Lesson Plan

Daily Doses of Nazism

Explore the power that propaganda can have on young people, especially when it is presented as part of everyday culture.

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Domain
Nazi Germany
Subject
Actions
Topic
Propaganda

Enduring Understanding

The Holocaust and its lasting damage were perpetrated by indoctrinating the most vulnerable.

Essential Question

  • 1How does propaganda work and what makes it so effective?

Readiness

5 Min

Ask students to define propaganda as they understand it. Explore the similarities and differences between what each individual understands and then compare the class definition to the one provided by Echoes & Reflections: “False or partly false information intended to shape people’s opinion and action that fulfills the propagandist’s intent.”

Input

15 Min

Direct students to the resource “Heil Hitler!”: Lessons of Daily Life by Facing History and Ourselves. Have students read the excerpt from Erika Mann and prep their reading with the following prompts; encourage them to highlight or underline sections of the story that help answer these questions:

  1. Reflect on how the definition of propaganda is demonstrated in this story.
  2. What means were used to distribute the message in Nazi Germany?
  3. Why was it so effective?

Output

25 Min
Teacher's Note
It is easy to conflate advertising and propaganda. Be wary of this slippage by returning to the definition.

Divide the class into groups of three to five. Ask the students to think about messages that they hear today.

First, as a group, they should write down as many messages as they can think of that they hear echoing in their world. These may come from advertisements, from their life in their town, from school, etc.

Then, ask them to consider whether the messages they hear or see are propaganda by answering the following questions:

  1. What is the intention behind these messages that you hear regularly?
  2. Do the messages you hear today fit the definition of propaganda?
  3. Do the messages you hear today seem to have a similar impact on you that the messages Erika Mann heard seemed to have on her and her peers?
  4. Do you think there is an opportunity for people to spread propaganda in today’s society?
  5. If so, how can we prevent being influenced by these messages?

Wisconsin Academic Standards

This lesson meets the following Academic Standards required by the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction.

Teacher Primer

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Before you teach, use our teacher primer to freshen up on your content knowledge.

Lesson Plan

Propaganda and the Third Reich

Gain an understanding of the depth of which Hitler and Joseph Goebbels were able to indoctrinate the general public with their ideology. This reading will help students understand the reach of propaganda during Nazi Germany and how this transformed the nation.

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Domain
Nazi Germany
Subject
Actions
Topic
Propaganda

Enduring Understanding

Hitler and the Nazi party used propaganda to sway public opinion. They were able to create different messages for various audiences.

Essential Question

  • 1What makes propaganda so effective?

Readiness

5 Min

Ask students to define propaganda. Discuss ways that propaganda is used today.

Input

20 Min

Go to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum’s online exhibit about propaganda.

Explore the different timeline sections and look through the themes. Choose one or more to explore with your students. Read through some of the subsections under these themes and click through the attached propaganda associated with it.

For example, if you click on the ‘1918-1933: Democracy‘ section and read the introduction and the subsection, ‘Hitler and Nazi Propaganda.’ Then scroll down to the subsection titled, ‘Creating a Public Image‘ and read and look through the images connected to it.

Output

20 Min

Divide the students into groups of 3 – 4 students Provide each with a current print advertisement or political ad. They can focus on these questions to present and discuss:

  1. Who is the target audience?
  2. What is their message?
  3. How is it conveyed through images and words?
  4. How effective is this message?

Come back together as a class and ask students: How do these messages shape a person’s perspective? How does this help to explain the effectiveness of Nazi propaganda?

Wisconsin Academic Standards

This lesson meets the following Academic Standards required by the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction.

Teacher Primer

Know Before You Go

Before you teach, use our teacher primer to freshen up on your content knowledge.

Lesson Plan

The Power of Nazi Propaganda

This lesson focuses on the power and influence of propaganda in the Third Reich through use of a multimedia source.

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Domain
Nazi Germany
Subject
Actions
Topic
Propaganda

Enduring Understanding

When people are given messages repeatedly with no dissenting views to oppose them, they can become more receptive to those messages.

Essential Question

  • 1Why was propaganda so effective in Germany and how was it used?

Readiness

10 Min

Ask students what they already know about propaganda. What is it? What purpose does it serve? How is it similar and different from other efforts to persuade people?

Input

10 Min

Watch the 6 minute video – The Power of Nazi Propaganda with students. Replay the video if necessary
While they watch the movie, have students answer the following questions:

  1. What was the logic behind using red in so much of Nazi propaganda?
  2. How were the Jews portrayed in Nazi propaganda?
  3. Hitler believed that the spoken word, rather than the written word, was responsible for all the great events in history. How did his public speaking feed into this?

Output

30 Min

Divide the class into groups of three to five to discuss the questions below. Have one person in the group be responsible for taking notes and writing down their answers. Pull up the images of Nazi propaganda below for the groups to look over while in their groups. These images come from the US Holocaust Memorial Museum.

  1. Why did the Nazis use propaganda to advance their political aims?
  2. Where do you find propaganda in your life today? Consider advertising, political messaging, and other examples.
  3. When does propaganda become dangerous?
  4. What is the best weapon against being manipulated?
  5. How do you think learning about Nazi propaganda can help us today?

If time permits, reconvene as a class to go over the answers the groups came up with. Have students add to their notes with responses from their classmates.

Teacher Primer

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Lesson Plan

What Neighbors Witnessed

Introduce students to the remarkable work of Father Patrick Desbois, who continues to reveal the uncomfortable truth about the realities of mass murder by the SS in the first years of the war.

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Enduring Understanding

Mobile killing squads massacred over one million Jews in the first years of the war and were aided by the neighbors of the victims.

Essential Question

  • 1Why were people willing to turn in their neighbors over to killers and revel in their death?

Readiness

5 Min
Teacher's Note
Most students know about the somewhat isolated extermination camps and gas chambers, but few know about the Einsatzgruppen (otherwise known as the SS).

Ask your students if anyone ever heard that the Holocaust was a crime that happened in secret–that ‘no one knew’? How were people killed? Did other citizens have an idea about the horrors of the Holocaust as it was happening? Were they in favor of it?

Input

25 Min

This lesson works best when complimented by the reading, What is the Holocaust by Bullets? by Yahud-in Unum. If you haven’t read it, please take the time to begin with the lesson plan ‘Operation Barbarossa’. If it is possible for your class to read this text prior to watching the video, ready your class by introducing them to its contents.

Then show this video interview with Father Patrick Desbois who researches sites of massacre.

Output

20 Min

After the video, ask your students to consider the following questions by writing responses independently:

  1. Did you notice anything peculiar about the killing sites? If so, what did you see?
  2. What do you think about the people who are being interviewed by Father Patrick Debois?
  3. How does your perception of the Holocaust change, knowing neighbors were complicit and even interested in watching their fellow citizens be shot to death?

After this task is complete, ask your students to gather in groups of 3 or 4 to share their responses. Each group should also pick a person to serve as a representative for the group. Provide 10 minutes to let the groups discuss amongst themselves.

Then, initiate a conversation about these questions within the larger group, asking each representative to address the three questions that were previously provided. Moving question by question rather than group by group creates more space for generative conversation.

Finally, return to the perception that the Holocaust happened in secret. What do they make of this perception in light of this information?

Teacher Primer

Know Before You Go

Before you teach, use our teacher primer to freshen up on your content knowledge.

Lesson Plan

Operation Barbarossa

Introduce students to the Einsatzgruppen and methods of extermination during the Holocaust.

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Enduring Understanding

Mobile killing squads massacred over one million Jews in the first years of the war.

Essential Question

  • 1Why did the Nazis consider it strategically important to murder civilians?

Readiness

5 Min

Begin by asking your students how many Jews were murdered during the Holocaust?
Then, ask them where those people died? Was death isolated to specific areas like camps?
Finally, ask them if they can imagine why killing civilians would have been considered strategically important?

Input

35 Min
Teacher's Note
Make sure students read the title section of this article. A lot of valuable information is in the header.

Prompt students to read the article, Einsatzgruppen: An Overview, from the US Holocaust Memorial Museum Encyclopedia.

Use the 3Ps method to dig into the reading in a critical manner. Ask students to take notes on what they find a) Powerful b) Puzzling and c) Propelling. Give approximately 10 minutes for this exercise.

In order to familiarize yourself, and your class with this model, please look over this guide: 3Ps: A Critical Reading Guide.

Then, split the class into groups of four students.

Distribute the two maps from this reading, death camps and mass shooting sites.

Ask the students to compare and contrast the two maps. Note that the number of people killed at the sites identified in each map are approximately equal. Ask each group to respond to the following prompts.

  1. What are the major differences between these two forms of violence?
  2. What do you suppose the impact would be on the communities in these areas?
  3. What are the main differences between these two geographies of violence?
  4. What was your Puzzling question? Does this answer the question you had?

After 15 minutes ask for group responses and broaden into a large class discussion.

Output

10 Min

Finally, return to the 3Ps that they recorded at the beginning of the lesson and share their Profound or Propelling comments, adding additional context to their comments.

Wisconsin Academic Standards

This lesson meets the following Academic Standards required by the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction.

Teacher Primer

Know Before You Go

Before you teach, use our teacher primer to freshen up on your content knowledge.

Lesson Plan

Mapping Stories of Extermination

Explore an interactive map and tap into first-hand accounts from various sites of massacre across Eastern Europe, a space that came to be known as the Bloodlands.

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Enduring Understanding

Mobile killing squads massacred over one million Jews in the first years of the war and were aided by the neighbors of the victims.

Essential Question

  • 1Why were some people willing to turn their neighbors and friends over to the Nazis or take part in murder themselves?

Readiness

5 Min

Explain to students that one of the tactics used by the Nazi regime in their attempt to mass murder was the use of Mobile Killing Units, or the Einsatzgruppen. Under the cover of war, these groups marched into territories where they targeted and killed over half a million people, primarily Jews.

Input

15 Min
Teacher's Note
This lesson is best used after an introduction to the SS through other lesson plans within this topic, so make certain that your students know what the Einsatzgruppen are.

Navigate the Yahud-in Unum map. The map is dotted with red and blue marks, each indicating a site of a massacre committed by the SS. It is recommended that you and your class familiarize yourself with navigating the map–zooming, dragging, clicking in and out of the sites.

Then, select a single country to focus on as a class. Centering attention in this way helps generate a sense of greater accomplishment at the end of the lesson.

Output

40 Min

After selecting a country, refer to the map of SS movements. Note which SS groups would have been in the country and when–how long has this community been suffering from war? What might be their level of fear, hunger, or desperation when the SS show up?

Now, divide the class into groups of 3.

Each group must:

  1. Choose a site that is documented online (red).
  2. Examine all of the information available (text, pictures, videos, testimonials, etc.) and select the most significant and interesting information about the events that happened here.
  3. Create a presentation for the class using a selection of the materials provided by Yahud-in Unum. The presentation should attempt to answer the following questions:
      1. How does this local story contribute to our understanding of the Holocaust?
      2. What does this location teach us about intolerance? Indifference? Power?
      3. What is the importance of discovering these buried stories?

As the groups present, collect their answers to the major questions. These lessons can then become touchstones for continued discussion and inquiry about the Holocaust, about intolerance and about exploring the past.

Teacher Primer

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Before you teach, use our teacher primer to freshen up on your content knowledge.

Lesson Plan

World Leaders Turn their Backs

Examine the dismissive language used by world leaders who attended the Evian Conference in 1938 and decided not to expand their aid to refugees seeking asylum from Nazi persecution.

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Enduring Understanding

Countries with a great deal of power sometimes do what is in their best interest rather than what is right or ethical.

Essential Question

  • 1Why do countries with so much capacity fail to offer their help to people and other countries who are in so much need?

Readiness

10 Min

Review the timeline from Echoes & Reflections between 1933 and 1938 to get a better picture of the context in which the Evian Conference occurred. What was the Evian Conference? Where was it? Who attended?

Highlight some of the major moments of persecution that Jews already witnessed at the hands of Nazis, like the boycott of Jewish businesses, the Nuremberg Laws or the expulsion of Jews from professional services.

Input

10 Min

If need be, review the basic concept of the Evian conference. If time permits, students can read this short summary from Facing History and Ourselves. Then, divide the class into five groups, assigning each group to one of the countries represented in the reading here.

Ask the groups to read their quotes very carefully. It will seem to be accomplished easily, they should read these quotes with great acuity and attention to detail.

Output

30 Min

Ask all the groups to consider the following set of questions and record their group answers:

  1. What do you know about the country you are assigned and the role that country ultimately played in WWII?
  2. What is the message that your country is telling the refugees?
  3. What kind of language (specific words and phrases) is being used by the country’s leaders to talk about their decision?
  4. Did your country own up to the decision or did they hide behind a sense of disempowerment or ‘policy’?
  5. Why do you think the leaders of your country made the decision that they did?

Each group should then present what they found in closely reading the quotations from their country. Take note of the themes that emerge–words like ‘impossible’ or ‘incapable’ will continue to come up. Ask how it is that countries like the USA are ‘incapable’ of something?

Then prompt the final question:

  1. Do you think the decision of your country’s leaders is justified or defensible? Why or why not?

This could be answered immediately, or, if time permits, groups could reconvene and come up with specific arguments about why the decision was defensible or justifiable. Possibly leave the class with a question about what motivated these countries to act to participate in WWII? If it wasn’t the plight of Jews, what was the reason these countries entered the war?

Teacher Primer

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Before you teach, use our teacher primer to freshen up on your content knowledge.

Lesson Plan

World Leaders Hesitate

Examine a detailed video about the international response to growing evidence of Nazi war crimes and learn about the effect that public pressure can have on the decisions of governments.

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Enduring Understanding

International leaders were slow to respond to the evidence of the mass murder of Jews by the Nazi regime.

Essential Question

  • 1Why are heads of state hesitant to intervene, even when there is evidence that atrocities are occurring?

Readiness

15 Min

Prompt students to do a bit of pre-writing about the subject. Ask them to reflect briefly on the motivations of the Allied forces of World War II. Specifically, prompt them to see if the likes of Great Britain, the USA and France were focused on stopping the Holocaust. After a few minutes, ask students to voice their answers and orient them to the predominantly political nature of the conflict.

Input

15 Min

Before showing the video, anticipate some of its content by asking students to pay close attention to the following questions:

  1. When was the information about the Holocaust revealed?
  2. Who received this information?
  3. What did the recipients of this information do with it?
  4. Did nations change their approach to war, in light of evidence about the Holocaust?
  5. What groups were responsible for initiating action?

Then, show the first 8:20 of the video, Did the world remain silent? produced by Tel Aviv University.

After the video, see if your students can answer the five questions listed above.

Output

20 Min

After establishing the facts around these international responses, split the class into three groups, each of whom will respond to a different troubling fact discussed in the video. Ask each group to tackle these questions in depth, thinking about the context of the situation as much as they can.

Group 1: At 1:42, the speaker suggests that the Russians saw evidence of the Holocaust in early 1942, but concealed the fact that murders were taking place specifically against Jews. Why?

Group 2: At 5:08 the speaker mentions that even at the end of 1942, ‘no concrete action’ to stop the Holocaust was mentioned by the Allies, despite mounting evidence of the murders. Why would the Allies not develop a plan to stop the atrocities?

Group 3: At 5:28, the speaker mentions that the War Refugee Board, which helped save the lives of thousands of Jews, was created as a result of public pressure. What does this say about your role as a citizen?

Teacher Primer

Know Before You Go

Before you teach, use our teacher primer to freshen up on your content knowledge.