tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6072539840440045471.post1386372187452889010..comments2024-02-22T05:37:42.278-05:00Comments on World History Teachers Blog: Your Teachers' Tool Kit for your lesson on the Arab SpringHistory Bloghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17951055071592873308noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6072539840440045471.post-27972102064537415572016-01-01T12:39:07.055-05:002016-01-01T12:39:07.055-05:00Hi Jeff.
This looks like a good plan. I'd li...Hi Jeff.<br /><br />This looks like a good plan. I'd like to add a couple of things based on my research for REPORTING UNDER FIRE, my book on women war reporters across the 20th century. I profiled Robin Wright (yes...there's another one...), a veteran reporter for many papers and magazines and now an authority on the Middle East. She is very up to date on life among young women and men in the Middle East. I included a passage from her article "The Pink Hijab" that appeared in the WILSON QUARTERLY in Summer 2011. The story featured a young woman who wears the hijab in order to effect social change in her culture. <br /><br />Check out her websites http://www.usip.org/experts/robin-wright There's a link to a New Yorker article she wrote about the Arab Spring.<br /><br />I think you can also probably find my book online via your local library. Your students and fellow teacher might find it useful.Kerrie Logan Hollihanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11053641063772538028noreply@blogger.com