Curriculum Suggestions
from the VOW Project by James Michael and Charlie Wine
All selections below are taken from their web site
The arts
James Michael Wine and his brother, Charlie, suggest using the arts
to think
about hands. "The hand is our connecting tool, to each other, to the
world we grasp..."
Ask students to think about all the good things that hands make such
as
music and paintings.
Discuss the song "Join Hands" (downloadable from the site) and analyze its
lyrics. Talk about other music in which hands are a central image: "I wanna
hold your hand;" "Hold My Hand."
Get students to write down their thoughts as they listen to "Join Hands."
Ask students to write a new verse for the "Join Hands" song.
Is it an oxymoron to juxtapose "hand" and "gun?" See their graphic that
splits those words apart.
Social Studies Projects
Ask students to research gun violence in the US compared to that of
other
countries. Compile statistics for gun violence affecting young people under
age 19.
Have a class debate on the 2nd Amendment.
Ask them to keep a log of incidents of violence seen by them: in the news,
in movies, on television, in life. Are there patterns to this violence?
How often are guns involved?
Students might bring in news stories about an act of violence that affected
one life or the life of a whole nation. (Political assassinations come
to
mind: Gandhi, Martin Luther King, JFK, etc. And there are thousands upon
thousands of private stories.)
Have a class brainstorming session in which each student generates 10 suggestions
for reducing and avoiding violence. Discuss the lists.
Create a message of nonviolence and "market" it as if it were an ad. The
Wine brothers suggest: "It can be serious, it can be cool. It must be effective." Figure
out how to spread this message in your school.
Hand out a survey one month after your message goes up to see how effective
it has been. Remember that it takes repeat exposure to have a message
take
root.
Literature
Invite students to bring in a story, poem, song, or film that says something
about violence. Have a student lead the discussion.
Compare Romeo and Juliet with West Side Story. Rewrite the
endings so that violence is avoided.
Talk about the Anton Chekhov quote: "If a gun is on the mantle in the first
act, it must go off in the third." Make societal comparisons.
Talk about dreams, using Langston Hughs's poem, "Harlem." ("What happens
to a dream deferred?")
Refer to Bobby Kennedy's use of the George Bernard Shaw quote: "Some
men
see things as they are and say why? I dream things that never were and
say
why not?"
Talk about Martin Luther King's "I Have a Dream" speech, and have students
write their own.
Lead-ins to the saying and/or signing of the Pledge - discussion with
students
What does it mean to go "on the record?"
What does a vow or pledge mean to you?
What does it mean to take a stand? Is it hard? Is it important?
[Is "giving your word" and keeping it a matter of honor to you? Does
having
friends who keep their word mean something to you?]
What kinds of vows or promises have you made?
What kinds of vows and commitments do people make to each other?
What are some examples of famous historical vows or pledges? The VOW
Project
gives Chief Joseph of the Nez Perce as an example: "I will fight no more
forever." [You might also quote the last line from the Declaration of Independence:
"With firm reliance on the protection of Divine Providence, we mutually
pledge to each other our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor." How
important was it to our development as a country for the signers of the
Declaration to be able to count on each other's word?]
The VOW Project suggests the quote from JFK's inaugural address as a
fitting
lead-in to the Pledge: "This much we pledge and more...In your hands, my
fellow citizens, more than in mine, will rest the final success or failure
of our course." (1961)
I am deeply indebted to the Wine brothers, Jim and Charlie, for their creativity,
their spirit of collaboration and partnership, and their wish to weave
the
Pledge into their work to reduce violence. All of the above ideas are from
their site unless otherwise
indicated. Some of MLG's suggestions are included in [brackets].
Mary Lewis Grow, National Coordinator
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