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Then and Now

This lesson encourages students to look for continuity and change in patterns in historical events. Students reflect on the patterns explored throughout the unit and consider why stereotypes continue to play a role in today’s society. They make connections between the experiences shown in Two Roses, historical events during the Holocaust, and examples of stereotyping in the modern world. The lesson encourages students to think critically about how stereotypes can be challenged and why understanding the past is essential for building more inclusive communities.

Lesson aim: Reflecting on consequences and modern connections

Learning Objectives

Students will be able to:

  • identify modern examples of stereotyping.
  • recognize similarities between past and present patterns.
  • reflect on personal and societal responsibility.

Guiding Questions

  • What responsibility do we have when we recognize harmful patterns?

Lesson Activities

Introduction

Write on the board: Do stereotypes still shape society today?

Students:

  • Think silently (2–3 minutes).
  • Turn and talk

Then ask:

  • In what spaces do stereotypes still spread?
  • Social media?
  • Politics?
  • News?
  • Schools?

Keep it general—avoid targeting groups.

Pattern Reflection

Reintroduce the progression from Lesson 3: Stereotype → Repetition → Acceptance → Policy → Harm. Then ask:

  • Do you see this pattern anywhere today?
  • Where does it usually stop?
  • What prevents escalation?

Keep discussion analytical and systems-focused.

Small Group Discussion

Give groups this prompt: What are warning signs that stereotypes are growing in influence?

Possible guiding questions:

  • When do jokes become normalized?
  • What happens when leaders repeat harmful ideas?
  • Why is silence powerful?

Each group identifies:

  • Two warning signs
  • One way stereotypes can be challenged

Build an Action Plan

In pairs or small groups, have students build an action plan to counteract stereotypes.

Step 1: Identify a Pattern

Groups choose one area where stereotypes commonly spread:

  • social media
  • school environment
  • news and politics
  • peer groups
  • popular culture

They list:

  • Two to three warning signs (build off their discussion from before, but now focused on a specific stereotype).
  • What escalation might look like.

Step 2: Create an Interruption Strategy

Each group designs a simple “interruption plan.”

They must answer:

a. What would interrupt the stereotype early?

b. What would prevent it from spreading?

c. What role do individuals play?

d. What role do institutions play?

Encourage realistic solutions:

  • asking questions
  • fact-checking
  • calling out misinformation respectfully
  • promoting multiple perspectives
  • changing language norms

Step 3: Share & Reflect

Groups present briefly. After each presentation, ask:

  • Is this practical?
  • What makes it effective?
  • Where might it be difficult?

Ideogram Final Addition

Add a final layer (outside the circle)   Interruption / Responsibility

Prompt: What helps stop stereotypes from escalation. Encourage students to think of their action plans and their peers’ actions plans.

Students may add:

  • education
  • speaking up
  • media literacy
  • laws protecting rights
  • inclusive communities

This visually completes the unit arc.

Closure

We studied how stereotypes grew into systems during the Holocaust. The lesson is not just historical—it’s about recognizing patterns before they escalate. Stereotypes may start small, but history shows us they can grow—unless someone interrupts them.

Optional Reflection:

  1. How has your understanding of stereotypes changed during this unit?
  2. What did you learn about how stereotypes can grow from ideas into larger systems?
  3. Looking at your ideogram, what does it reveal about how stereotypes grow and impact people?