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GenEd: Lincy Foundation Awards Grant To The Genocide Education Proje

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  • GenEd: Lincy Foundation Awards Grant To The Genocide Education Proje

    ***PRESS RELEASE***

    April 17, 2007

    The Genocide Education Project
    51 Commonwealth Avenue
    San Francisco, CA 94118
    (415) 264-4203
    [email protected]
    www.GenocideEd ucation.org

    Contact: Raffi Momjian - [email protected]

    LINCY FOUNDATION AWARDS GRANT TO THE GENOCIDE EDUCATION PROJECT
    http://www.genocideeducation.org/pr/2007/0 4_17_2007.htm

    SAN FRANCISCO, CA - The Lincy Foundation has awarded a grant to
    The Genocide Education Project to support The Genocide Education
    Project's teacher training, outreach and educational resource
    development projects.

    "The Lincy Foundation's support is a vote of confidence for our
    rapidly developing organization and expands our ability to reach more
    teachers and schools to teach about the Armenian Genocide," stated
    Raffi Momjian, Executive Director of the Genocide Education Project.

    In addition to reaching out to public school districts about
    the importance of genocide and human rights education, organizing
    workshops for teachers, distributing resources and lesson plans to be
    used in the classroom, The Genocide Education Project also maintains
    a cyber-resource library site at www.TeachGenocide.com. This website
    offers teachers resources for classroom use about the Armenian Genocide
    and other gross human rights violations. Lesson plans and training
    opportunities are regularly posted on the site.

    The Genocide Education Project recently launched a new site,
    www.LearnGenocide.com, which serves as an online classroom for
    students to learn about the Armenian Genocide through a series of
    interactive activities. The Genocide Education Project also provides
    a comprehensive binder for educators, Human Rights and Genocide:
    A Case Study of the First Modern Genocide of the 20th Century, that
    includes several step-by-step lesson plans enabling teachers to give
    Armenian Genocide courses ranging from one to ten days.

    Collaborating with organizations such as The National Council for
    the Social Studies, the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, the
    Choices Program at Brown University, and Facing History and Ourselves,
    The Genocide Education Project has been able to successfully reach
    out to non-Armenian communities through out the country.

    Other ground-breaking work of The Genocide Education Project includes
    launching the first curriculum-based competition for educators who
    teach about the Armenian Case. The Aharonian Award challenges teachers
    to develop innovative and effective lesson plans about the Armenian
    Genocide, rewarding an educator each year whose efforts in this field
    are exemplary.

    "The workshops we conduct for educators at both national conferences
    and at the district level are one of this organization's most
    meaningful activities," said Sara Cohan, Education Director of The
    Genocide Education Project. "This year we are preparing to launch a
    series of online workshops to reach individual educators in districts
    that cannot afford face to face training sessions," she explained. "Our
    ultimate goal is to ensure that every teacher in the United States who
    wants to teach about the Armenian Genocide has the resources to do so."

    For more information about the work of The Genocide Education Project,
    please visit www.GenocideEducation.org.

    ###

    The Genocide Education Project is a nonprofit, tax-exempt 501(c)(3)
    organization that assists educators in teaching about human rights
    and genocide, particularly the Armenian Genocide, by developing and
    distributing instructional materials, providing access to teaching
    resources and organizing educational workshops.
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