POV
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Download the Lesson Plan

Jump to:


OVERVIEW

This lesson plan is designed to be used in conjunction with the film Lumo, which takes an intimate look at the healing process of a victim of rape, a crime of political terror that is increasingly common in areas of military conflict, such as the central African country of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (the Congo). This lesson uses an excerpt of the film to put a human face on the high numbers of women who are victims of rape in these areas. Students will learn more about this worldwide problem and write letters to government leaders suggesting how the United States could show greater leadership in addressing sexual violence in war. The film is in Swahili, French and English with English subtitles.

Note: The content of this documentary includes discussion of a brutal war, disturbing verbal descriptions of violent rape, and examples of the physical and emotional destruction of such attacks. There are also images of dead bodies seen from a distance. It is strongly recommended that the film be reviewed for content before use in a classroom setting.

POV documentaries can be recorded off-the-air and used for educational purposes for up to one year from the initial broadcast. In addition, POV offers a lending library of DVDs and VHS tapes that you can borrow anytime during the school year — FOR FREE!


OBJECTIVES

By the end of this lesson, students will:

GRADE LEVEL: This lesson is best used with mature students in grades 9-12.

SUBJECT AREAS: Current Events, World History, Civics, Geography, English, Health.

MATERIALS:

ESTIMATED TIME NEEDED: One 50-minute class period


BACKGROUND:

The Democratic Republic of the Congo has a population of 56 million people composed of more than 200 ethnic groups. An estimated 65 percent of the population can read and write in French, the official language.

The rich mineral deposits, competing tribal groups, a brutal colonial legacy from Belgium and vast stretches of forest have always made the nation ripe for foreign intervention and political chaos. Especially in eastern Congo, where uncertain borders are remote from the capital of Kinshasa, the country has served as haven and battleground for Congolese insurgents and armed groups spilling over from wars in neighboring countries. The end of the Rwandan genocide sent thousands of Hutu militiamen, the Interhamwe — who were responsible for the mass murder of Tutsis and moderate Hutus — fleeing to the Congolese forests, where they were pursued by the new Tutsi-dominated Rwandan army.

Their struggle became entangled with a long-running insurgency against the crumbling Mobutu regime and cross-border tensions with other nations, helping to fuel the First and Second Congo Wars. The latter, lasting from 1998 to 2003, involved nine African nations and some 20 armed groups, and led to the death of nearly 4 million people, earning it the epithet of "Africa's First World War." As in some other African conflicts, child soldiers, drugs, superstition and a virulent terrorizing of women characterized the fighting.

The death toll continues to rise at the rate of nearly 1,200 people each day, with no end to the conflict in sight. In addition, the United Nations estimates that an average of 40 women are raped every day in some parts of the Congo, with tens and possibly hundreds of thousands of women having been victims of sexual violence since 1998.


ACTIVITY

  1. Show students where the Democratic Republic of the Congo is located on a political map of Africa. Explain that tens and possibly hundreds of thousands of women and girls in this war-torn country have suffered crimes of extreme sexual violence.
  2. Use the video clip, "War Overview and Account of Lumo's Attack," to introduce Lumo. Tell the class that she was raped so violently that she suffers from fistula, which is characterized by severe tissue damage. Explain that as a result of fistula, Lumo is unable to control her bodily functions and may not be able to bear children. Her fiancée and family, except for her mother, rejected because of the rape and the fistula. In the video, she tells her story from a hospital where she has gone to heal.
  3. Allow students to react to Lumo's experience. Tell students that Lumo had to stay at that hospital for nearly two years and underwent five surgeries to repair the physical damage to her body that happened when she was raped. After her final operation, which seemed to repair the fistula, she returned to her village, but  her safety continues to be at risk.
  4. Explain that Lumo is one of many women who have suffered from sexual violence being used as a weapon of war. Then share with the class some of the following statistics (source: United Nations Stop Rape Now brochure (PDF)). Be sure to point out on a map the locations of each place listed:
  5. Tell students that these numbers demonstrate that acts of sexual violence are not random offenses committed by individual soldiers. It is often used as a military tactic to humiliate and demoralize individuals, to tear apart families and to devastate communities. The perpetrators of these crimes largely go unpunished and the victims are left powerless.
  6. Next, break the class into small groups to read and discuss the POV interview with Pamela Shifman of UNICEF.
  7. Finally, ask students to write letters to President Bush and/or members of Congress. Request that students include in their letters what they have learned about sexual violence as a weapon of war and suggestions they might have for how the United States could show greater leadership in addressing these issues.

ASSESSMENT

Students can be assessed on:


EXTENSIONS & ADAPTATIONS:


RESOURCES:

Human Rights Watch The website of Human Rights Watch, an international organization dedicated to defending human rights across the globe, includes dozens of reports about the Congo and related conflicts, including this 2002 report entitled "The War Within the War." For direct testimony from rape survivors, see http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2002/06/19/sexual-violence-eastern-congo-recent-testimonies.

Stop Rape Now This site focuses on the Untied Nation's actions against sexual violence in conflict. It features a brochure explaining the issue, more information on the crisis in the Congo and survivor accounts.


STANDARDS:

These standards are drawn from "Content Knowledge," a compilation of content standards and benchmarks for K-12 curriculum by McRel (Mid-continent Research for Education and Learning) at http://www.mcrel.org/standards-benchmarks.

Health Standard 2: Knows environmental and external factors that affect individual and community health.

Language Arts Standard 4: Gathers and uses information for research purposes.

Standard 8: Uses listening and speaking strategies for different purposes.

Standard 9: Uses viewing skills and strategies to understand and interpret visual media.

World History Standard 44: Understands the search for community, stability and peace in an interdependent world.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Cari Ladd, M.Ed., is an educational writer with a background in broadcast journalism, secondary education and media development. Previously, she served as PBS Interactive's director of education, overseeing the development of curricular resources tied to PBS programs, the PBS TeacherSource website (now PBS Teachers), and online teacher professional development services. She has also taught in Maryland and northern Virginia.

BACKGROUND SOURCES:

DR Congo: Key Facts http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/spl/hi/guides/456900/456977/html/nn3page1.stm

Stop Rape Now Brochure StopRapeNow_Brochure.pdf

Violence Against Women "Beyond Rape" in Congo – U.N. http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L30471668.htm

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Download the Lesson Plan

Jump to:


OVERVIEW

This lesson plan is designed to be used in conjunction with the film Lumo, which takes an intimate look at the healing process of a victim of rape, a crime of political terror that is increasingly common in areas of military conflict, such as the central African country of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (the Congo). This lesson uses an excerpt of the film to put a human face on the high numbers of women who are victims of rape in these areas. Students will learn more about this worldwide problem and write letters to government leaders suggesting how the United States could show greater leadership in addressing sexual violence in war. The film is in Swahili, French and English with English subtitles.

Note: The content of this documentary includes discussion of a brutal war, disturbing verbal descriptions of violent rape, and examples of the physical and emotional destruction of such attacks. There are also images of dead bodies seen from a distance. It is strongly recommended that the film be reviewed for content before use in a classroom setting.

POV documentaries can be recorded off-the-air and used for educational purposes for up to one year from the initial broadcast. In addition, POV offers a lending library of DVDs and VHS tapes that you can borrow anytime during the school year — FOR FREE!


OBJECTIVES

By the end of this lesson, students will:

GRADE LEVEL: This lesson is best used with mature students in grades 9-12.

SUBJECT AREAS: Current Events, World History, Civics, Geography, English, Health.

MATERIALS:

ESTIMATED TIME NEEDED: One 50-minute class period


BACKGROUND:

The Democratic Republic of the Congo has a population of 56 million people composed of more than 200 ethnic groups. An estimated 65 percent of the population can read and write in French, the official language.

The rich mineral deposits, competing tribal groups, a brutal colonial legacy from Belgium and vast stretches of forest have always made the nation ripe for foreign intervention and political chaos. Especially in eastern Congo, where uncertain borders are remote from the capital of Kinshasa, the country has served as haven and battleground for Congolese insurgents and armed groups spilling over from wars in neighboring countries. The end of the Rwandan genocide sent thousands of Hutu militiamen, the Interhamwe — who were responsible for the mass murder of Tutsis and moderate Hutus — fleeing to the Congolese forests, where they were pursued by the new Tutsi-dominated Rwandan army.

Their struggle became entangled with a long-running insurgency against the crumbling Mobutu regime and cross-border tensions with other nations, helping to fuel the First and Second Congo Wars. The latter, lasting from 1998 to 2003, involved nine African nations and some 20 armed groups, and led to the death of nearly 4 million people, earning it the epithet of "Africa's First World War." As in some other African conflicts, child soldiers, drugs, superstition and a virulent terrorizing of women characterized the fighting.

The death toll continues to rise at the rate of nearly 1,200 people each day, with no end to the conflict in sight. In addition, the United Nations estimates that an average of 40 women are raped every day in some parts of the Congo, with tens and possibly hundreds of thousands of women having been victims of sexual violence since 1998.


ACTIVITY

  1. Show students where the Democratic Republic of the Congo is located on a political map of Africa. Explain that tens and possibly hundreds of thousands of women and girls in this war-torn country have suffered crimes of extreme sexual violence.
  2. Use the video clip, "War Overview and Account of Lumo's Attack," to introduce Lumo. Tell the class that she was raped so violently that she suffers from fistula, which is characterized by severe tissue damage. Explain that as a result of fistula, Lumo is unable to control her bodily functions and may not be able to bear children. Her fiancée and family, except for her mother, rejected because of the rape and the fistula. In the video, she tells her story from a hospital where she has gone to heal.
  3. Allow students to react to Lumo's experience. Tell students that Lumo had to stay at that hospital for nearly two years and underwent five surgeries to repair the physical damage to her body that happened when she was raped. After her final operation, which seemed to repair the fistula, she returned to her village, but  her safety continues to be at risk.
  4. Explain that Lumo is one of many women who have suffered from sexual violence being used as a weapon of war. Then share with the class some of the following statistics (source: United Nations Stop Rape Now brochure (PDF)). Be sure to point out on a map the locations of each place listed:
  5. Tell students that these numbers demonstrate that acts of sexual violence are not random offenses committed by individual soldiers. It is often used as a military tactic to humiliate and demoralize individuals, to tear apart families and to devastate communities. The perpetrators of these crimes largely go unpunished and the victims are left powerless.
  6. Next, break the class into small groups to read and discuss the POV interview with Pamela Shifman of UNICEF.
  7. Finally, ask students to write letters to President Bush and/or members of Congress. Request that students include in their letters what they have learned about sexual violence as a weapon of war and suggestions they might have for how the United States could show greater leadership in addressing these issues.

ASSESSMENT

Students can be assessed on:


EXTENSIONS & ADAPTATIONS:


RESOURCES:

Human Rights Watch The website of Human Rights Watch, an international organization dedicated to defending human rights across the globe, includes dozens of reports about the Congo and related conflicts, including this 2002 report entitled "The War Within the War." For direct testimony from rape survivors, see http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2002/06/19/sexual-violence-eastern-congo-recent-testimonies.

Stop Rape Now This site focuses on the Untied Nation's actions against sexual violence in conflict. It features a brochure explaining the issue, more information on the crisis in the Congo and survivor accounts.


STANDARDS:

These standards are drawn from "Content Knowledge," a compilation of content standards and benchmarks for K-12 curriculum by McRel (Mid-continent Research for Education and Learning) at http://www.mcrel.org/standards-benchmarks.

Health Standard 2: Knows environmental and external factors that affect individual and community health.

Language Arts Standard 4: Gathers and uses information for research purposes.

Standard 8: Uses listening and speaking strategies for different purposes.

Standard 9: Uses viewing skills and strategies to understand and interpret visual media.

World History Standard 44: Understands the search for community, stability and peace in an interdependent world.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Cari Ladd, M.Ed., is an educational writer with a background in broadcast journalism, secondary education and media development. Previously, she served as PBS Interactive's director of education, overseeing the development of curricular resources tied to PBS programs, the PBS TeacherSource website (now PBS Teachers), and online teacher professional development services. She has also taught in Maryland and northern Virginia.

BACKGROUND SOURCES:

DR Congo: Key Facts http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/spl/hi/guides/456900/456977/html/nn3page1.stm

Stop Rape Now Brochure StopRapeNow_Brochure.pdf

Violence Against Women "Beyond Rape" in Congo – U.N. http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L30471668.htm

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Download the Lesson Plan

Jump to:


OVERVIEW

This lesson plan is designed to be used in conjunction with the film Lumo, which takes an intimate look at the healing process of a victim of rape, a crime of political terror that is increasingly common in areas of military conflict, such as the central African country of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (the Congo). This lesson uses an excerpt of the film to put a human face on the high numbers of women who are victims of rape in these areas. Students will learn more about this worldwide problem and write letters to government leaders suggesting how the United States could show greater leadership in addressing sexual violence in war. The film is in Swahili, French and English with English subtitles.

Note: The content of this documentary includes discussion of a brutal war, disturbing verbal descriptions of violent rape, and examples of the physical and emotional destruction of such attacks. There are also images of dead bodies seen from a distance. It is strongly recommended that the film be reviewed for content before use in a classroom setting.

POV documentaries can be recorded off-the-air and used for educational purposes for up to one year from the initial broadcast. In addition, POV offers a lending library of DVDs and VHS tapes that you can borrow anytime during the school year — FOR FREE!


OBJECTIVES

By the end of this lesson, students will:

GRADE LEVEL: This lesson is best used with mature students in grades 9-12.

SUBJECT AREAS: Current Events, World History, Civics, Geography, English, Health.

MATERIALS:

ESTIMATED TIME NEEDED: One 50-minute class period


BACKGROUND:

The Democratic Republic of the Congo has a population of 56 million people composed of more than 200 ethnic groups. An estimated 65 percent of the population can read and write in French, the official language.

The rich mineral deposits, competing tribal groups, a brutal colonial legacy from Belgium and vast stretches of forest have always made the nation ripe for foreign intervention and political chaos. Especially in eastern Congo, where uncertain borders are remote from the capital of Kinshasa, the country has served as haven and battleground for Congolese insurgents and armed groups spilling over from wars in neighboring countries. The end of the Rwandan genocide sent thousands of Hutu militiamen, the Interhamwe — who were responsible for the mass murder of Tutsis and moderate Hutus — fleeing to the Congolese forests, where they were pursued by the new Tutsi-dominated Rwandan army.

Their struggle became entangled with a long-running insurgency against the crumbling Mobutu regime and cross-border tensions with other nations, helping to fuel the First and Second Congo Wars. The latter, lasting from 1998 to 2003, involved nine African nations and some 20 armed groups, and led to the death of nearly 4 million people, earning it the epithet of "Africa's First World War." As in some other African conflicts, child soldiers, drugs, superstition and a virulent terrorizing of women characterized the fighting.

The death toll continues to rise at the rate of nearly 1,200 people each day, with no end to the conflict in sight. In addition, the United Nations estimates that an average of 40 women are raped every day in some parts of the Congo, with tens and possibly hundreds of thousands of women having been victims of sexual violence since 1998.


ACTIVITY

  1. Show students where the Democratic Republic of the Congo is located on a political map of Africa. Explain that tens and possibly hundreds of thousands of women and girls in this war-torn country have suffered crimes of extreme sexual violence.
  2. Use the video clip, "War Overview and Account of Lumo's Attack," to introduce Lumo. Tell the class that she was raped so violently that she suffers from fistula, which is characterized by severe tissue damage. Explain that as a result of fistula, Lumo is unable to control her bodily functions and may not be able to bear children. Her fiancée and family, except for her mother, rejected because of the rape and the fistula. In the video, she tells her story from a hospital where she has gone to heal.
  3. Allow students to react to Lumo's experience. Tell students that Lumo had to stay at that hospital for nearly two years and underwent five surgeries to repair the physical damage to her body that happened when she was raped. After her final operation, which seemed to repair the fistula, she returned to her village, but  her safety continues to be at risk.
  4. Explain that Lumo is one of many women who have suffered from sexual violence being used as a weapon of war. Then share with the class some of the following statistics (source: United Nations Stop Rape Now brochure (PDF)). Be sure to point out on a map the locations of each place listed:
  5. Tell students that these numbers demonstrate that acts of sexual violence are not random offenses committed by individual soldiers. It is often used as a military tactic to humiliate and demoralize individuals, to tear apart families and to devastate communities. The perpetrators of these crimes largely go unpunished and the victims are left powerless.
  6. Next, break the class into small groups to read and discuss the POV interview with Pamela Shifman of UNICEF.
  7. Finally, ask students to write letters to President Bush and/or members of Congress. Request that students include in their letters what they have learned about sexual violence as a weapon of war and suggestions they might have for how the United States could show greater leadership in addressing these issues.

ASSESSMENT

Students can be assessed on:


EXTENSIONS & ADAPTATIONS:


RESOURCES:

Human Rights Watch The website of Human Rights Watch, an international organization dedicated to defending human rights across the globe, includes dozens of reports about the Congo and related conflicts, including this 2002 report entitled "The War Within the War." For direct testimony from rape survivors, see http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2002/06/19/sexual-violence-eastern-congo-recent-testimonies.

Stop Rape Now This site focuses on the Untied Nation's actions against sexual violence in conflict. It features a brochure explaining the issue, more information on the crisis in the Congo and survivor accounts.


STANDARDS:

These standards are drawn from "Content Knowledge," a compilation of content standards and benchmarks for K-12 curriculum by McRel (Mid-continent Research for Education and Learning) at http://www.mcrel.org/standards-benchmarks.

Health Standard 2: Knows environmental and external factors that affect individual and community health.

Language Arts Standard 4: Gathers and uses information for research purposes.

Standard 8: Uses listening and speaking strategies for different purposes.

Standard 9: Uses viewing skills and strategies to understand and interpret visual media.

World History Standard 44: Understands the search for community, stability and peace in an interdependent world.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Cari Ladd, M.Ed., is an educational writer with a background in broadcast journalism, secondary education and media development. Previously, she served as PBS Interactive's director of education, overseeing the development of curricular resources tied to PBS programs, the PBS TeacherSource website (now PBS Teachers), and online teacher professional development services. She has also taught in Maryland and northern Virginia.

BACKGROUND SOURCES:

DR Congo: Key Facts http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/spl/hi/guides/456900/456977/html/nn3page1.stm

Stop Rape Now Brochure StopRapeNow_Brochure.pdf

Violence Against Women "Beyond Rape" in Congo – U.N. http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L30471668.htm

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Lumo: Lesson Plan: Addressing Sexual Violence in War

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OVERVIEW

This lesson plan is designed to be used in conjunction with the film Lumo, which takes an intimate look at the healing process of a victim of rape, a crime of political terror that is increasingly common in areas of military conflict, such as the central African country of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (the Congo). This lesson uses an excerpt of the film to put a human face on the high numbers of women who are victims of rape in these areas. Students will learn more about this worldwide problem and write letters to government leaders suggesting how the United States could show greater leadership in addressing sexual violence in war. The film is in Swahili, French and English with English subtitles.

Note: The content of this documentary includes discussion of a brutal war, disturbing verbal descriptions of violent rape, and examples of the physical and emotional destruction of such attacks. There are also images of dead bodies seen from a distance. It is strongly recommended that the film be reviewed for content before use in a classroom setting.

POV documentaries can be recorded off-the-air and used for educational purposes for up to one year from the initial broadcast. In addition, POV offers a lending library of DVDs and VHS tapes that you can borrow anytime during the school year — FOR FREE!


OBJECTIVES

By the end of this lesson, students will:

GRADE LEVEL: This lesson is best used with mature students in grades 9-12.

SUBJECT AREAS: Current Events, World History, Civics, Geography, English, Health.

MATERIALS:

ESTIMATED TIME NEEDED: One 50-minute class period


BACKGROUND:

The Democratic Republic of the Congo has a population of 56 million people composed of more than 200 ethnic groups. An estimated 65 percent of the population can read and write in French, the official language.

The rich mineral deposits, competing tribal groups, a brutal colonial legacy from Belgium and vast stretches of forest have always made the nation ripe for foreign intervention and political chaos. Especially in eastern Congo, where uncertain borders are remote from the capital of Kinshasa, the country has served as haven and battleground for Congolese insurgents and armed groups spilling over from wars in neighboring countries. The end of the Rwandan genocide sent thousands of Hutu militiamen, the Interhamwe — who were responsible for the mass murder of Tutsis and moderate Hutus — fleeing to the Congolese forests, where they were pursued by the new Tutsi-dominated Rwandan army.

Their struggle became entangled with a long-running insurgency against the crumbling Mobutu regime and cross-border tensions with other nations, helping to fuel the First and Second Congo Wars. The latter, lasting from 1998 to 2003, involved nine African nations and some 20 armed groups, and led to the death of nearly 4 million people, earning it the epithet of "Africa's First World War." As in some other African conflicts, child soldiers, drugs, superstition and a virulent terrorizing of women characterized the fighting.

The death toll continues to rise at the rate of nearly 1,200 people each day, with no end to the conflict in sight. In addition, the United Nations estimates that an average of 40 women are raped every day in some parts of the Congo, with tens and possibly hundreds of thousands of women having been victims of sexual violence since 1998.


ACTIVITY

  1. Show students where the Democratic Republic of the Congo is located on a political map of Africa. Explain that tens and possibly hundreds of thousands of women and girls in this war-torn country have suffered crimes of extreme sexual violence.
  2. Use the video clip, "War Overview and Account of Lumo's Attack," to introduce Lumo. Tell the class that she was raped so violently that she suffers from fistula, which is characterized by severe tissue damage. Explain that as a result of fistula, Lumo is unable to control her bodily functions and may not be able to bear children. Her fiancée and family, except for her mother, rejected because of the rape and the fistula. In the video, she tells her story from a hospital where she has gone to heal.
  3. Allow students to react to Lumo's experience. Tell students that Lumo had to stay at that hospital for nearly two years and underwent five surgeries to repair the physical damage to her body that happened when she was raped. After her final operation, which seemed to repair the fistula, she returned to her village, but  her safety continues to be at risk.
  4. Explain that Lumo is one of many women who have suffered from sexual violence being used as a weapon of war. Then share with the class some of the following statistics (source: United Nations Stop Rape Now brochure (PDF)). Be sure to point out on a map the locations of each place listed:
    • An average of 40 women are raped every day in South Kivu in the context of the ongoing armed conflict in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
    • It is estimated that between 20,000 and 50,000 women were raped during the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina in the early 1990s.
    • It is estimated that between 50,000 and 64,000 internally displaced women in Sierra Leone have experienced sexual violence at the hands of armed combatants.
    • It is estimated that between 250,000 and 500,000 women were raped during the genocide in Rwanda.
  5. Tell students that these numbers demonstrate that acts of sexual violence are not random offenses committed by individual soldiers. It is often used as a military tactic to humiliate and demoralize individuals, to tear apart families and to devastate communities. The perpetrators of these crimes largely go unpunished and the victims are left powerless.
  6. Next, break the class into small groups to read and discuss the POV interview with Pamela Shifman of UNICEF.
  7. Finally, ask students to write letters to President Bush and/or members of Congress. Request that students include in their letters what they have learned about sexual violence as a weapon of war and suggestions they might have for how the United States could show greater leadership in addressing these issues.


ASSESSMENT

Students can be assessed on:


EXTENSIONS & ADAPTATIONS:


RESOURCES:

Human Rights Watch
The website of Human Rights Watch, an international organization dedicated to defending human rights across the globe, includes dozens of reports about the Congo and related conflicts, including this 2002 report entitled "The War Within the War." For direct testimony from rape survivors, see http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2002/06/19/sexual-violence-eastern-congo-recent-testimonies.

Stop Rape Now
This site focuses on the Untied Nation's actions against sexual violence in conflict. It features a brochure explaining the issue, more information on the crisis in the Congo and survivor accounts.


STANDARDS:

These standards are drawn from "Content Knowledge," a compilation of content standards and benchmarks for K-12 curriculum by McRel (Mid-continent Research for Education and Learning) at http://www.mcrel.org/standards-benchmarks.

Health
Standard 2: Knows environmental and external factors that affect individual and community health.

Language Arts
Standard 4: Gathers and uses information for research purposes.

Standard 8: Uses listening and speaking strategies for different purposes.

Standard 9: Uses viewing skills and strategies to understand and interpret visual media.

World History
Standard 44: Understands the search for community, stability and peace in an interdependent world.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Cari Ladd, M.Ed., is an educational writer with a background in broadcast journalism, secondary education and media development. Previously, she served as PBS Interactive's director of education, overseeing the development of curricular resources tied to PBS programs, the PBS TeacherSource website (now PBS Teachers), and online teacher professional development services. She has also taught in Maryland and northern Virginia.

BACKGROUND SOURCES:

DR Congo: Key Facts
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/spl/hi/guides/456900/456977/html/nn3page1.stm

Stop Rape Now Brochure
StopRapeNow_Brochure.pdf

Violence Against Women "Beyond Rape" in Congo – U.N.
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L30471668.htm