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July 31, 2007

[CRC] My Story

Hello! I plan on doing article #31 for my short machinima, it entitles "All children have a right to relax and play and join in a wide range of activies." I got the idea because Tabitha suggested it and I had a good idea for it!

My story starts out with a child working and laying bricks, about 10 seconds in it switches to a sapia tone style of children playing in a play ground and laughing ect. It keeps switching back and each time it switches back theirs more bricks filling up the screen, in the last scence theirs only one brick left to put in, you can see her eye looking through as she puts the last brick in.

That's my story great thanks! :D

[CRC] My Story for Machinima

My story identifies CRC Article # 12. You have the right to say your opinion when concerning decisions affecting you.

My story: (rough, still need to work out details)

Owen’s parents are divorced. His mom has custody of him and he is happy with that. That is what he wanted when they got divorced because his mom lived closer to his school. Now Owen has a problem. His mom wants to get a job in Europe and take Owen with her. Owen doesn't want to go to Europe because the only language he speaks is English and she is not going to England. Owen also does not want to move because he will be leaving his dad and friends behind.

Owen’s father is fighting his mother in court for custody so that Owen does not have to go to Europe. After the court case ended, Owen still had to go because the court wouldn't listen to Owen or his father. Owen said even if he didn't stay with his father, he could stay with other family members. The next week, Owen got on a plane and left the country.

Owen's rights were violated because the court did not want to listen to him. It is not about him deciding where he goes or not, but he should at least be considered and have his voice heard.

[sl] Sixth meeting with the U.S. Holocaust Museum summer Ambassador program

Last week, the Ambassadors met at the museum on their own to further refine their design concept and develop the asset list. A 28-page document was produced.

Today we reviewed the draft design document and asset list, talked about scaling back the concept, and clarified the details within the design document.

We decided to scale back in part by making the entry room more simple and to keep the before and after experience but only do the before within the Synagogue.

We met with the head builder from the Digital Refinery (center above) to explain the details, get their feedback and get help scaling back the core concepts.

July 30, 2007

[CRC] My story

So, here is what my story is probably going to end up being:

CRC article # 38 – in my own words, it would suck to be kidnapped and to shoot people by force

Beginning

- boy is working in a field
- truck pulls up beside him and people with guns make him get in
- boy learns from another kid in truck that they were kidnapped by an army
- fades to black as truck drives away

Middle

- scene blurs in
- shows kids shooting guns while walking forward as if assaulting somewhere, a few fall down and "die" (brief chaos)
- fades out

End

- fades in
- tells how many kids are kidnapped by military
- tells how many survive while fading to next
- fade to shot of battlefield with bodies everywhere

Hopefully I'll be able to make it under a minute and have people still get the point biggrin.gif

[CRC] Week 2 - day 6: Story for making

I have chosen to do my machinima on CRC article # 24 because I like the sound of this one compared to everything else, it gives out a good positive message and I think I will be able to make one good to watch.

Start Plan

- 11 year old boy called Tom is living very poor in a part in the world where there is nothing there.
- Wakes up each day at 5am until 9pm working to survive.
- The house he lives in is very small, he has no family, or enough money or food or drink to last for 2 days unless something happens.
- The place he is in gets to a temp of 30 Celsius max and the min at 17 C every day even worse when it’s raining.
- He works in the woods working all day with only 2 breaks and it is very hard working alone.

Middle

- So he is trying to turn things around by getting help to have a better environment and better health care which he and others need to do because the main people of the village wants money also to get better supplies etc.

End
- He searches for clean water and supplies in this old village with woods outside
- Then gets ready on his own each day for the next working days but getting harder as the week and months go by.
- By the end he is better off and helping others to do what he did in a way

I am still working on this story so it is still not right yet…to be continued…


Week 2 – Day 6


Well the day started off by gathering in the meeting room, then we went over the day and a new guest came called Barry Gkid, he introduced himself to the group which was fun. After that we were asked about the ideas of our stories to film in the coming weeks. After that Moo from the MG came and did an intro about how to start making machinimas for the next week, and she told us useful stuff which I thought was great. After 12pm we asked questions and tips for making machinimas, then after 12:30pm we gathered at the cinema screen to watch a moo movie about making movies like a tutorial. Then we were asked to e-mail ours stories and blog it. That was the end of day 6. Tomorrow we are story boarding! Cool!

[CRC] The right I chose, and why.

The article I have identified and plan on doing a machinima on is CRC article # 31 which is "All children have a right to relax and play, and to join a wide range of activities (Child-friendly version)”.

There is a purpose why I chose this right, so I would really like to get down to the reasoning and facts about why children should have this right. Out of all the topics, this one stuck out to me, because I believe this right is true. Children do need to relax and play and just be a kid! Childhood will teach them things that could become useful in the world, like when they grow up and have kids, they could let their child have a regular childhood as well. Children playing and obeying in activities is important. This is why I’m gonna use this article as the focus of my machinima :)

By: bbelevenslashsixtytwo Ayresbiggrin.gifbiggrin.gifbiggrin.gif

[CRC] My article and story

Article 33: The government should provide ways of protecting you from dangerous drugs.

I want to do a machinima based on this article because it has to do with something that happened in my neighborhood, and I hear everyday some dangerous drug is found in the world.

My story is a about an 11-year old kid, who has a rough day at school. The kid walks up to a bad-looking person, and the bad person gives the kid white powder, and tells him to breath it in. The next day, the kid dies, and it is reported all over the news. Unfortunately, the government says that they are doing all they can, and they don't have the money to protect people from dangerous drugs, when they are lining their pockets with cash.

(to be continued....)

July 28, 2007

[CRC] Day 5 - last day of week 1

Wow this week has gone really fast! It’s been great fun joining in each day with a new challenge or tasks. On my last day of week 1 we started with an activity called Human Barometer, which was cool because we had to claim either agree, disagree or not sure about on 4 statements, then we had to stand on the corresponding platform. After that we brainstorm our ideas on what stories we are going to do for our machinima, that was ok until we had to relog because of an SL downtime. Once I logged in again with everyone else we started part 2, which included a special guest from the main grid and another surprise Linden guest at the dance party afterwards, which was great to bring the hardworking week to a close. We also watched A Child’s War, which I was a part of with the Gkids a couple of months ago. I was really glad I saw myself in Red.

Looking forward to next week which I think will be another great camp week.
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July 27, 2007

[CRC] Summary of first week at CRC Machinima Camp

Hi everyone!

This is Tabitha Gkid, I am here to report on our first week of CRC Machinima Camp, and what a wonderful first week, indeed!

On Day 1, each camper did a “show and tell” exercise. Every camper got up to introduce him/herself, and shared something from their inventory with the rest of the group. That was a lot of fun and we got to see some interesting “prized possessions” from a few of the campers.

Here is a snapshot of us going through the CRC, putting up a poster version of the child-friendly version, soon after everyone had agreed to the 3 GK guidelines – One mic, safe space and participation!

Here is Scott standing closer to the poster for a better look:

Before everyone left, we had an optional dance party for everyone to get to know each other.

Thanks Daniel Voyager for taking the snapshot!

On Day 2, we did a quick warm up activity, which surprised a few campers...
The group was asked to line up in a row from beginning of the year to the end of the year, according to their birthdays.

2 campers found that they had the same birthday! While the rest were scattered most in the beginning and end of the year.

Then, the campers were asked to discuss what they think are "human needs" and "human wants". We had it listed on the board, and the discussion went a bit over time but it was well worth it. Funny enough, MONEY was both listed as a human need and human want.

Then the campers were asked to put on their "lawmakers" thinking cap, as you can see Meghan wearing below as a example, to write their own children's rights declaration in their own words.

On Day 3, Campers played the "Name That Article" game, where they were broken into smaller groups, and were each given a scenario where a child's rights were violated. The campers also brainstormed on how they would translate a real-life story taken from UNICEF's Voices of Youth website to a snapshot display in Teen Second Life.

Here are some examples:

Fatima's story by Totem, Joey and Echo:

Ishen's story by Tecno and bb:

Lam's story by Dragon and Mike:

Ali's story by Daniel Voyager, Tonyo and Ashtar:

On Day 4, being the only day we had to explore in depth on an issue that matters to all of us - child labor, and how it relates to the CRC.

The campers were asked to do multiple things, and they all got through the activities with huge success!

First, they were all given a real life story of a young girl's struggle in Brazil.

The teams decided on what they would do if we were to replicate her story in a machinima video, what props, objects, music, dialogue, and etc, would be needed, and then we discussed about her rights as a child, we identified numerous articles in the CRC that would relate to her situation, and at the end, each camper was asked to finish a sentence beginning with...

1. One thing I learned is...
2. I now feel that......
3. I appreciate that the fact that...
4. I wish that...
5. One thing that I would like to learn about this issue is......

Here are some examples:

Towards the end of day 4, we did a role play activity where each camper was asked to MAKE TOYS AS FAST AND ACCURATELY without a break or time to chat, as if they were working in a toy factory under harsh conditions.

Here is a picture of the massive pile of dollhouses the campers were asked to build:

The activity helped campers to put themselves in someone else's shoe, and learned that although it was a mock-version of what a real working child's life would be, we had a lot of strong feedback.

On day 5, we did a quick warm up activity called the Human Barometer. Campers were asked to listen to a statement, think about it, and to stand on the platform if they agree, disagree, or is unsure about the statement.

Then for the rest of the day, we went around one by one and helped each other brainstorm on what RIGHT they want to identify in their machinima, and for some, what story they would like to create.

Lastly, we had Machinima Guru, also known as Moo Money on the main grid, introduced herself to the campers for the first time, and we all watched A Child's War, a short machinima made by teens in our Virtual Video Project machinima program.

We ended with a great sense of accomplishment, and everyone looks forward to Machinima Guru's lessons for week 2. Stay tuned for the next weekly update!

Cheers,

Tabitha

[CRC] Last day of first week!

Today was the last day of the first week. It was very fun today. I can't wait until next week when we start pre-production!

July 26, 2007

[CRC] Child Labor Around the World

Aamina wakes up everyday. She is sad because she knows she has to walk 3 1/2 miles to go to work. She works in a clothing factory hand sewing seams onto socks.

Aamina is an 11-year-old girl from Ethiopia. She is one of the 43% of Ethiopian children who have to work to survive. If she cannot work, she cannot buy food. If she cannot buy food, she will starve and die. Aamina doesn't have the opportunity to go to school because she is working 10-hour-a-day shifts.

Aamina wishes she didn't have to work and she could go to school, learn, and make friends. Aamina wishes she had a childhood. Aamina wants her rights as a human.

In Ethiopia, 43% of children between the ages of 5-11 have to go to work everyday for at least one hour a day.

I wrote this story to show how miserable kids are to work. They deserve a childhood. They deserve the basic human rights.

[CRC] Day 4 + Homework Task

Well on day 4 we learned about child labour which was a new area for me. I really enjoyed the tasks except when we all had to make doll houses, which was a job. The gkids was telling us and getting people to hurry – this was part of our task. A few crashes again but we all managed to log in again within seconds :). Again we were given our little group stories to work on and we came up with ideas on how we could solve it. Then another task during the camp today was finding well-known brands in our house, and reporting back to the group, that was the best part of today.

Homework task is this: my idea

I have learnt al ot about human rights and what the CRC means and this includes how poor people can get by child labour in the world.

Ok my story is this a boy who is 11 years old and living in a poor environment like in a poor area of the world. And he wakes up during the night at 1am each day and he is very poor with no money, no friends, no food or drink because that comes every 10 days at the most fresh supplies. He goes to work at night alone into the woods and finds his own work or sometimes he chooses to work with others. He works from 1am to 8pm each day except when he is ill or he can't walk etc. He comes home getting ready for the next day but getting weaker everyday.

So a fact for that would be men and women should get paid enough to live on and have a good life. The reason is that companies or factories near the area should get older workers I think. :)

I think that my story would be a nice idea to film as an CRC at the camp showing our daily lifestyles living in this part of the world - just an idea for now

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[CRC] CRC Day 4

One day a child woke up at 6 am and started the walk to the factory he worked at. He finally arrived at 8, and got to work. He was forced to make dollhouses for $3 a day by the two women and the cross dressing man who owned the factory. At around noon, two men came in with guns and kidnapped all the children in the factory, and forced them to be in their army. By the end of the day, all the children from the factory were dead, along with many important people and storeowners.

I did the story so it's not just one thing; it starts out as one and ends as another so it also has 2 different topics to make it a bit longer. Child labor, and kidnapping children for military recruit. These are probably the 2 things I feel strongest about.

[CRC] My story - example on child labor

A young boy from Latin America goes outside to pick up some food a crow had dropped which probably came from the dump yard about 2 miles away. Today this boy was the lucky one. Everyday people have to walk to the dump yard and back, which wastes whatever calories and food they’ve consumed. Everyday these people starve, or die from the smallest thing as food poisoning because their immune systems are not strong enough, and they are not getting the nourishment their bodies need to survive. These people also die from other simple diseases that we don’t even need medicine for. That’s my story.

[CRC] Child Labor

Today in the CRC machinima camp, we learned all about child labor. First we read an article and brainstormed about what it would take to make a machinima based on it. After that little warm up activity we went back inside and thought about big brand name clothing companies and looked at our real life clothes and realized that almost all of them outsourced, and may even be hiring children in sweatshops! This is horrible! For the next activity, we went outside and pretended to be in a sweatshop building dollhouses. We had to build as many doll houses from scratch as possible in the limited amount of time we had. And we had to do all this with the instructor being cruel factory managers. Although I have to admit I wasn't very intimidated by them demanding in all caps. biggrin.gif Well, over all the day was really interesting and I really enjoyed learning about child labor. It is a very important topic to be aware of and understand!

[CRC] Time upon a once.

Here is my homework assignment for today…a story:
Once upon a time an 8 year old girl woke up at 7AM to the smell of burning tires and over flooding sewers. She had no breakfast and immediately went to the dump. When she got there a dump truck was pulling up to dump more garbage in the huge polluted pile. She heard screams of children getting crushed under the pressure of the garbage being poured on them. She ran to the pile and spent the whole day savaging for bottles and cans only to make 3$ to buy a basic dinner. After dinner she went to bed and only hoped tomorrow would hold a brighter future.

The End!

July 25, 2007

[CRC] Day 3 - At Camp

Well before it started at 11am today, I decided to show up early and to chat with some people about the previous days. I had great feedback from them and we found out some news before we started.

Ok to start off - we again gathered in the meeting and seating area to find out what we were going to do today. Including making our first build from a story! We had to take snapshots and tell everyone what it was about. Also most of today was group work which was cool biggrin.gif. It included working as a pair and working in groups taking snapshots and making stories, and also working in IMs. Everyone worked hard including my teammates, and I really enjoyed the day at camp without any crashes or problems; except from a few. About 12:30pm we went to watch two fun movies, which finished off the day with a high.

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[CRC] Wednesday, July 25th

It was another day at camp, and we got to build today! Lol, and we also did some stories, and stuff like that which was truly fun. We were in the theatre again today :) At the end someone asked me to do an interview for Second Life News Journal! I’m happy for that, and I can’t wait!

[CRC] Making scenes

Today in the machinima camp, we reviewed real life articles that related to the CRC. Then based on what we read, we had to make a scene and take a screen shot of it. We were split into groups and my group had to make a scene about contaminated water and health issues. For my part of the scene, I made an icky steaming green pond and a bucket full of the water from it. I thought it was pretty cool, but we didn't really have much time, so we couldn't finish everything. But perhaps we were just putting in too much detail! Well, when we finally finished I was the one who took the screen shot, which was fun, but it was a bit frustrating because no one would get out of the scene, so there were a whole bunch of hi-tech avatars in our scene in a third world country! But after much effort, they all moved and our picture was pretty good I think.

[CRC] Day the Third

When I got onto SL this afternoon in my time zone, I was greeted by a message saying we would get to build something. And we did
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We ended up working in groups of 2, and then we got real life stories that we had to make into a snapshot. Our group got a story about people whose latrines weren't clean and almost everyone ended up getting worms and a lot of them died. So we just took a snapshot of a kid sitting on a dirty latrine we made. But anyways, we're supposed to start thinking about what rights we may want to talk about in our machinima video, and I'm probably going to do something on Article #38, just so I can do something with action that will get people to pay attention. Hopefully we'll do something else tomorrow like building so we actually get to go out and do something!

[CRC] CRC Right

The most important CRC right to me is the one that states no slavery. It is very important that this no longer happens in our society. I want to do something on this right for my machinima, I hope.

July 24, 2007

[CRC] One very crazy day

Today at CRC Machinima Camp it was a bit crazy. I got there a bit late because of so much lag getting to the room. Once we were there, the people who weren't there before were introduced, then we did an activity that tried our cooperation. We all had to line up according to birthdates and me and Echolon found out we had the same birthday. Weird.

After that we found pictures of happy and sad kids to make a billboard (I think).

Then we made 2 lists of human wants and needs and shared them. I am pretty sure we were going to do another activity, but we all crashed so we lost 10 minutes and skipped it. Since we skipped it we went straight to the movie theater and watched some machinima. Interesting movie.

Well, I hope tommorow isn't as crazy as today with all the crashing and such! biggrin.gif

Till next time,
Nick

[CRC] Day #2

I showed up early today, and there were less people there than yesterday, so I ended up playing with my plane for about 30 minutes waiting to start. But anyways, once it actually started we got to do some pretty fun stuff. Near the beginning we all lined up in order by our birthdays which somehow ended up being fun, we listed things that people want and need (the best human want is pie), we got into groups and found pictures of kids on the UNICEF website, and near the end we went to the theater and watched a machinima. We also decided on which parts of the CRC should be made into laws. Can't wait for tomorrow!

[CRC] Day 1 and Day 2 at CRC Machinima Camp 2007

Day 1:

I arrived at 11am on time and we started the camp inside a nice meeting room with loads of different campers from different parts around the world – wow!
After about 10 minutes we started to have show and tell session, which was great because I told the group what I like doing and I love helping, etc. Then we went through the step by step on rules and guidelines. After 11am we talked about rights and people’s views on topics, which was fun, then we were told to move to the theatre to watch 3 films, which were very fun to watch. I learned a lot, which I did not know before. I think it was a great start to the CRC Machinima camp of 2007.

Day 2

I arrived at 11am and we gathered in the seating/meeting area. We had to talk about the rights and needs today in our topics. After that we did a birthday check when people’s birthdays were during the year, which was ok but my birthday (December) didn’t come on until late during the task. After that we were giving our views on topics about human rights before getting showed on a slide what we came up with. Then about 12:10pm we went to the theatre to watch 2 movies, which again was really fun to enjoy and learn from.
The downsides of today and yesterday were when I crashed, the sim was lagging also which caused some problems with me and others, but I hope that will improve in the coming days but overall it was another great day! biggrin.gif

[CRC] Great!

The workshop we had on the 24th of July was great! Tabitha and the other CRC people really taught us something we can apply to real life and second life.

For example, like how to get things done with cooperation and faster! We also talked about human needs which was a very important topic. And she let me introduce myself today since I couldn't yesterday.

Thanks Tabitha and all the CRC members! See you next class!

[CRC] Day 1: First Impressions

The first day of the second Global Kids camp was great :D We all introduced ourselves and showed something from our own inventory. Glad we did, seeing how I only knew a handful of residents who are part of the camp. Mercury is still as helpful as ever and working with new GKids was great, they also seem really nice. Can't wait for the next day of camp.

July 23, 2007

[CRC] The Convention on the Rights of the Child Summer Camp has begun!

It seems like just yesterday I was sitting around the campfire of Camp GK 2006, and going over what we had done that day. It's been over a year, and I'm happy to say that I'm reporting for the CRC Machinima camp this year smile.gif! The first day of camp went really well, and Tabitha, Meghan, and Mercury all did amazing jobs.

The day started out great! Tabitha, Meghan, and Mercury all introduced themselves to the campers, and began to explain the rules and guidelines for camp this year, (Safe Space, One Mic, Participation, PBC [people before computers]). After we all understood and discussed the rules, we all got to introduce ourselves, and show an item that represented us. We saw many different things; a car, a necklace, some posters, and some pretty intresting shoestongue.gif. We all then moved to the amazing movie theater that Brooke Barmy put together for the camp, and watched some movies on Child Rights. After a discussion on them; it was time to close up for the day! It went by rather fast, and I'm looking forward to many more sessions of the camp. :)

[CRC] First Day

Not bad for a camp inside a video game community. I arrived about fifteen minutes early, and for the time I was there we learned who our leaders were, what the guidelines of the camp were, and a basic definition of what the CRC and machinima were. After that I had to leave my computer for a work meeting, but upon returning I was able to read the chat log to see who my fellow campers were and what they were capable of. It'll be interesting to see how this camp progresses over the next few weeks.

[CRC] My First Day

My first day at the CRC Machinima Camp was incredible. Global Kids really knows how to do a good event. biggrin.gif Everyone was very nice, except for Scott, because he rezzed something with beer in floating text. But he didn’t know and apologized. Overall, it was great, especially the movies! The movie theater idea was awesome!

[CRC] First day of camp!

Today was the first day of camp! ohmy.gif Hello everyone my name is Scott Deharo on the teen grid, I’m a 14 year old teen! The first day of camp was absolutely fantastic! We started in a little circle introducing what CRC is and introducing ourselves.

After that we moved into the theater to watch 3 videos on human rights. They were all made by teens and absolutely fantastic!

After we watched the videos we went back into the first room to sum things up, then Mercury span some awesome tunes and we danced!

That's all for today! I plan on blogging a lot about the camp! Thanks for reading :D!

[CRC] First Day

Today was an interesting day. Not what I expected. At first we learned about the camp and the Convention on the Rights of the Child, then we introduced each other and did show and tell. Then we watched 3 movies in the theater and Tabitha got our opinions on them. Overall, it was good. Now I'm off to a GK Dance Party!

[CRC] It be the first of them days...

First day of the camp is now behind. It was pretty cool, everyone introduced each other and we also watched some videos. Good ones, indeed. Brooke had also built us an awesome cinema to watch them in.

[CRC] The first day

Thankfully there was plenty of time to get to know everyone and send around friend requests, and I got there early so I got to mess around with a few of the others and chat. We talked about the rules on GK, just so we all know what we can and can't do. We also went over to a theater made by Brooke Barney and watched some human rights videos made by other kids, and said what we liked and didn't like about them so we could learn more about making movies. One of the best parts was when we did a show and tell thing where one person went up and told everyone something about themselves and showed something cool they made, and everyone had all kinds of different things, one person had a car, others had clothes, just all kinds of stuff.
We also had a lot of questions about machinimas answered, although one of mine is supposed to be answered later, so I'll just have to wait. But anyways, it was really fun, and I can't wait for tomorrow!

July 20, 2007

[sl] Fifth meeting with the U.S. Holocaust Museum summer Ambassador program

Today was our fifth meeting of the program. We focused on refining the idea so we could develop a design document which would provide details on the project and offer an asset list. We also used Skype for video conferencing, which was excellent (but now we have to watch what we look like at our computers!).

[sl] Using Skype video to teleconference with Museum

Today we figured out how to use the video conferencing capabilities in Skype to allow the Ambassadors to see us in NYC and, for the first time, for us to see them. It added a considerable amount to the program, providing us with visual information that was invaluable.

July 19, 2007

[sl] Teen Second Life Tour!

This morning, I had the opportunity to give students in Washington, DC, a tour of Teen Second Life. The purpose of the tour was to inspire them for their upcoming project with the Holocaust Museum and to spark thoughts and ideas that they themselves could take advantage of when creating their project. I wanted to show the students the best of the best, so I took them to the following locations:

Valhalla
This area was created by Buzzcut Andalso, and is themed to resemble a Viking village. Some residents come here to roleplay as Vikings and socialize.

Dernier Cri
Dernier Cri is a private island owned by Asuka Martin, one of the most popular and successful clothing designers on the Teen Grid. The island is a commercial shopping district composed of various well-known content creators.

Behemoth
This simulator is public and owned by Linden Lab. It was named after one of the very first teens on this grid – Malarthi Behemoth. The sim has since been preserved as a forest-themed area as per the request of Malarthi. Many residents come here to roleplay as mythical creatures and ride around in vehicles.

Furry Plateau / Unreal
Furry Plateau is a themed community, targeting those residents who have anthropomorphic avatars. In this area, there are shops and areas in which to socialize and hang out. This sim, which is named “Unreal” and owned by Switch Spectre, has a fantasy theme to it. There is a cave filled with crystal formations to the South East, and a sunken ship to the East, underwater.

Alcove
Like Dernier Cri, Alcove is a commercial sim, consisting of various clothing stores and shops containing other content. The theme of this sim is urban with an industrial flair.

Ivory Tower
The Ivory Tower is a walkthrough building tutorial that was brought over from the main grid. Almost everything inside the building is interactive.

All if these locations are immersive environments that are both aesthetically pleasing and easy to navigate. At some locations, there were objects which the students could interact with, which proved to be very helpful during their brainstorming and reflection process at the end of the tour. They understood a variety of logistics and overall technicalities that are either feasible or not within the space. The ideas they were coming up with at the end of the tour were all very exciting, and they all agreed that the tour helped them to further understand how things work in Second Life. I can't wait to see what they come up with for their project!

[sl] Lessons on Holocaust Education and Simulations

Working with the U.S. Holocaust Museum has taught us a lot about simulations. If you have never been to the museum in D.C., much of it is essentially a brilliant simulation to teach you the history of the period. But what are the ethics of putting someone in someone else's shoe - when is it appropriate and when it insulting, or misleading? These lessons are important for those like us in Second Life bringing real world content into Second Life leveraging its role playing and simulation abilities.

The U.S. Holocaust Museum has prepared this guide for educators, which is very useful in addressing these issues:

1. Define the term “Holocaust.”
The Holocaust refers to a specific genocidal event in twentieth-century history: the state-sponsored, systematic persecution and annihilation of European Jewry by Nazi Germany and its collaborators between 1933 and 1945. Jews were the primary victims—6 million were murdered; Gypsies, the handicapped, and Poles were also targeted for destruction or decimation for racial, ethnic, or national reasons. Millions more, including homosexuals, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Soviet prisoners of war, and
political dissidents, also suffered grievous oppression and death under Nazi tyranny.

2. Avoid comparisons of pain.
A study of the Holocaust should always highlight the different policies carried out by the Nazi regime toward various groups of people; however, these distinctions should not be presented as a basis for comparison of suffering between those groups. Similarly, one cannot presume that the horror of an individual, family, or community destroyed by the Nazis was any greater than that experienced by victims of other genocides. Avoid generalizations that suggest exclusivity such as “the victims of the Holocaust suffered the most cruelty ever faced by a people in the history of humanity.”

3. Avoid simple answers to complex history.
A study of the Holocaust raises difficult questions about human behavior, and it often involves complicated answers as to why events occurred. Be wary of oversimplifications. Allow students to contemplate the various factors that contributed to the Holocaust; do not attempt to reduce Holocaust history to one or two catalysts in isolation from the other factors that came into play. For example, the Holocaust was not simply the logical and inevitable consequence of unbridled racism.

Rather, racism combined with centuries-old bigotry and antisemitism; renewed by a nationalistic fervor that emerged in Europe in the latter half of the nineteenth century; fueled by Germany’s defeat in World War I and its national humiliation following the Treaty of Versailles; exacerbated by worldwide economic hard times, the ineffectiveness of the Weimar Republic, and international indifference; and catalyzed by the political charisma and manipulative propaganda of Adolf Hitler’s Nazi regime contributed to the occurrence of the Holocaust.

4. Just because it happened does not mean it was inevitable.
Too often students have the simplistic impression that the Holocaust was inevitable. Just because a historical event took place, and it was documented in textbooks and on film, does not mean that it had to happen. This seemingly obvious concept is often overlooked by students and teachers alike. The Holocaust took place because individuals, groups, and nations made decisions to act or not to act. By focusing on those decisions, you gain insight into history and human nature and can better help your students to become critical thinkers.

5. Strive for precision of language.
Any study of the Holocaust touches upon nuances of human behavior. Because of the complexity of the history, there is a temptation to overgeneralize and thus to distort the facts (e.g., “all concentration camps were killing centers” or “all Germans were collaborators”). Rather, you must strive to help your students clarify the information presented and encourage them to distinguish the differences between prejudice and discrimination, collaborators and bystanders, armed and spiritual resistance, direct orders and assumed orders, concentration camps and killing centers, and guilt and responsibility.

Words that describe human behavior often have multiple meanings. Resistance, for example, usually refers to a physical act of armed revolt. During the Holocaust, it also encompassed partisan activity; the smuggling of messages, food, and weapons; and actual military engagement. But resistance also embraced willful disobedience such as continuing to practice religious and cultural traditions in defiance of the rules or creating fine art, music, and poetry inside ghettos and concentration camps. For many, simply maintaining the will to remain alive in the face of abject brutality was an act of spiritual resistance.

6. Make careful distinctions about sources of information.
Students need practice in distinguishing between fact, opinion, and fiction; between primary and secondary sources; and between types of evidence such as court testimonies, oral histories, and other written documents. Hermeneutics—the science of interpretation—should be called into play to help guide your students in their analysis of sources. Students should be encouraged to consider why a particular text was written, who wrote it, who the intended audience was, whether there were any biases inherent in the information, whether any gaps occurred in discussion, whether omissions in certain passages were inadvertent or not, and how the information has been used to interpret various events.

Because scholars often base their research on different bodies of information, varying interpretations of history can emerge. Consequently, all interpretations are subject to analytical evaluation. Only by refining their own “hermeneutic of suspicion” can students mature into readers who discern the difference between legitimate scholars who present competing historical interpretations and those who distort or deny historical fact for personal or political gain.

7. Try to avoid stereotypical descriptions.
Though all Jews were targeted for destruction by the Nazis, the experiences of all Jews were not the same. Simplistic views and stereotyping take place when groups of people are viewed as monolithic in attitudes and actions. How ethnic groups or social clusters are labeled and portrayed in school curricula has a direct impact on how students perceive groups in their daily lives. Remind your students that, although members of a group may share common experiences and beliefs, generalizations about them, without benefit of modifying or qualifying terms (e.g.,“sometimes,” “usually,” “in many cases but not all”) tend to stereotype group behavior and distort historical reality. Thus, all Germans cannot be characterized as Nazis nor should any nationality be reduced to a singular or one-dimensional description.

8. Do not romanticize history to engage students’ interest.
People who risked their lives to rescue victims of Nazi oppression provide useful, important, and compelling role models for students. However, given that only a small fraction of non-Jews under Nazi occupation helped to rescue Jews, an overemphasis on heroic tales in a unit on the Holocaust can result in an inaccurate and unbalanced account of the history. Similarly, in exposing students to the worst aspects of human nature as revealed in the history of the Holocaust, you run the risk of fostering cynicism in your students. Accuracy of fact along with a balanced perspective on the history must be priorities for any teacher.

9. Contextualize the history you are teaching.
Events of the Holocaust and, particularly, how individuals and organizations behaved at that time, should be placed in historical context. The occurrence of the Holocaust must be studied in the context of European history as a whole to give students a perspective on the precedents and circumstances that may have contributed to it.

Similarly, study of the Holocaust should be viewed within a contemporaneous context, so students can begin to comprehend the circumstances that encouraged or discouraged particular actions or events. Frame your approach to specific events and acts of complicity or defiance by considering when and where an act took place; the immediate consequences to oneself and one’s family of one’s actions; the impact of contemporaneous events; the degree of control the Nazis had on a country or local population; the cultural attitudes of particular native populations historically toward different victim groups; and the availability, effectiveness, and risk of potential hiding places.

Students should be reminded that individuals and groups do not always fit neatly into categories of behavior. The very same people did not always act consistently as “bystanders,” “collaborators,” “perpetrators,” or “rescuers.” Individuals and groups often behaved differently depending upon changing events and circumstances. The same person who in 1933 might have stood by and remained uninvolved while witnessing social discrimination of Jews might later have joined up with the SA and become a collaborator or have been moved to dissent vocally or act in defense of Jewish friends and neighbors.

Encourage your students not to categorize groups of people only on the basis of their experiences during the Holocaust: contextualization is critical so that victims are not perceived only as victims. The fact that Jews were the central victims of the Nazi regime should not obscure the vibrant culture and long history of Jews in Europe prior to the Nazi era. By exposing students to some of the cultural contributions and achievements of 2,000 years of European Jewish life, you help them to balance their perception of Jews as victims and to better appreciate the traumatic disruption in Jewish history caused by the Holocaust.

Similarly, students may know very little about Gypsies (Roma and Sinti) except for the negative images and derogatory descriptions promulgated by the Nazis. Students would benefit from a broader viewpoint, learning something about Gypsy history and culture as well as understanding the diverse ways of life among different Gypsy groups.

10. Translate statistics into people.
In any study of the Holocaust, the sheer number of victims challenges easy comprehension. You need to show that individual people—families of grandparents, parents, and children—are behind the statistics and to emphasize that within the larger historical narrative is a diversity of personal experience. Precisely because they portray people in the fullness of their lives and not just as victims, first-person accounts and memoir literature provide students with a way of making meaning out of collective numbers and give individual voices to a collective experience. Although students should be careful about overgeneralizing from first-person accounts such as those from survivors, journalists, relief workers, bystanders, and liberators, personal accounts help students get beyond statistics and make historical events of the Holocaust more immediate and more personal.

11. Be sensitive to appropriate written and audiovisual content.
One of the primary concerns of educators teaching the history of the Holocaust is how to present horrific images in a sensitive and appropriate manner. Graphic material should be used judiciously and only to the extent necessary to achieve the objective of the lesson. You should remind yourself that each student and each class is different and that what seems appropriate for one may not be appropriate for all.

Students are essentially a “captive audience.” When you assault them with images of horror for which they are unprepared, you violate a basic trust: the obligation of a teacher to provide a “safe” learning environment. The assumption that all students will seek to understand human behavior after being exposed to horrible images is fallacious. Some students may be so appalled by images of brutality and mass murder that they are discouraged from studying the subject further. Others may become fascinated in a more voyeuristic fashion, subordinating further critical analysis of the history to the superficial titillation of looking at images of starvation, disfigurement, and death. Though they can be powerful tools, shocking images of mass killings and barbarisms should not overwhelm a student’s awareness of the broader scope of events within Holocaust history. Try to select images and texts that do not exploit the students’ emotional vulnerability or that might be construed as disrespectful of the victims themselves.

12. Strive for balance in establishing whose perspective informs your study of the Holocaust.
Often, too great an emphasis is placed on the victims of Nazi aggression rather than on the victimizers who forced people to make impossible choices or simply left them with no choice to make. Most students express empathy for victims of mass murder. But it is not uncommon for students to assume that the victims may have done something to justify the actions against them and, thus, to place inappropriate blame on the victims themselves.

There is also a tendency among students to glorify power, even when it is used to kill innocent people. Many teachers indicate that their students are intrigued and, in some cases, intellectually seduced by the symbols of power that pervaded Nazi propaganda (e.g., the swastika and/or Nazi flags, regalia, slogans, rituals, and music). Rather than highlight the trappings of Nazi power, you should ask your students to evaluate how such elements are used by governments (including our own) to build, protect, and mobilize a society. Students should also be encouraged to contemplate how such elements can be abused and manipulated by governments to implement and legitimize acts of terror and even genocide.

In any review of the propaganda used to promote Nazi ideology—Nazi stereotypes of targeted victim groups and the Hitler regime’s justifications for persecution and murder—you need to remind your students that just because such policies and beliefs are under discussion in class does not mean they are acceptable. Furthermore, any study of the Holocaust should attempt to portray all individuals, especially the victims and the perpetrators of violence, as human beings who are capable of moral judgment and independent decision making.

13. Select appropriate learning activities.
Word scrambles, crossword puzzles, and other gimmicky exercises tend not to encourage critical analysis but lead instead to low-level types of thinking and, in the case of Holocaust curricula, trivialize the history. When the effects of a particular activity, even when popular with you and your students, run counter to the rationale for studying the history, then that activity should not be used.

Similarly, activities that encourage students to construct models of killing centers should also be reconsidered because any assignment along this line will almost inevitably end up being simplistic, time-consuming, and tangential to the educational objectives for studying the history of the Holocaust.

Thought-provoking learning activities are preferred, but even here, there are pitfalls to avoid. In studying complex human behavior, many teachers rely upon simulation exercises meant to help students “experience” unfamiliar situations. Even when great care is taken to prepare a class for such an activity, simulating experiences from the Holocaust remains pedagogically unsound. The activity may engage students, but they often forget the purpose of the lesson and, even worse, they are left with the impression at the conclusion of the activity that they now know what it was like during the Holocaust. Holocaust survivors and eyewitnesses are among the first to indicate the grave difficulty of finding words to describe their experiences. It is virtually impossible to simulate accurately what it was like to live on a daily basis with fear, hunger, disease, unfathomable loss, and the unrelenting threat of abject brutality and death.

An additional problem with trying to simulate situations from the Holocaust is that complex events and actions are oversimplified, and students are left with a skewed view of history. Because there are numerous primary source accounts, both written and visual, as well as survivors and eyewitnesses who can describe actual choices faced and made by individuals, groups, and nations during this period, you should draw upon these resources and refrain from simulation games that lead to a trivialization of the subject matter.

Rather than use simulation activities that attempt to re-create situations from the Holocaust, teachers can, through the use of reflective writing assignments or in-class discussion, ask students to empathize with the experiences of those who lived through the Holocaust era. Students can be encouraged to explore varying aspects of human behavior such as fear, scapegoating, conflict resolution, and difficult decision making or to consider various perspectives on a particular event or historical experience.

14. Reinforce the objectives of your lesson plan.

As in all teaching situations, the opening and closing lessons are critically important. A strong opening should serve to dispel misinformation students may have prior to studying the Holocaust.

It should set a reflective tone, move students from passive to active learning, indicate to students that their ideas and opinions matter, and establish that this history has multiple ramifications for them as individuals and as members of society as a whole.

Your closing lesson should encourage further examination of Holocaust history, literature, and art.

A strong closing should emphasize synthesis by encouraging students to connect this history to other world events and to the world they live in today. Students should be encouraged to reflect on what they have learned and to consider what this study means to them personally and as citizens of a democracy.

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