Archive for February, 2010

The Answer Sheet: Week of Jan. 30

Monday, February 8th, 2010

Did you take the Quiztory last week? Now it’s time to check your answers:

1. When did Iran’s military declare itself neutral, allowing revolutionaries to take control? Feb. 11, 1979

2. After Patty Hearst was arrested for participating in Symbionese Liberation Army robberies, what did she list as her occupation? Urban guerilla

3. The Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association planned a march on Jan. 30, 1972, in protest of what? Internment and mistreatment of prisoners

4. When Supreme Court Justice Owen Roberts voted with the liberal block in West Coast Hotel Co. v. Parrish in 1937, what did his decision become known as? “the switch in time that saved nine”

5. The date of Groundhog Day—Feb. 2—is derived from which Christian holiday? Candlemas or the Feast of the Purification of the Blessed Virgin

Related Link Resources
On This Day: Newspaper Heiress Patty Hearst Is Kidnapped
On This Day: 13 Irish Catholic Marchers Killed on Bloody Sunday
On This Day: Roosevelt Proposes “Court-Packing” Plan
On This Day: First Groundhog Day Celebrated

Quiztory: Week of Jan. 30

Friday, February 5th, 2010

Test your students’ knowledge of the notable events covered in findingDulcinea’s “On This Day” column this week with the Quiztory—a quiz on important events in history. A new Quiztory will run every Friday.

1. When did Iran’s military declare itself neutral, allowing revolutionaries to take control?
2. After Patty Hearst was arrested for participating in Symbionese Liberation Army robberies, what did she list as her occupation?
3. The Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association planned a march on Jan. 30, 1972, in protest of what?
4. When Supreme Court Justice Owen Roberts voted with the liberal block in West Coast Hotel Co. v. Parrish in 1937, what did his decision become known as?
5. The date of Groundhog Day—Feb. 2—is derived from which Christian holiday?

What’s Coming Up?

Next week, “On This Day” will examine the “Mayflower of Liberia,” the “British Invasion” and the execution of Mary, Queen of Scots. We’ll also take a look at John Quincy Adams, the release of U-2 pilot Francis Gary Powers, Nelson Mandela’s release from prison and the trial of Slobodan Milosevic.

Related Link Resources
On This Day column

Schools Around the World: Iran

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

Hasan Sarbakhshian/AP
A group of girls attend the first day of school in Tehran.

Feb. 11 marks the 31st anniversary of the Islamic revolution in Iran—and an opportunity for more unrest in the country. Following the controversial presidential election in June, the opposition Green Movement has been at constant odds with President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

On Feb. 2, the Financial Times reported that Iran’s fundamentalists charge the Green Movement with being “restricted to the educated middle class,” and failing “to convince the poorer sections of society to back the unrest.”

In response, Mir-Hossein Moussavi, leader of the Green Movement, is trying to soften the group’s radical message and extend its reach.

“The fate of the movement should be tied up to the fate of all walks of life, in particular the two groups which are in charge of economy and education, meaning labourers and teachers,” Moussavi said in an interview on his Web site, Kaleme, according to the Financial Times.

How have Iran’s teachers and students fared since the disputed election? In September 2009, Shervin Malekzadeh of Time Magazine spoke with teachers on the first day of class in Iran. “For many, school will be the first time to confront in a formal social setting what has happened to the country,” Malekzadeh wrote. He also cautioned that “there can be no moving on, not yet, because what has happened is not over.”

The Iranian Students’ News Agency provides photos of Iranian students and teachers in the school setting, and the British Council, the United Kingdom’s international organization for education and cultural relations, links to an overview of the education system in Iran.

But as Malekzadeh points out, “Without access to the daily lives of teachers and their students, studies on Iranian schooling have proven to reveal more about their authors and our shifting preconceptions of Iran than any sort of reality on the ground.”

Malekzadeh contends that the “country’s public schools face many of the same challenges as U.S. schools”: urban schools that are overcrowded and operate in shifts in order to serve too many students, teachers that are underpaid and demoralized by a constricted curriculum and students that are stifled by a lack of creativity and constant testing.

There seems to be more than these woes plaguing Iran’s schools, however. In 2007, part of a girls’ school collapsed, killing a 12-year-old and injuring five others, Shirzad Abdollahi reported for Payvand Iran News. Many of Iran’s schools are old and in disrepair; in Tehran, Abdollahi writes, “seven out of ten schools are more than 35 years old,” and “[f]acilities at girls’ schools are especially flawed, with poor provision for sports and recreation.”

Still, Iran’s political unrest may be the most immediate threat to its schools right now. In November 2009, the Associated Press reported that “Islamic religious authorities have begun tightening their grip on Iranian public schools.” Officials announced plans to place a cleric in every school, while Ahmadinejad “criticized Western influence in school curriculum.”

For a look at how politics shaped one Iranian girl’s childhood during the Islamic Revolution of 1979, read “Persepolis.” The autobiographical novel, written by Marjane Satrapi, uses stark black-and-white illustrations to tell her story of living in Tehran from ages 10 to 14.

Related Link Resources
Financial Times
Time
Iranian Students News Agency
British Council
Payvand Iran News
Breitbart

The Answer Sheet: Week of Jan. 23

Monday, February 1st, 2010

Did you take the Quiztory last week? Now it’s time to check your answers:

1. Who signed a confession in order to gain the release of the crew of the USS Pueblo, held hostage by North Korea? U.S. Army Major General Gilbert Woodward

2. Which Mormon businessman is credited with spreading the news of gold being discovered in California? Sam Brannan

3. What did American Brig. Gen. James Dozier credit for making him appear “more human” when he was held as a hostage by the Red Brigades, an Italian Marxist-Leninist terrorist group? A deck of cards

4. Who warned that the command module of the Apollo 1 presented a fire hazard? Dr. Frank J. Hendel

5. How long were NASA’s two rovers expected to function on Mars, and how long have they lasted? 3 months; 6 years

Related Link Resources
On This Day: USS Pueblo Seized by North Korea
On This Day: Gen. Dozier Rescued From Italian Terrorists
On This Day: Fire Kills Apollo 1 Crew