On Violence and Conflict Resolution
LPF project summary November 1996
A. Background: Work on these resources began in early
1993. They examine violence, conflict, and conflict resolution
using a wide range of activities, perspectives, and materials.
Geared initially to high schools, they have also been used in
middle schools, colleges, and with youth groups. Lutheran Peace
Fellowship is a leading member of the Project, LPF's national
coordinator has served as project director from the beginning,
and LPF is adapting and testing project materials with youth
groups. These resources have been shared with more than three
hundred classes and youth groups, teachers and youth leaders,
and project members have been asked to discuss them in scores
of media interviews and community gatherings.
B. Major Features and
Strengths of Project Resources:
1. Emphasis on Involvement -- The unit makes ample use of audiovisuals, participatory activities,
and displays such as the "Path of Hope" to develop
and maintain interest and involvement. It seeks to foster young
people's direction and initiative, and behavioral and attitudinal
as well as cognitive learning.
2. Multiple Dimensions -- In our experience, young people learn best by examining conflict,
violence, and conflict resolution on a variety of levels and
dimensions: historical and contemporary; international, intergroup,
cultural, community, and interpersonal. The skills and lessons
developed on each level seem to be mutually reinforcing. This
suggests that school programs on violence and conflict resolution
are best organized "across the curriculum," where teachers
in the social studies, language arts, and other subjects, as
well as family life and counseling programs address the issues
in a serious, mutually reinforcing manner.
3. Focus on Solutions and Alternatives -- Another hypothesis confirmed by our
experience in class-rooms and youth groups is the importance
of discussing alternatives, solutions, citizenship skills, and
values at each stage of a program and not, as so often happens,
tacked on at the end. Skills, alternatives, and solutions developed
in these resources are also of a broader range than in most available
curricula.
4. Unit Adaptability -- Resources are designed to allow groups of lessons to be used
on their own or added to another curriculum. Lessons can be expanded
into two or three days and lesson plans often provide suggestions
for doing so. Most lessons offer alternative activities, audiovisuals,
approaches, etc., and reference is often made to helpful lessons
from other sources.
5. Cooperative Process -- Unlike many programs on these issues, we have been eager to
share the results of our efforts freely. And we have studied
materials from many other sources. Where an existing resource
uses an approach or activity that has merit, we recommend it
rather than "reinventing the wheel."
C. Response: Youth groups, students, and teachers
have had a very positive response to project activities and resources.
The success of the unit has led to requests for more than thirty
newspaper, radio, and television interviews including several
national programs. A classroom session of the project was featured
on the Pacific Northwest region's most widely seen public affairs
television program, The Compton Report.
D. Materials Available
on the Project: A Unit Overview summarizes more than thirty lessons and options
of the resource unit and graphically conveys the breadth of its
content and key relationships among the unit's themes.
An Information Packet with
sample lesson plans and handouts from each of the five section
of the unit is available for $3.
The Weapons Connection, an
article on the project's philosophy and origins was published
by the National Association of Social Workers (Spring 1994),
and in the peace education journal, COPRED Chronicle (December
1993).
The Compton Report TV show
featuring a classroom discussion from the project is available
(VHS video, 23 min., $10 rental).
Fact sheets (free), Info Packets
($3), and Bibliographies (free) on community violence, racial
and economic justice, international issues.
Project leadership: Glen Gersmehl, Director;
Wilda Luttermoser, Chair; Nan McMurry, Co-Chair; Kirstin Baron,
Monica Bradley, Cheri Davis, Glen Gersmehl, Larissa Heyman, Sonja
Josund, Abe Keller, Steve Lane, Andrea Langeland, Todd Nicholson,
Bob Wilson, Principal Writers. Project members: Fellowship of
Reconciliation, League of Women Voters of Seattle, Lutheran Peace
Fellowship, Peace Action of Washington, Peace & Justice Resource
Center, Peace Between People, Physicians for Social Responsibility,
United Nations Association. Project support has included grants
from the S.H. Cowell Foundation, Women of the ELCA (WELCA), and
the Board for Church in Society, Rocky Mountain Synod, ELCA.
For more information: contact Glen Gersmehl, LPF, 1710 11th Ave.,
Seattle, WA 98122; 206-349-2501 (1-5 pm); e-mail: lpf@ecunet.org