Nevada Code § 388.887

Development of curriculum regarding the Holocaust and other genocides; reports
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1. The State Board shall create a
subcommittee to review and make recommendations on the manner in which to
provide age-appropriate and historically accurate instruction about the
Holocaust and other genocides, such as the Armenian, Cambodian, Darfur,
Guatemalan and Rwandan genocides, in social studies and language arts courses
of study.
2. The review conducted and any
recommendations made by the subcommittee pursuant to this section must include,
without limitation:
(a) The manner in which to modify the curricula
of relevant courses in social studies and language arts to include the
instruction described in this section;
(b) An inventory of available classroom resources
for educators to meet the requirements of this section;
(c) The professional development that may be
necessary or appropriate for a teacher who provides the instruction described
in this section; and
(d) Consideration of any similar instruction
provided in another state or school district.
3. The subcommittee shall link current
standards with community resources that may assist in the implementation of the
instruction described in subsection 1. The subcommittee shall review the manner
in which the current standards support comprehensive education regarding the
Holocaust and other genocides, such as the Armenian, Cambodian, Darfur,
Guatemalan and Rwandan genocides, including, without limitation, by:
(a) Preparing pupils to confront the immorality
of the Holocaust, other genocides, such as the Armenian, Cambodian, Darfur,
Guatemalan and Rwandan genocides, and other acts of mass violence and to
reflect on the causes of related historical events;
(b) Addressing the breadth of the history of the
Holocaust, including, without limitation, the dictatorship of the Third Reich,
the system of concentration camps, the persecution of both Jewish and
non-Jewish people, the resistance to the Third Reich and the Holocaust by both
Jewish and non-Jewish people and the various trials that occurred after the end
of World War II;
(c) Developing the respect of pupils for cultural
diversity and helping pupils to gain insight into the importance of
international human rights for all people;
(d) Promoting the understanding of pupils of how
the Holocaust contributed to the need for the term genocide and led to
international legislation that recognized genocide as a crime;
(e) Communicating the impact of personal
responsibility, civic engagement and societal responsiveness;
(f) Stimulating the reflection of pupils on the
role and responsibility of citizens in democratic societies to combat
misinformation, indifference and discrimination through the development of
critical thinking skills and through tools of resistance such as protest,
reform and celebration;
(g) Providing pupils with opportunities to
contextualize and analyze patterns of human behavior by persons and groups who
belong in one or more categories, including, without limitation, perpetrator,
collaborator, bystander, victim and rescuer;
(h) Enabling pupils to understand the
ramifications of prejudice, racism and stereotyping;
(i) Preserving the memories of survivors of
genocide and providing opportunities for pupils to discuss and honor the
cultural legacies of survivors;
(j) Providing pupils with a foundation for
examining the history of discrimination in this State;
(k) Including in curricula the use of personal
narratives and multimedia primary source materials, which may include, without
limitation, video testimony, photographs, artwork, diary entries, letters,
government documents, maps and poems; and
(l) Exploring the various mechanisms of
transitional and restorative justice that help humanity move forward in the
aftermath of genocide.
4. The subcommittee must be composed of
the Superintendent of Public Instruction, or his or her designee, and the
following members appointed by the Superintendent:
(a) Three members representing the Governors
Advisory Council on Education Relating to the Holocaust created by NRS 233G.020 ;
(b) Three members representing nonprofit
organizations that have developed curricula regarding the Holocaust for use in
public schools;
(c) At least one member representing a school
district in which 60,000 or more pupils are enrolled;
(d) At least one member representing a school
district in which fewer than 60,000 pupils are enrolled;
(e) At least one member representing a charter
school located in this State;
(f) At least one member representing nonprofit
organizations that have developed curricula for use in public schools regarding
the Armenian genocide; and
(g) At least one member representing nonprofit organizations
that have developed curricula for use in public schools regarding genocides
other than the Holocaust and the Armenian genocide.
5. On or before July 1 of each
even-numbered year, the State Board shall report its findings and any
recommendations to the Joint Interim Standing Committee on Education,
including, without limitation, any recommendations made by the subcommittee
pursuant to subsection 1, as well as any actions the State Board has taken or
intends to take to include the instruction in the relevant courses pursuant to
subsection 2.
6. On or before August 31 of each
even-numbered year, the Joint Interim Standing Committee on Education shall
consider the report submitted by the State Board and prepare and submit a
written report to the Director of the Legislative Counsel Bureau for
transmittal to the Legislature concerning the Committees consideration of the
matters described in this section and any recommendations for legislation to
ensure the instruction described in this section is included in the curricula
for the relevant courses.
7. As used in this section:
(a) Genocide means any of the following acts
committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic,
racial or religious group and includes, without limitation, genocides and other
acts of mass atrocities identified by the United States Holocaust Memorial
Museum:
(1) Killing members of the group;
(2) Causing serious bodily or mental harm
to members of the group;
(3) Deliberately inflicting on the group
conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole
or in part;
(4) Imposing measures intended to prevent
births within the group; and
(5) Forcibly transferring children of the
group to another group.
(b) Holocaust means the systematic,
bureaucratic, state-sponsored persecution and murder of approximately 6,000,000
Jewish persons and 5,000,000 other persons by the Nazi regime and its
collaborators.

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