Written by Robbie Corey-Boulet | |
Wednesday, 21 January 2009 | |
After a long and at times contentious review by a government committee, a guidebook combined with a training program will advise teachers on controversial instruction methods. In schools, a longing for information Touch Thouda, a teacher at the Phnom Penh Regional Teacher Training Centre, said she never tells her high school students about the Khmer Rouge years, adding that she would welcome guidance on how to treat the period. Hok Phally, a 10th-grade student in Phnom Penh, said most of what she knows about the Khmer Rouge she learned from her parents. Chum On, 18, a 12th-grader in Battambang province, lamented that she does not know more about the period. "I was told that during this regime many people died," she said. Ï do not understand why. We should have it taught in the classrooms because the new generation can take it as an example not to follow." THE Documentation Center of Cambodia (DC-Cam) plans next week to publish a guide for high school teachers, advising them on the best ways to present A History of Democratic Kampuchea, a textbook detailing the history of the Khmer Rouge. Monday's release of the 79-page guidebook, a draft of which has been obtained by the Post, will mark the end of a review process that saw members of a Ministry of Education review committee occasionally clash with DC-Cam staff over how the history should be taught. |
0 comments:
Post a Comment