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Up Close And Personal |
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| Students at Arkansas secondary schools
use technology to remember the Japanese-American internment
camps of their state's past. |
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| When
Gladys Inouye left Rohwer, Ark., in 1943, two years after
the United States entered World War II she thought she would
never see the town that housed the Japanese-American internment
camp in which her family had been detained for 10 months.
"It was wrong to incarcerate U.S. citizens without
due process and without legal representation," says Inouye,
who was 15 when her family was relocated from Southern California
to that isolated corner of Arkansas. "However, the important
this is to learn from this chapter in our history so that
these mistakes will never be tolerated in the future."
The retires nurse, now in her 70s, is pleased to learn that
some Arkansas students have taken her words to heart.
Through the Arkansas' Environmental and Spatial Technology
(EAST) Initiative, a statewide IT venture that has developed
a hands-on project-based curriculum, students at Horace Middle
School in Little Rock are developing a multimedia project
that examines life in Japanese-American internment camps after
the bombing of Pearl Harbor. The project, Arkansas' Forgotten,
details the experiences of internees through film, 3-D images,
computer-aided design (CAD) and Global Positioning System
(GPS) mapping.
"Our students have been on an incredible journey this
past year, a journey that touched their hearts and souls,"
says Rick Washam, Horace Mann's EAST facilitator and the faculty
coordinator for the project. "They have viewed a tragic
part of America's history from first hand accounts, and they
have resolved to make sure it never happens again." |
| Life
Interrupted |
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| The EAST Project, which was born of the union
of the Japanese American National Museum (JANM) and the University
of Arkansas at Little Rock's Life Interrupted: The Japanese-American
Experience in WWII Arkansas project, uses the past to engage
students, says Kristin Mann, an associate professor in UALR's
history department.
"I think it's a subject in which they have become engrossed,"
says Mann, who's also the education director for Life Interrupted.
a documentary Web site. "History has come alive for them,
and they've become passionate about telling these stories.
Since it's a two hour drive from the school in little Rock
to the relocation sites, Horace Mann's Washam knew that his
students could do only half the work required to make the
project a complete success. So he called in reinforcements.
Last summer, they began working on the virtual reality portion
of the project with students from Fountain Hill High School
in Fountain Hill, Arkansas.
Keturah West, the former EAST facilitator at Fountain Hill,
recalls that her students were excited about the opportunity
to assist in such an historic undertaking. "I threw it
out on the table, and they jumped on it," says West,
who was contacted by Washam last spring about participating
in the project.
Because Fountain Hill is only 30 minutes from the internment
camp sites in Jerome and Rohwer, West's students had unprecedented
access to what was left of the forgotten WWII connections.
They interviewed the current land owner, who showed them the
site's remains. The students then used GPS technology to gather
data points for the mapping portion of the project.
Seventeen-year-old David Titsworth, who headed the group's
virtual reality team, says that he was unaware of the history
that had taken place in his own backyard. "I've probably
been through there 20 or 30 times, and I had never heard of
it," Titsworth says of the sites. He adds that it was
a unique learning experience "to actually see how we've
grown as a nation." |
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| Up
Close and Virtual |
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The
highlight of the Arkansas' Forgotten project is the virtual
reality portal, which lets users pop a CD into their computers
and take a tour of the sites. the CD features old photos of
the internees, a GPS map of the sites and information on legislation
relating to the camps.
"The virtual reality re-creations of the barracks were
really interesting," notes UALR's Mann. "The amount
of primary source material that these students have been working
with is almost overwhelming, and the fact that they can make
sense of it in these electronic formats is very impressive."
To complete this ambitions endeavor, the students from Horace
Mann and Fountain Hill met with the former mayor of a nearby
town, who had inherited more than 300 pieces of original artwork
created by the children in the camps. Members of the team
photographed the memorabilia and converted the images to a
digitized format.
"The students are poised, well-informed and incredibly
adept with technology," Mann adds.
Titsworth, who plans to minor in information technology
at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, says it was
the project's potential impact that first attracted him. "It
seemed to be the project that would have the largest impact
on the biggest number of people," he explains. "I
knew it was going to have a great effect, not just in my community,
but in the curriculum for the public school students."
The students hope to eventually create an entire virtual
internment camp that users can tour on the web.
"I think this project has had a profound effect on
students," says West, who recently started an EAST lab
in the neighboring Monticello School District.
"It's been amazing to watch the students blossom, and
it's created a lot of public awareness in our small community." |
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| Involved
Students |
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So far, more than 50 students from Horace
Mann and Fountain Hill have participated in the project. Horace
Mann's Washam says he will continue to encourage students
to participate until the project is complete.
"They not only believe they can make a difference,
but they have embarked on a journey to actually do it,"
he says. "Sometimes, when they tell the story of the
injustices in America's past, you forget they are only 13
and 14 years old."
Inouye agrees, she was touched by the student's commitment
ot telling the story of former internees. "The extent
of their research and their eagerness to learn even more from
our wartime experiences was very gratifying," Inouye
says.
Fourteen-year-old Esther Im, a ninth grader at Little Rock's
Parkview Arts Science Magnet High school, was instantly intrigued
by the project. "It is a once-in -a-lifetime experience."
says Im, who began working on the documentary, Arkansas Forgotten:
Japanese Internment Camps, during this past school year. "This
has really opened my eyes and made me realize there are so
many things that stay hidden in our history."
Aaron Campbell, who also worked on the documentary, says
the perseverance of the internees inspired him. "I was
amazed at the determination and forgiveness of the internees,"
says Campbell, who is 14 and attends Little Rock Central High
School. "I wish I had as strong a character as they did."
Campbell and Im's teammate, Kaitlin Kilbury, says the project
has given her a greater appreciation both for national history
and for hew own state's checkered past. "When I started
this project I didn't know how many camps there were or that
there were two right here in Arkansas," says the 14-year-old
freshman at Little Rock Central high.
The students hope to have their documentary included in
the Education Department's Arkansas History Curriculum.
For other students, the project has broadened career interests.
"[Arkansas' Forgotten] has increased my interest in technology-related
careers because the tools available in the 21st century set
no limits on what is attainable," says Cyrus Bahrassa,
Horace Mann's GPS guru.
This month, a group of students who worked on the project
will attend a conference sponsored by the UALR and JANM, which
brings together veterans, former internees and community members
to discuss civil rights issues.
-Provided by: Aiesha D. Little Associate Editor of CDW-G's
Ed Tech Magazine.
Read student authored
profiles for this project
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| Online
Media |
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| View the Fountain
Hill - Japanese Internment Camp Virtual Tour (10.93 Mb Quicktime) |
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