The Armenian Genocide Assessment: Part 2
Duration
One 50-min class periodSubject
- History
- Social Studies
Grade
10–12Language
English — USPublished
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About This Assessment
In this optional activity, students review what they have learned about the choices and conditions that made Armenians vulnerable to genocide in the Ottoman Empire, and then add new ideas and connections to their Assessment Analysis Organizer.
Since last working with the graphic organizer, students have learned about how nationalism contributed to the decline of the Ottoman Empire, the massacres of Armenians fomented by the sultan in response to their efforts to improve their status in the empire, and the rise of Turkish nationalism that led to the overthrow of the sultan and the transformation of Ottoman society.
Essential Questions
- What choices and conditions led to the genocide of the Armenians of the Ottoman Empire during World War I?
- How can learning about these choices and conditions help us protect the most vulnerable groups in our society today?
Materials
Instructions
Activity: Add to the Analysis Organizer
Give students time, working individually or in pairs, to add new information, analysis, and connections to the handout Armenian Genocide Assessment Analysis Organizer, Parts 1–3. Their goal should be to complete three new rows of the organizer.
Encourage students to articulate their responses in their own words. If they need support with this process, you might suggest or guide them toward the responses in the first and third columns in the chart below. Then, have them provide their own responses for the second and fourth columns.
Under the column “Choices/Conditions that Made the Armenian Genocide Possible”, some possible responses might be:
- Decline of the Ottoman Empire
- The Hamidian Massacres in response to Armenians standing up for equal rights in the empire in the 1890s.
- “Turkification” of Ottoman Society
Under the column “Universal Theme”, some possible responses might be:
- Failure and humiliation of a dominant group
- A “habit of violence” against an out-group’
- Extreme nationalism
Once students have had some time to work on the organizer, use a strategy such as concentric circles to give them the opportunity to share what they recorded and the connections they are making. Let students know that after hearing their classmates’ ideas they are welcome to revise and strengthen their own responses.
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