In this video, Dr. Paul Bookbinder gives a short overview of the Holocaust.
In this video, Dr. Paul Bookbinder describes how the Nazis assumed power in 1930s Germany.
In this video, Dr. Paul Bookbinder gives an overview of the Nuremberg trials.
Professor Paul Bookbinder describes the “noble experiment” of democracy in the Weimar Republic.
This video tells the story of the Mississippi Voter Registration Project in the 1960s.
Participants of 'The Great Migration' discuss their lives and their reasons for migrating.
History teacher Brittany Burns' class at Algonquin Regional High School in Northborough, Massachusetts, studies the fall of Weimar Germany.
Alfons Heck recalls how he became a high-ranking member of the Hitler Youth. He talks about the importance of peer pressure and propaganda to Hitler's ability to recruit eight million German children to participate in the "war effort."
Giles Hodges describes the riot that erupted in 1933 Toronto when a group of Nazi-inspired men raised a swastika flag at a local baseball game.
Teachers at Animo Jackie Robinson Charter High School use our Holocaust and Human Behavior resource and journey of discovery about oneself and others ("Scope and Sequence") to help students think critically about history and make informed choices.
Journalists discuss the idea of bias and explain the processes they follow to combat bias in their reporting.
Kwame Anthony Appiah reflects on factors that affect our individual moral decision making.