Lesson Plan Quote
Sherry Tousley: I am a big question asker and lo and behold that's what I did, I stood up by my desk and said 'Mr. Jones, why can't we just say what we think? Why can't we just express our opinions of what we think about the Third Wave?' And at that point, he said, 'You to the library for the rest of the semester'.
Russel Mulock: Things that I do remember happened in my classroom was somebody indeed was sent to the library, that at more than one time, people were banished from the class.
Philip Carr Neel: You were a hundred percent or you were not, and so if you even had a doubt about something he would say and you mention that, he would send you out.
Jo Ann Wood: People would just disappear, and that nobody was allowed to even talk about it made it even more mysterious.
Wendy Brodie: And it's not like you saw them after class or after school and say 'hey what's this all about?'
Sherry Tousley: So, I went off to the library feeling most dejected and outcast, and really very intimidated, I think I felt like crying. Naively, I had believed him that he had in fact told all the faculty that to collect our names and kick us out, so was fearful to tell the librarian why I was there, but she was really on me. She wanted to 'What are you doing here? You need to be in class'. So I remember just taking a really deep breath and thinking 'Well, I've got to tell her and okay, maybe she turns my name in and I'm already out, I already have the out, so what else can they do?' but it was still very intimidating to me, very much so to tell her. But I did describe to her the nature of the movement as I had come to understand it those first few days, and her response was one of great alarm. She shared with me that she had been born and raised in Nazi Germany and that this was the climate of her upbringing, and she said 'This is so like that, and you can't take this sitting down, you have to do something'. And I knew th
Russel Mulock: Things that I do remember happened in my classroom was somebody indeed was sent to the library, that at more than one time, people were banished from the class.
Philip Carr Neel: You were a hundred percent or you were not, and so if you even had a doubt about something he would say and you mention that, he would send you out.
Jo Ann Wood: People would just disappear, and that nobody was allowed to even talk about it made it even more mysterious.
Wendy Brodie: And it's not like you saw them after class or after school and say 'hey what's this all about?'
Sherry Tousley: So, I went off to the library feeling most dejected and outcast, and really very intimidated, I think I felt like crying. Naively, I had believed him that he had in fact told all the faculty that to collect our names and kick us out, so was fearful to tell the librarian why I was there, but she was really on me. She wanted to 'What are you doing here? You need to be in class'. So I remember just taking a really deep breath and thinking 'Well, I've got to tell her and okay, maybe she turns my name in and I'm already out, I already have the out, so what else can they do?' but it was still very intimidating to me, very much so to tell her. But I did describe to her the nature of the movement as I had come to understand it those first few days, and her response was one of great alarm. She shared with me that she had been born and raised in Nazi Germany and that this was the climate of her upbringing, and she said 'This is so like that, and you can't take this sitting down, you have to do something'. And I knew th
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