflict resolution, identity and inclusion and much more.
Challenging Islamophobia and  identity-based violence
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Challenging Islamophobia and identity-based violence

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A Teach Peace lesson from Protection Approaches and Circles of Salam. During this lesson, learners will consider how anti-Muslim hate, Islamophobia, and other forms of identity-based violence occur in society through the exploration of a personal story. Learners will then consider how we strengthen our schools and communities by making them a more open, inclusive and welcoming place for everyone.
Responding to unseen poetry  from Potent Whisper
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Responding to unseen poetry from Potent Whisper

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This Teach Peace lesson from Child Rights International Network (CRIN) invites learners to explore poetry on a citizenship theme. Potent Whisper is a London based Spoken Word artist. The lesson introduces his piece, The Rhyming Guide to Joining the Army!, and gives students the opportunity to respond to it as unseen poetry. The poem also raises important questions about under-18s recruitment to the armed forces and the way it is promoted to young people. Creative expression | Citizenship and action
Conscientious objectors
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Conscientious objectors

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A Teach Peace lesson from the Peace Pledge Union. Why did some people choose to be conscientious objectors in World War I and what did this mean for them? What does military conscription mean? Learners will reflect on their own principles and consider when they would be prepared to take action if confronted with military conscription. History & Society | Religion and ethics Talking and listening
Taking Action for Climate Justice
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Taking Action for Climate Justice

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Taking action for climate justice is a Teach Peace lesson from Quakers in Britain. People all around the world are taking action for climate justice. This lesson takes a close look at different challenges and approaches ranging from the Amazon’s indigenous defenders to divestment campaigners in Glasgow. Leaners will become expert in one case study and present it to their peers, evaluating diverse actions. Along the way, they will explore the data behind climate justice and concepts like the Global North and South and climate adaptation. Citizenship and action | Geography | History & Society | Talking and listening
How should we remember war?
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How should we remember war?

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A Teach Peace leeson from Facing History & Ourselves UK. How do we connect with the past? How have we memorialised war? Students will look at examples of memorials from World War I to Iraq and consider their messages, reflecting on how they think we should remember war. Facing History & Ourselves uses the lessons of history to challenge teachers and their students to stand up to bigotry and hate.