1for2: 1 School for 2 Opposing Political Groups' Children

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How can one school help solve a conflict?

Extended summary

Schools between "self-described" states

Why Cyprus first?

Videos of conflicts below

Israel - Pales. Authority

N. Korea - S. Korea

Syria - Israel - Jordan

Pakistan - India

Schools for intra-state conflicts

Videos of these conflicts

N. Ireland (Belfast)

Iraq (Baghdad)

Lebanon (Beirut)

Afghanistan (Kabul)

Nepal (Kathmandu)

For the best resolution results

Why integrating the school is not enough

Video clips of CL

Cypriot School location

Sample drawing

Admissions formula for influential two-year-olds

Visuals: Cog. diss. at TCS

Analogy: A watershed and a dying fruit tree

Evaluating TCS

Fast rail as a school bus

Estimated cost

Videos: Non-maglev

Palestinian rail

Maglev /Non-maglev?

Videos: Maglev rail

Common questions

Why only integrating the school is not enough


Read this article to learn about what happened in the Austin (Texas) School District in 1971 shortly after schools there were racially integrated.  Students had been segregated until this time, and the difference in quality among their former schools had put them on different ability levels. Teachers struggled to reach all students, who began to compete to have tailored instruction - usually advanced instruction for white students and remediation for minority students. This unspoken competition between whites and minorities led to inter-racial competitive attitudes and eventually violence on school grounds.

Teachers can inadvertently set up inter-racial competition in the classroom by using race and ethnicity to track students or to sort them into socially homogeneous learning groups. Students already and unwittingly bring enough racial, sexist, nationalistic, and other types of negative socialization into the classroom.  Muzafer Sherif and his researchers showed in their historic Robbers Cave experiment in 1954 that just putting children of different groups into contact with each other does not guarantee an improvement of inter-group relations.
 


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