Margot's Journey
Margot Stern Strom is an international leader in
education for justice and the preservation of democracy. Through her
commitment to honoring the voices of teachers and students and her deep
belief that history matters, she has enabled millions of students to
study the Holocaust, to investigate root causes of racism, antisemitism
and violence, and to realize their obligations and capabilities as
citizens in a democracy.
As the Executive Director of Facing History and Ourselves since its
inception, Margot has recognized that young people are moral
philosophers- and that it is critical to listen to their voices to
understand how to make education relevant to them and to the world they
will enter. With her leadership, Facing History and Ourselves has
become known worldwide for the high quality of its materials and
programs for both students and teachers. Facing History teachers are
empowered to engage their students in the urgent task of developing
individual responsibility, tolerance for difference, and civic
participation through the rigorous study of history. Facing History is
based on the belief that students must be trusted to examine history in
all of its complexities, including its legacies of prejudice and
discrimination as well as resilience and courage. This trust encourages
young people to develop their own ideas and to contribute their voices
to critical discussions and debates among their peers and in the larger
community.
Margot's inspiration came from her own education. Growing up in
racially segregated Memphis, Tennessee, she was exposed to a culture
where ‘colored' water fountains did not spout brightly colored water as
a child might expect but stood as symbols of racism. She was also
exposed to the values of her family, who were devoted to inclusion and
understanding across racial lines. She became committed to the field of
education, convinced that it was critical that educators not betray
children by protecting them from difficult issues and painful history.
In 1976, while teaching social studies at the Runkle School in
Brookline, Massachusetts, and studying moral development at the Harvard
Graduate School of Education, Margot attended a conference on the
Holocaust. It changed her life. It inspired her to develop lessons and
classroom resources that focused on this then-neglected history. It
deepened her commitment to understanding issues of individual
responsibility and moral decision-making in adolescents, and defined
her own learning about democracy. Believing that no classroom exists in
isolation, she began to include in her own classroom, teachers from
many disciplines, librarians, art teachers, and other adults who worked
in the school.
Building on these successes, Margot moved from the classroom to become
project director and, in 1980, Executive Director of Facing History and
Ourselves. Through pilot workshops and in consultation with scholars
and teachers, she created the Facing History scope and sequence: the
journey that students undertake to learn about the impact of history on
their own lives and their futures. Beginning with the concept of
individual and group identity, the study then examines the failure of
democracy and the steps leading to the Holocaust. The program further
explores difficult questions of judgment, memory, and legacy. It
concludes with the necessity for responsible participation in
protecting and promoting democracy, justice, and human dignity today
and for generations to come. Later, she brought exhibitions, community
conversations, and online dialogues to wider audiences in the
community, including a vibrant, engaged adult learning community.
Margot credits her "virtual teachers" with inspiration. From the
philosopher Hannah Arendt, she learned the importance of thinking about
one's thinking in a silent dialogue with oneself and the value of
examining those thoughts in a public space. Facing History is built on
the belief that individuals have the capacity to make a difference and
that history is not the result of immutable forces or a collection of
inevitable outcomes. Margot's understanding of the critical concept of
"choice" was enhanced by scholar Jacob Bronowski's emphasis on choice
as a uniquely human possibility.
Father Robert Bullock, who was an early chair of the Board of Directors
and later chair of the Board of Scholars, was "a gentle guide" for
Margot and Facing History. His passionate interest in the connections
among religion, history, and the world we live in, informed Margot's
deep understanding of the link between history and ethics. Father
Bullock saw it as his life's work to help repair the world, make it a
better place, and face history in all of its complexity, not only its
triumphs but also its most profound failures. He believed that Facing
History helped fulfill this important mission.
Margot learned too from the stories of Holocaust survivors and their
generosity in sharing their experiences with students in classrooms.
And she learned from the grace with which they embrace other survivors
- those who tell their stories of the legacies of hatred and
discrimination in Rwanda, Cambodia and places where humans behaved in
the cruelest-and sometimes the bravest-of ways.
Facing History is truly a marriage of head and heart. It teaches the
skills of in-depth historical thinking in the belief that all students
are capable of attaining the high standards necessary to engage deeply
in its resource materials. Through using these skills, students develop
greater understanding of the tragedies in humanity's history and
greater compassion for others. As they learn about prejudice and
discrimination in the past, they can examine the meaning of their own
attitudes and behavior and begin to see how they might make a
difference themselves.
Margot exemplifies this connection
between head and heart. She has developed a world-class nonprofit
organization that sets the standard for demonstrated impact, a strong
business model, and outstanding leadership by board and staff. She has
given children and adults a platform to discuss the most important
moral questions we must all ask and answer.
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