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Post by freecharlie on Feb 19, 2023 20:29:00 GMT
On this day in 1942, Executive Order 9066 was signed into law allowing for the forced relocation and internment of people of Japanese ancestry.
I wasn't taught this in school. I happened to be a history major and learned it in college.
I teach my students when we are on that year (I have a three year cycle, so they all get it it just depends in if they get it 9th, 10th, or 11th).
Did you learn it in high school? Does your district teach about this part of American history?
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Post by Delta Dawn on Feb 19, 2023 20:32:03 GMT
We learned nothing about Japanese internment in my history classes in Canadá. I also had the stupidest history teachers ever. We learned nothing about Japan and the Second World War.
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Post by katlady on Feb 19, 2023 20:41:40 GMT
My father’s family was sent to an internment camp, so I kinda always knew about them. I also grew up in an area with a lot of Japanese-Americans, so there were always talk about them (pilgrimages, memorials, etc). I don’t remember when we formally studied it in school, probably about Jr. High in our California history class.
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Post by cadoodlebug on Feb 19, 2023 20:42:13 GMT
Since I took those classes at least 57 years ago, I'm not sure. I do remember a 3-week study of communism.
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J u l e e
Drama Llama
Posts: 6,531
Location: Cincinnati
Jun 28, 2014 2:50:47 GMT
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Post by J u l e e on Feb 19, 2023 20:46:17 GMT
Nope. I learned it as an elementary teacher (my first year out of college) when I bought The Bracelet and Baseball Saved Us picture books to read to my students.
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garcia5050
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 2,773
Location: So. Calif.
Jun 25, 2014 23:22:29 GMT
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Post by garcia5050 on Feb 19, 2023 20:55:58 GMT
Yes. I learned about it in high school. DH went to the same high school and says he did not learn it. (We took very different courses.) I just asked my kids, and neither said they learned about it.
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Post by chaosisapony on Feb 19, 2023 21:05:41 GMT
Yes I learned about it in high school. It was a pretty brief mention though.
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Post by supersoda on Feb 19, 2023 21:07:20 GMT
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Post by littlemama on Feb 19, 2023 21:07:35 GMT
Yes I learned about it in AP US History in 11th grade.
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breetheflea
Drama Llama
Posts: 6,585
Location: PNW
Jul 20, 2014 21:57:23 GMT
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Post by breetheflea on Feb 19, 2023 21:09:23 GMT
Not in high school or a college class, I learned about it from my college advisor who was Japanese and went to one when he was a young kid.
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Post by epeanymous on Feb 19, 2023 21:24:10 GMT
My father (born in 1931) had his best friend sent to camp, and I met his friend as a kid, so knew about them. We read Farewell to Manzanar in tenth grade, but my Chinese-immigrant teacher made clear it was because he had chosen to highlight it and that it was not part of the standard curriculum.
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mich5481
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 2,760
Oct 2, 2017 23:20:46 GMT
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Post by mich5481 on Feb 19, 2023 21:26:42 GMT
We read "Snow Falling on Cedars" for one of my AP English classes, and it is part of the plot.
I believe it was also mentioned in AP US History my junior year.
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Post by Merge on Feb 19, 2023 21:28:41 GMT
I honestly don't remember when I learned about it. Probably touched on it in AP History in high school but I don't recall.
I'm continually shocked at what I never learned that took place relatively close to where I grew up - the Tulsa Massacre, for example. And I read just recently about a horrible lynching (not that any of them were good) that took place in the little town in Missouri where I went to college.
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Post by busy on Feb 19, 2023 21:32:20 GMT
I went to high school less than 20 miles from a large internment camp and we barely learned about it. It didn’t even take up a whole class period.
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Post by tmarschall on Feb 19, 2023 21:34:27 GMT
I did not learn about the internment until I had finished undergrad and was taking a couple classes to bolster my application for graduate school. I remember being incredulous and angry. My professor of Psychology of Women included it in her syllabus. We had some readings and a film. So, not through all those years of history, and only in an elective course in a different discipline. I did not learn of the immigrant raids in the 1950's with a slur in the name, where Mexicans (including many American citizens) rounded up and dropped off deep in Mexico on the hope they would not be able to return, either.
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Post by Lexica on Feb 19, 2023 21:35:10 GMT
No. We were taught the whitewashed history where our American ancestors did no wrong. Nothing about Native Americans being killed or shoved onto undesirable land. Nothing about Japanese Internment. And very very little about slavery. These subjects were skipped over or if they were mentioned at all, I must have been out sick that day.
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Post by mollycoddle on Feb 19, 2023 21:43:54 GMT
I went to school with a girl who parents were in internment camps. I don’t think that we studied that shameful practice in school.
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maryannscraps
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 4,803
Aug 28, 2017 12:51:28 GMT
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Post by maryannscraps on Feb 19, 2023 21:45:32 GMT
I’m 60 and definitely studied it in high school. It was not whitewashed and I remember wondering how America could have ever done such a thing and it couldn’t happen again. I was so naive. I didn’t take history in college.
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Post by SallyPA on Feb 19, 2023 22:04:15 GMT
I grew up near a relocation camp in Wyoming. It was taught thought all all of the grades. I remember field trips in elementary and junior high. And more thorough lessons in high school.
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Post by Zee on Feb 19, 2023 22:05:47 GMT
I had some fairly liberal teachers as a kid who covered slavery, civil rights, the wrongs done to Native Americans and Jews, and other major teaching points but didn't learn about this until I was a young adult.
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caangel
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Jun 26, 2014 16:42:12 GMT
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Post by caangel on Feb 19, 2023 22:17:46 GMT
I learned it in HS, not sure if I did earlier or not. I know that it is also in our current upper elementary curriculum cuz I have taught it as a sub.
I live in CA where many of the Japanese lived and were interned so it is also part of our state's history.
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Post by birukitty on Feb 19, 2023 22:33:39 GMT
Honestly at 62 I can't remember if I learned about it or not in school. I think I did. But there was a lot of history that I didn't learn that was white-washed.
I've made up for that since I was a teen by reading about this and other subjects in historical fiction books or non-fiction books. History has become one of my very favorite subjects.
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Post by Darcy Collins on Feb 19, 2023 22:46:22 GMT
Public schools in California and was covered extensively. My kids definitely learned about it in both middle school and high school.
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Deleted
Posts: 0
Nov 23, 2024 16:39:34 GMT
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Post by Deleted on Feb 19, 2023 22:50:10 GMT
It was kinda glossed over in high school. It was mentioned but not a whole lot of depth. I had a friend who took AP history and he had more coverage. I was a history minor in college and read two different books about it.
There's a lot of our history that gets skipped over or treated as a footnote. More history should be taught.
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Deleted
Posts: 0
Nov 23, 2024 16:39:34 GMT
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Post by Deleted on Feb 19, 2023 23:34:40 GMT
I'm pretty sure the first I ever heard of it was when I read "Snow Falling on Cedars" when it came out in the early 90s.
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peabay
Prolific Pea
Posts: 9,940
Jun 25, 2014 19:50:41 GMT
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Post by peabay on Feb 19, 2023 23:41:10 GMT
I learned about it in high school 30 years ago (taught by super progressive, mission-focused nuns in Catholic school) and my kids were taught it in their high school also.
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Post by bianca42 on Feb 19, 2023 23:46:46 GMT
I learned briefly in school, but I can't remember if it was in class or on a field trip to Fort Ontario which was used as an internment camp.
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Post by delila on Feb 19, 2023 23:53:11 GMT
I learned all about Japanese internment camps from my Japanese aunt who came to America when she married my fathers brother.
That woman was my absolute hero and loved me unconditionally.
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snyder
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 4,342
Location: Colorado
Apr 26, 2017 6:14:47 GMT
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Post by snyder on Feb 19, 2023 23:55:19 GMT
If I can remember correctly, it was briefly brought up along with Pearl Harbor. That was many moons ago. I'll have to ask grandson.
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Post by Scrapper100 on Feb 20, 2023 0:02:35 GMT
I’m pretty sure I learned it in high school almost 40 years ago.
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