Facing History and Ourselves Introduces a New Interactive Website to Help Students Participate in Human Rights
On
October 9, 2007 the non-profit organization Facing History and
Ourselves will launch a new multimedia website for students and
educators, Be the Change: Upstanders for Human Rights (www.facinghistory.org/BeTheChange).
The interactive website profiles the stories of five extraordinary
activists who have been awarded the Reebok Human Rights Award, and
combines educational resources for students and teachers with a dynamic
interface for middle and high school-aged kids. Be the Change aims to
connect each student with the growing global network of his or her
peers who care about creating a more just world.
Designed for middle and high school students, and
created with the help of student interviewers, Be the Change examines
the influences, inspirations and motivations that led the five
upstanders to take action on behalf of others. The five activists
profiled are: Vanita Gupta: an NAACP lawyer who helped thirty-five
African Americans falsely accused of drug-related crimes in Tulia,
Texas, Martin O'Brien: a peace activist who worked to advance human
rights in Northern Ireland, Ernest Guevarra: an advocate for healthcare
and human rights in battle-torn areas of the Philippines, Arn Chorn
Pond: a survivor of the Cambodian genocide who helped young immigrant
gang members in Lowell, Massachusetts, and Yinka Jegede-Ekpe: an AIDS
activist who bravely stepped forward to fight for the rights of
Nigerian women infected with HIV/AIDS.
"I enjoyed hearing [the award winners] influences," said
one High School student who toured the website. "It shows that they
were not just like superheroes at birth, but normal people who only
wanted to help make change." In addition to the profiles, Be the Change
also offers lists of resources and organizations to help students think
more critically about the roles they might play in the world, their
responsibilities and obligations towards their communities, and the
choices they will make in their own lives. In a section entitled
"Student Spotlights," visitors to the website can read about-or even
nominate-middle and high schoolers their own age who have chosen to
participate for positive change.
While the website is designed for any young person to
explore on his or her own, teachers will also find the site a great
resource to use in their classrooms. The website offers a variety of
helpful ideas and activities to help educators bring important lessons
into the classroom, and offers numerous links to organizations and
information to help them delve further into the issues that interest
them and their students.



