Human Rights Education Can Be Integrated Throughout the School Day

Peace educators can indeed stand up and cheer in response to the awarding of the 2004 Nobel Peace Prize to an African environmental activist and advocate for human rights. Wangari Maathai was honored as founder of the Green Belt Movement in Kenya, which works to bring democracy and human rights to central Africa. In 1991, she was arrested and imprisoned because of her protests against projects that would have cleared great expanses of forest. Only a campaign by Amnesty International helped free her from prison. Maathai earned a degree in biological sciences from Mount St. Scholastica in Kansas and a masters degree at the University of Pittsburgh. She is now Kenya's assistant minister for environment, natural resources, and wildlife ("Nobel Prizes," 2004).

ACEI continues to call our attention to the children of war, child soldiers, and refugees from the war-torn parts of the globe. ACEI also has taken on an advocacy role on their behalf. We should applaud these efforts for human rights. Research by Dennis Banks (see Online Resources), however, indicates that few state departments of education have actually mandated human rights education in their schools. Clearly, individual teachers will need to take responsibility for the integration of peace education and human rights education. ACEI's representatives to the United Nations, Lynn Staley and Eileen Bayer, issued a call to our membership that we cannot ignore. They ask: "Are we educating our children to be active advocates? Are we integrating global education and peace education into our curricula? Are we facilitating classroom projects whereby children help children?" They are collecting stories of any efforts by our membership to take on these responsibilities (Staley & Bayer, 2004).

On the bright side, progress has been made in fulfilling a basic right for children—the right to an education. In recent years, large groups of children in several African nations (Kenya, Malawi, Lesotho, Tanzania, and Uganda) were able to enter schools after their governments ended the requirement that parents pay a fee for their children's education. As a result, millions of children have showed up at their schools, resulting in 1st-grade classes of 100 children in some areas (Dugger, 2004).

By integrating human rights education and peace education into the daily fabric of our school day, we have the potential to take first steps toward the integration of human rights education. Here are a few ways that you can begin:
To sum up, teaching human rights education may begin in small places, our own classrooms. We may feel alone, but we can take heart in the memorable words of Eleanor Roosevelt, in a 1958 speech before the UN, that still ring true today:
Where after all, do human rights begin? In small places, close to home-so close and so small that they cannot be seen on any map of the world. Yet, they "are" the world of individual persons. . . Such are the places where every man, woman, and child seeks equal justice, equal opportunity, equal dignity without discrimination. Unless these rights have meaning there, they have little meaning elsewhere.

—Aline Stomfay-Stitz and Edyth Wheeler




References
Amnesty International. (2004). The Fourth R (newsletter), 14(1). Banks, D. (2004). Research on human rights education. Online at http://www.hrusa.org/PromisesToKeep.htm
Dugger, C.W. (Oct. 24, 2004). In Africa, free schools offer nourishment that feeds a different hunger. New York Times (International), Section BW, 1 & 10.
Morascini, J. (Fall 2004). A curriculum of hope for a peaceful world newsletter. Columbia, CT: Delta Kappa Gamma Society International.
Nobel Prizes Awarded in Peace and Environmentalism. (October 22, 2004). Chronicle of Higher Education, A22.
Roosevelt, E. (1958). Online at www.ervk.org/geohrquotes.htm. Val-kill, NY: Eleanor Roosevelt Center.
Staley, L., & Bayer, E. (2004). The role of educators in the 21st century. Childhood Education, 81, 32-D.
Wheeler, E. (2004). Conflict resolution in early childhood: Helping children understand, manage and resolve conflicts. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Merrill/Prentice Hall.