Ever thought of organizing a student excursion to a former concentration camp, but don’t know how to approach it? Many teachers feel underqualified to address sensitive and heavy topics like the Holocaust, and without the right resources, may choose to avoid the topic altogether. What questions do you ask your students before the visit? What kind of reflection do you prompt on arrival? What are the main thoughts students should take away from such an experience?

Thankfully, Holocaust Education Trust Ireland (HETI) have compiled a useful set of guidelines for educational visits to former concentration camps, with materials that include:

  • terms and key concepts
  • reflection questions
  • research inquiry questions
  • preparation and post-visit discussion points

Learning from the Holocaust: Visiting Krakow and Auschwitz-Birkenau

Learning from the Holocaust: Leaving Krakow and Auschwitz-Birkenau

  • Teaching 1815 – Rethinking Waterloo from Multiple Perspectives
  • How we lived together in the 20th century in Georgia

    How to teach history in a multicultural and multireligious environment? […]

  • History Teaching and Democratic Citizenship Education: Innovative Teaching Approaches

    In the context of the the project “Fostering History and […]

  • History of the Epoch

    The Period seen through the Eyes of an Individual. Ukraine […]

  • History of the 20th Century and Education for Democratic Citizenship Education

    In the context of the the project “Fostering History and […]