Section 7 v.3 - HHBElectiveOutline

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Section 7: Conformity and Obedience
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Section 7: Conformity and Obedience
Part 1: Overview
The purpose of this section is to explore essential questions such as:
? What is propaganda? How can propaganda be distinguished from other forms of media?
? How do you know when information is accurate? Under what conditions do you believe
what you see and hear?
? What type of schooling prepares young people for their role as citizens in a democracy?
What type of schooling prepares young people for their role as citizens in a dictatorship?
? What is dehumanization? What conditions allow a group to become dehumanized?
? What is the difference between obedience and unconditional (“blind”) obedience? What
can be the consequences of unconditional obedience?
? Under what conditions is it appropriate to obey authority? Under what conditions is it
appropriate to resist authority?
The lesson ideas for this section are built around these core resources:
 The Nazis: A Warning from History, episode 2, Chaos and Consent (film)
 Nazi propaganda posters
 Childhood Memories (film)
 Readings from Chapter 5, Facing History and Ourselves: Holocaust and Human Behavior
 Obedience (film)
Background information
To support the teaching of this section, we strongly recommend reading chapter 5 in the
resource book Facing History and Ourselves: Holocaust and Human Behavior.
FIND SITES FOR BACKGROUND
Rationale: What is the purpose of this section? Why teach this material?
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Part 2: Lesson ideas
These lesson ideas suggest ways to the core resources in order to support students’ exploration of the section’s’
essential questions. They should be adapted to meet the needs of your students and context.
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Lesson idea #18 – Propaganda and conformity
Suggested duration: 90-120 minutes
Key terms: propaganda, conformity, dehumanization
Materials:
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The Nazis: A Warning from History, episode 2, Chaos and Consent (24:00 – 38:27)
(Handout 18.1) Definitions of propaganda
(Handout 18.2) ”Healthy Parents Have Healthy Children”
(Handout 18.3) The Poisonous Mushroom
(Handout 18.4) Hitler Youth Poster
(Handout 18.5) “Trust No Fox on His Green Meadow and No Jew on His Oath”
Recommended journal and discussion prompts
 Identify an example of conformity (or peer pressure) from your own experience. In what
ways did you conform? What were the benefits of conforming? What were the costs of
conforming?
 If you were the head of a group (an organization, a school, a country…) and you wanted
to convince people to believe a certain idea, what might you do? What are some ways
you might persuade people to agree with you?
 Do you strongly agree, agree, disagree, or strongly disagree with the following
statement: Most people can be convinced to believe almost anything. Explain your
answer. Under what circumstances do you think people are less likely to believe what
they see or hear? Under what circumstances do you think people are most likely to
believe what they see or hear?
 In the first few months of being appointed Chancellor, Hitler created a Ministry of Public
Enlightenment and Propaganda. Why do you think Hitler might have done this? What
might the director of a Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda do?
 What criteria do you use to determine what information is accurate and can be trusted?
How do you know when what you are hearing is misleading or inaccurate?
 What does it mean to dehumanize someone? What are the ways in which we can make
individuals or groups seem unworthy or less-than-human?
Activity ideas
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Watch excerpt from The Nazis: A Warning from History, episode 2, Chaos and Consent (24:00
– 38:27) - This excerpt from the BBC-produced documentary The Nazis: Chaos and Consent
describes life in the Third Reich starting when Hitler came to power (1933) until violence
against Jews escalated with Kristallnacht (1939). This clip provides a review of some material
students have already covered, including the Nuremberg Laws, while introducing concepts
students will be exploring in this lesson, such as conformity and propaganda.
 Pre-viewing: Before watching this clip, ask students to identify an idea they wish
everyone believed or behavior they wished everyone practiced. If they were in a
position of power, what could they do to get as many people as possible to believe this
idea or to act in this way?
 During-viewing: Ask students to record evidence from the film to answer the question,
“What are some ways the Nazi dictatorship encouraged people to follow their policies
and embrace their ideals?”
 Post- viewing: In the clip, Erna Kranz recollected her feelings as a young woman living in
Nazi Germany who witnessed violence and injustice against Jewish people yet did
nothing to stop these crimes. Here is a transcript from the video:
Erna Kranz: It was quite a shock….You actually thought about things more…. At first
you allowed yourself to swim with the tide. You were carried along on a wave of
hope, because we had it better, we had order in the country, we felt secure. But,
then you really started to think. Me, personally, that is….It was a terrible shock. I
have to admit it.
Interviewer: But you didn’t become an opponent of the regime.
Erna Kranz: No, no, no, that, no. One could have, then. But when the masses were
shouting “Heil,” what could one do? You went with it. We were the ones who went
along.
After reading these words or watching this clip again, ask students to reflect in their
journals on the following questions:
 Why do you think Erna decided to be part of the group “who went along”?
 What options did she feel she had?
 Erna asks, “What could one do?” How might you answer her given what you
know about the time period?
Analyzing Erna’s experience provides an opportunity to create a working definition for
“conformity” (or for students to review definitions they may have developed during
section three). In their journals, students could reflect on questions such as, “What
does conformity mean to you? Identify an example of conformity from your own
experience. In what ways did you conform? What were the benefits of conforming?
What were the costs of conforming?”
Create a working definition for propaganda -The materials in this lesson help students address
the question “Why did most Germans, like Erna, go along with the policies dictated by Hitler
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and the Nazi Party?” by examining the role of propaganda in German society. Before they
begin analyzing Nazi propaganda, help students come up with a working definition for
propaganda. A working definition of propaganda might include pro meaning for something and
ganda meaning to reproduce. Here are some other ways to help students think more deeply
about this concept:
o The reading “Propaganda,” on pp. 218-19 of the resource book, describes how
Nazi Minister of Propaganda Joseph Goebbels and Hitler believed they could use
a range of media to control the beliefs and actions of German citizens. Students
could read “Propaganda” for homework in preparation for this lesson.
o Handout 18.1 includes several definitions of propaganda you might share with
students to help them think about the different meanings of this word.
o Another way to help students think about propaganda is to ask what they might
do if they wanted to convince someone—friends, parents, teachers, etc.—of an
idea. What strategies might they use? What kinds of words would they employ?
o At this point, you might want to remind students that within the first few
months of being appointed Chancellor, Hitler created a Ministry of Public
Enlightenment and Propaganda. The United States federal government, like
many nations, has ministries (or departments) of defense, treasury, and
education, but does not have a department of propaganda. In Nazi Germany,
what might the director of a Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda
do? What purpose might it serve? They could write about this question in their
journals and then share responses with a partner.
Analyzing Nazi Propaganda– Facing History teachers have found that one of the most effective
ways to help students understand life in the Third Reich is through studying the propaganda
disseminated by the Nazis. Handouts 18.2 - 18.5 provide several examples of Nazi propaganda
distributed during the 1930s - two posters and a page from a children’s book. These images
exemplify Nazi propaganda that was targeted at young people. For other examples of Nazi
propaganda, refer to the German Propaganda Archive at Calvin College which posts speeches,
posters, and political cartoons. Also, Facing History’s library has a set of propaganda slides
available for borrowing.
 Describe, interpret, evaluate: For a structured way to help students analyze Nazi
propaganda, refer to the teaching strategy Media Literacy: Analyzing Visual Images. This
strategy guides students through the process of describing, interpreting and evaluating
what they see. To model how to answer questions with specific evidence from the image
analyze the first image together as a whole class. . Students can analyze other images in
small groups or independently. After this exercise, students can discuss the extent to which
these examples fit the various definitions of propaganda on handout 18.1, as well as any
working definitions they have developed.
 Propaganda and dehumanization: Once students haveanalyzed several examples of Nazi
propaganda, they are prepared to discuss how these images may have impacted the
millions of Germans who saw it. As students will likely discover, Nazi propaganda served
many purposes: to glorify the pure German race, to encourage obedience to Hitler, and to
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promote specific gender stereotypes. One of the main purposes of Nazi propaganda was to
dehumanize Jews – to make them appear unworthy of the dignity and respect afforded to
human beings. Tntroduce students to the term dehumanization.,. Questions you might use
for journal writing and/or discussion include:
o What does it mean to dehumanize someone?
o How might this be accomplished?
o What might be the consequences of dehumanizing an individual or group? Once
people believe that someone is sub-human, how might that individual be
treated?
o Identify examples of dehumanization from other periods of history. What group
was dehumanized? By whom? What were the consequences of this? .
Discussing the impact of propaganda: After seeing a Nazi propaganda film called The Eternal
Jew, a graduate student named Marion Pritchard said:
It was so cruel . . . that we could not believe anybody would have taken it seriously, or
find it convincing. But the next day one of the gentiles [non-Jews] said that she was
ashamed to admit that the movie had affected her. That although it strengthened her
resolve to oppose the German regime, the film had succeeded in making her see Jews as
“them.” And that of course was true for all of us. The Germans had driven a wedge in
what was one of the most integrated communities in Europe.1
You might end this lesson by sharing this quotation with students and asking them to reflect on
how they think propaganda might have influenced their lives. Have they ever felt like Marion
Pritchard? After seeing a movie or an advertisement or listening to a song, have they ever felt
like an idea stuck with them, even though they questioned whether this idea was true?
? Below are some other questions that can provide a starting point for a class discussion or a
personal essay assignment. You might give students this list of questions and allow them to
respond to the one that most interests them. In small groups, students can comment on
each other’s ideas using the “save the last word for me ”teaching strategy. Does
propaganda have to be misleading? Does it have to be untrue? Is it always harmful?
? In Nazi Germany, propaganda had deadly consequences. What are the consequences of
propaganda on lives today?
? Can you think of positive uses for propaganda? Where is the line between the appropriate
use of media to persuade and the misuse of media to inflict harm?
? What criteria can we use to determine whether what we see and hear can be trusted?
? Hitler is known for saying, “What good fortune for governments that people do not think,”
and his policies were based on the premise that most individuals are conformists who do
not think for themselves. What do you think of his statement of human behavior?
? The Nazis used several tactics to control information; including limiting access to media that
they thought was offensive. They organized public book burnings, censored the media, and
banned particular authors and artists. What have been your experiences with censorship?
1
Marion Pritchard as quoted in The Courage to Care, ed. Carol Rittner and Sondra Myers (New York: New
York University Press, 1986), 28.
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What are the reasons why a person, group, or government may want to restrict access to
certain information? Under what circumstances, if any, do you think censorship is
appropriate? Why?
Assessment ideas (for class work and/or homework)
 The German Propaganda Archive at Calvin College has a large archive of Nazi
propaganda posters. Students can pick a different poster and analyze it on their own.
They can share the poster and their analysis with students in class the next day.
 To evaluate students’ understanding of propaganda, you could ask them to select an
example of propaganda today and analyze this artifact following a similar protocol used
during this lesson.
 Many of the questions included in this lesson idea could be used as prompts for a formal
essay assignment.
Extensions:
Analyzing Contemporary Media - Students are surrounded by advertisements and other media
that are intended to influence public opinion. The media, intentionally or unintentionally,
disseminate ideas about race, gender, age, class and the messages individuals, especially young
people, pick up from the media can have a profound impact on how they define themselves
and how they are defined by others. To expose and demystify these messages, ask students to
interpret media in their lives. Here are some ways you can help students develop their media
literacy skills while also giving them an opportunity to think about how the media influences
how they see themselves and how they see others.
 Have students identify a group to which they belong (gender, race, age, religion,
neighborhood, school, nation, etc). They can begin by making an identity chart for this
group that addresses the questions, “How do you perceive this group? How do you think
this group is perceived by others?” Then have students look for examples of how this
group is represented by the media (by a song, a newspaper article, advertisements,
etc.). Finally, students can report on how these representations are aligned with the
ideas on their identity chart. To what degree (a lot, somewhat, not much) does the
media’s portrayal of this group match the student’s own characterization? To what
degree (a lot, somewhat, not much), does the media’s portrayal of this group match
how we think others define this group? This exercise can lead into a discussion about
the relationship between the media and identity. How does the media shape who we
are and how we see others? In what ways can this be helpful? In what ways can the
media be harmful?
 Students can bring in examples of propaganda; either found on the Internet, in
magazines, or on television, and then discuss why they think this text should be
classified as propaganda based on the definitions they developed in class. To complicate
students’ work with propaganda, include an example of media with a “positive”
message, such as a public service announcement. Students could organize the examples
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of contemporary propaganda they have collected on a continuum from most ethical to
least ethical.
Create propaganda posters - After students analyze propaganda from Nazi Germany and from
today, give them the opportunity to create their own propaganda posters. Begin by having
students select a cause or message that is important to them. Then they can identify an
appropriate audience for this message and then they can brainstorm tactics that might be
persuasive to this audience. For more information about propaganda techniques, two helpful
resources include the Institute for Propaganda Analysis and the Sourcewatch web site.
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(Handout 18.1) Definitions of Propaganda
Definition #1 - The spreading of ideas for the purpose of helping or harming an institution, a
cause, or a person
(Source: Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary)
Definition #2 - Information, especially of a biased or misleading nature, used to promote
a political cause or point of view.
(Source: Concise Oxford English Dictionary)
Definition #3 - A manipulation designed to lead you to a simplistic conclusion rather than a
carefully considered one.
(Source: Dr. Anthony Pratkanis, Professor of Psychology, University of California Santa Cruz)
Definition #4 - The deliberate, systematic attempt to shape perceptions, manipulate cognitions
[thoughts], and direct behavior to achieve a response that furthers the desired intent of the
propagandist.
(Source: Propaganda and Persuasion, Garth Jowett and Victoria O’Donnell, 1999)
Write your own working definition of propaganda:
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(Handout 18.2) ”Healthy Parents Have Healthy Children”
The caption on this poster
reads: "Healthy Parents
have Healthy Children."
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(Handout 18.3) The Poisonous Mushroom
Page from the German children's book, "Der Giftpilz" (The Poisonous
Mushroom) published in 1938 by Julius Streicher, member of the Nazi party
and founder of the Der Sturmer newspaper. The text reads, "Just as it is
often very difficult to tell the poisonous from the edible mushrooms, it is
often very difficult to recognize Jews as thieves and criminals..."
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(Handout 18.4) Hitler Youth Poster
Hitler Youth poster, “Youth Serves the Fuhrer: All Ten Year Olds into
the Hitler Youth”
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(Handout 18.5) Trust No Fox on His Green Meadow and No Jew on His Oath
This picture comes from the book Trust No Fox on His Green Meadow and No Jew on His Oath,
published by Julius Streicher in 1936. The book was used in many schools. Martin Luther, the
founder of the Protestant Church, is credited with saying these words in the sixteenth century.
The Nazis were known for incorporating antisemitic ideas from the past into their propaganda.2
2
http://www.calvin.edu/academic/cas/gpa/fuchs.htm
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Lesson idea #19 – “He alone who owns the youth, gains the future”
Suggested duration: 60-90 minutes
Key terms: propaganda, conformity, civic education
Materials:
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Confessions of a Hitler Youth (video), chapters “Hitler Youth” and “Nuremberg”
Childhood Memories (video), chapters “Frank S.” and “Walter K.”
Readings from Chapter 5 of Facing History and Ourselves: Holocaust and Human
Behavior
(Handout 19.1) Definitions of propaganda
(Handout 19.2) Life for German Youth (1933-1939) – Sample Analysis Worksheet
Recommended journal and discussion prompts
 What messages does society send to young people today about the proper way to think
and act? Where do these messages come from? To what extent do you agree or
disagree with these messages?
 Hitler said, “He alone who owns the truth, gains the future.” What do you think he
meant by this? Do you strongly agree, agree, disagree or strongly disagree with this
statement? Explain.
 If you were designing a school that was supposed to prepare young people for their role
as citizens in a democracy, what would it be like? What would students learn? What
would happen at this school? How might this school be different than one that was
preparing students for their role as citizens in a dictatorship?
 What is the difference between education and propaganda? Where is the line between
education and indoctrination?
Activity ideas
Preparation – The purpose of this lesson is to help students explore the different strategies the
Nazis used to prepare young Germans for their role as obedient followers of Hitler. You might
begin this lesson by having students think about the purpose of education, especially civic
education. Any of the suggested journal questions could be used to prompt students’ writing
and discussion. In addition to journal writing, we suggest having students view two chapters,
“Hitler Youth” and “Nuremberg,” from the video Heil Hitler: Confessions of a Hitler Youth. In
these chapters, Alfons Heck, a high-ranking member of the Hitler Youth, describes how peer
pressure and propaganda helped Hitler and the Nazis recruit eight million German children to
participate in the “war effort.” Handout 19.1, a viewing guide for these chapters of this film,
follows the levels of questions strategy, including questions ranging from factual to inferential
to universal. You could use this handout, or you could simply ask students to describe what
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they saw and heard in the film and then interpret the significance of this information. What
does this clip reveal about growing up in Nazi Germany? Where do they see evidence of the
influence of propaganda? Of conformity?
Explore other narratives describing life for German youth in the 1930s - Facing History
teachers have found that students are especially engaged in the study of history when they
have the opportunity to learn about the experiences of young people in the past. For this
reason, in our resource book and video library, we have included narratives that focus on the
experiences of German youth representing different perspectives (i.e. “Aryan,” Jewish, etc.).For
example, Facing History, working with Yale University, has produced Childhood Memories, a
video montage of Holocaust survivors, many of whom share stories of what it was like to grow
up in Nazi Germany and attend German schools. We especially recommend having students
view the testimonies of Frank S. and Walter K. before reading one or more of the following
texts from the resource book:
“Changes at School,” pp. 175–76
“School for Barbarians,” pp. 228–31
“Belonging,” pp. 232–35
“Propaganda and Education,” pp. 242–43
“Racial Instruction,” pp. 243–45
“School for Girls,” pp. 245–46
“A Lesson in Current Events,” pp. 246–48
 Students can analyze these texts using a process similar to the one they used when
interpreting Nazi propaganda in the previous lesson. Handout 19.2 is a sample
worksheet designed to break down the interpretation process for students. You can
model this process by analyzing one of the clips from Childhood Memories as a whole
class before students engage in this process independently or in small groups.
 The jigsaw teaching strategy is an effective way to structure students’ reading and
sharing of ideas from various texts.
 Encourage students to connect what they are reading to other material they have
covered, such as the story of Alfons Heck or the propaganda posters. In groups or
individually, students can use the text to text, text to self, text to world strategy to help
identify these connections. These reflections can prepare students for a debrief
discussion focused around the question, “What was it like growing up in Nazi
Germany?” Students’ responses should reference the extreme degree of conformity
that was influenced by government policies and propaganda.
Defining and discussing civic education – Nazi Germany was not the only government to make
civic education an important priority. Many nations, including the United States, have said that
one of the purposes of schooling, especially public schooling, is to prepare the young for their
role as citizens. After reflecting on what kinds of citizens were desired in Nazi Germany and
how schooling was adapted to achieve this goal, students can reflect on civic education in their
own society. Before beginning this discussion, students can create working definitions for the
phrase “civic education.” In small groups, students can respond to the following prompt and
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then share their answers with the whole class: If you were designing a school that was
supposed to prepare young people for their role as citizens in a democracy, what would it be
like? What would students learn? What would happen at this school? How might this school be
different than one that was preparing students for their role as citizens in a dictatorship?
Assessment ideas (for class work and/or homework)
 Students’ responses to the questions on the viewing guide (handout 19.1) and/or their
analysis of suggested videos and readings (see handout 19.2) will reveal the degree to
which they understand the role of propaganda and conformity in the lives of German
youth.
 This is an appropriate time to have students add to their definitions of conformity and
propaganda. They can turn in an exit card with their revised understanding of these
terms. Or, you can ask them to identify a specific way that these concepts played out in
the lives of German youth.
Extensions:
Civic education debate - The materials in this lesson might spark students’ interest in civic
education. Students could research what their school, district, or state mandate in terms of
civic education. They could also analyze civics or history textbooks. Another way to deepen
students’ understanding of civic preparation in a democracy is to organize a debate on the
topic. Students can take positions on statements such as:
 The purpose of public schools is to prepare youth for their role as citizens.
 Schools today do a good job of preparing young people to be effective democratic
citizens.
 It is appropriate for schools to indoctrinate youth to the norms valued in that society.
The following teaching strategies provide useful structures for classroom debates: SPAR,
barometer, and four corners.
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(Handout 19.1) Heil Hitler: Confessions of a Hitler Youth – Viewing Guide
Questions for “Hitler Youth”
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Approximately how many children pledged themselves to Hitler and the Third Reich?
How old was Alfons when he joined the Hitler Youth Corp?
Identify at least 3 examples of propaganda that Alfons said had an impact on him. How
did the propaganda impact him?
How did the Nazis try to captivate the young? (Try to come up with at least three
strategies they used.)
What do you think was the intended purpose of showing a film like The Eternal Jew?
What is racial science? Why do you think people believed it?
How do you think learning about racial science influenced young school age children?
Why do you think the Nazis targeted the youth? Why did they devote so much time to
their education and training?
What does this film reveal about how the Nazis taught young Germans about
distinctions between we and they? What do you think might be the impact of these
lessons?
According to this film, how were the Nazis trying to shape the morals of the young?
What were they teaching was the “right” way to behave? The “wrong” way to behave?
To what extent do you think it is possible for governments to shape the morals of its
citizens? What shapes your morals and beliefs?
Questions for “Nuremberg”
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Where did the Nazis hold the Annual Nazi Party Conference?
What was the purpose of this conference?
What “mesmerizing” message did Hitler give the Youth Corp?
What is the significance of Hitler referring to young people in the audience as “his
youth?”
What are some feelings Aflons experiences at the Nazi rally in Nuremberg?
Why do you think belonging to the Hitler Youth is important to Alfons?
Do you think belonging to a group is important to young people today? Why or why
not?
Identify an example of obedience in this film. Who is obedient? To whom? Why?
Identify an example of conformity in this film. Who is conforming? To what norm or set
of behaviors? Why?
What are the benefits of having a charismatic government leader? What are the dangers
of having a charismatic government leader?
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(Handout 19.2) Life for German Youth (1933-1939) – Sample Analysis Worksheet
Based on the information in this text (video or reading), what message is being sent to German
youth?
By whom?
What might be the purpose of disseminating this message?
How might this message influence the thoughts and actions of German youth?
Who else might have been impacted by this message? How so?
What questions or thoughts does this document or video raise for you?
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Lesson idea #20 – Obedience
Suggested duration: 60-90 minutes
Key terms: obedience, unconditional obedience, authority, resistance
Materials:
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Obedience (video)
From Facing History and Ourselves: Holocaust and Human Behavior:
o “A Matter of Obedience” pp. 210-212
o “Birthday Party,” pp. 237–40
o “A Matter of Loyalty,” pp. 240–41
o “Models of Obedience,” pp. 235–37
o “Rebels without a cause,” pp. 249-250
Recommended journal and discussion prompts
 Think of a time when you obeyed a rule or an authority figure (a parent, teacher, group
leader, etc). Why did you obey? What were the consequences of your decision? Now
think about a time when you ignored or disobeyed a rule or an authority figure? Why
did you resist authority? What were the consequences of your decision?
 What is obedience? What factors encourage obedience to authority?
 What is resistance? What factors encourage resistance to authority?
 Under what circumstances do you think it is appropriate, or even necessary, to obey
authority? Why?
 Under what circumstances do you think it is appropriate, or even necessary, to resist
authority? Why?
Activity ideas
Think-pair-share: Ask students to identify specific moments of obedience from their own lives.
You could use a prompt such as: Think of a time when you obeyed a rule or an authority figure
(a parent, teacher, group leader, etc). Why did you obey? What were the consequences of your
decision? Now think about a time when you ignored or disobeyed a rule or an authority figure?
Why did you resist authority? What were the consequences of your decision? In the sharing
portion of this exercise, focus on the reasons why students choose to obey and to resist
authority.
Defining obedience and resistance– To prepare students to learn about Professor Stanley
Milgram’s famous study, have them create working definitions for obedience and resistance. In
prior lessons when discussing questions such as, “Why did so many Germans follow the Nazis’
policies?” and “What was it like growing up in Nazi Germany?” students may have already
raised “obedience” as a factor that influenced decision-making at this time. Remind students
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of these conversations as they brainstorm examples of obedience and resistance from their
study of Nazi Germany thus far. You could also ask students to react to the adjectives
“obedient” and “resistant.” Do they think of these as positive or negative qualities? At this
point, the purpose of asking these questions is to pique students’ thinking and help them
articulate their initial thoughts. At the end of this lesson, students can review their journal
entries and note how their ideas may have changed.
Watch Obedience: The film Obedience is a 45-minute documentary about Stanley Milgram’s
famous experiment which demonstrated the human tendency to obey authority. We strongly
recommend that you watch the entire film before deciding whether or not it is appropriate for
your students. To allow ample time for preparation and debrief, many teachers show students
only excerpts of the film. Excepts commonly used include:
 (9:30-11:45) – The“teacher” (subject) refuses to go along with the experimenter’s
instructions
 (21:50–35:15) – The “teacher” volunteer obeys the instructions of the test
administrator to the most advanced degree
 (39:40-44:17) - Milgram describes variations to the experiment and how that influenced
the results. In particular, this excerpt shows how subjects were influenced by the
actions of people around them. When the group obeyed, the subject was more likely to
obey, and vice versa. Thus, this clip can be useful in helping students consider the
relationship between conformity and obedience.
In addition to or instead of viewing Obedience, students can read “A Matter of Obedience” (pp.
210-212 ). This reading provides a description of this experiment.
 Pre-viewing: Give students some background information about Milgram’s experiment
through a brief lecture or by having students read the following excerpt from “A Matter
of Obedience”:
Working with pairs, Milgram designated one volunteer as “teacher” and the
other as “learner.” As the “teacher” watched, the “learner” was strapped into a
chair with an electrode attached to each wrist. The “learner” was then told to
memorize word pairs for a test and warned that wrong answers would result in
electric shocks. The “learner” was, in fact, a member of Milgram’s team. The real
focus of the experiment was the “teacher.” Each was taken to a separate room
and seated before a “shock generator” with switches ranging from 15 volts
labeled “slight shock” to 450 volts labeled “danger–severe shock.” Each
“teacher” was told to administer a “shock” for each wrong answer. The shock
was to increase by 15 volts every time the “learner” responded incorrectly. The
“teacher” received a practice shock before the test began to get an idea of the
pain involved.
Before viewing, some teachers ask students to form a hypothesis about the results of
Milgram’s study by answering questions such as:
 What percentage of volunteer “teachers” do you think will refuse to give the
“learner” any electric shocks at all?
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Section 7: Conformity and Obedience
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
What percentage of volunteer “teachers” do you think will refuse to give electric
shocks of more than 150 volts?
 What percentage of volunteer “teachers” do you think will give shocks up to 450
volts (labeled “danger–severe shock”)?
Record students’ hypotheses on the board so they can be reviewed after students learn
the results of Milgram’s experiment. Before you show the video, you might also share
Milgram’s hypothesis with the class: he predicted that most volunteers would refuse to
give electric shocks of more than 150 volts.
 During-viewing: While viewing this clip, ask students to closely observe the behavior of
the “teacher” and the test administrator. Provide frequent opportunities for students to
write in their journals about what they have viewed, for example by pausing after
selected excerpts. Two-column note-taking can be a useful structure to help students
capture information about what they observe as well as their reactions (feelings,
questions, comments) to this information. To provide more structure for students’
note-taking, ask them to respond to specific questions such as:
 What language is used by the experimenter and the “teacher”?
 What is the teacher’s body language?
 How does the teacher act as he administered the shocks? What does he say?
 What pressures were placed on the teacher as the experiment continued?
 How does viewing this film make you feel? What ideas and questions does it
raise for you?
This film has been known to provoke strong emotional reactions in students. Many
teachers have been surprised when students laugh at sensitive moments of the
documentary. This laughter can be interpreted in many ways, but often it is a sign of
discomfort or confusion, not of enjoyment. Those who study human behavior say that
laughter can be a way of relieving tension, showing embarrassment, or expressing relief
that someone else is “on the spot.” You might share these findings with students so that
they see laughter as something other than an indication of humor or foolishness.
 Post- viewing: Teachers who have used this film comment on the importance of
planning sufficient time for debriefing during that class period, making sure that
students process their reactions before moving on to their next class. Leave time for
initial reactions to the film, as a whole class discussion or as a think-pair-share. There
are so many ways that this film can be a springboard to deep discussions about
obedience and conformity in the past and today. You might begin by asking students to
generate a list of questions that they want to talk about. As you discuss, make sure
students know that 65 percent of the volunteers gave the “learner” the full 450 volts.
(You may want to remind students that the “learner” in the experiment was a member
of the research team and was not actually receiving any electric shocks.) In addition to
students’ own questions, here are examples questions that teachers have used
following this film:
? What were the results of this experiment?
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Section 7: Conformity and Obedience
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?
?
?
?
Why do people go all the way to 450 volts? Why do some refuse?
What does this study teach us about human behavior?
What does this study teach us about Nazi Germany?
What conclusions does Milgam draw from this experiment? To what extent
do you agree with his conclusions?
? How do the results of this experiment relate to what you know about other
moments in history?
? How do the results of this experiment relate to what you have observed or
experienced about people today?
? How do people learn about obedience? Do you think this is something that is
taught to people or is it just an instinctive part of human nature? Explain.
? How should young people, especially, be taught to approach issues of
obedience? What should they learn about obeying authority? How might
they be taught these lessons?
? Milgram concluded that “relatively few people have the resources to resist
authority?” To what extent do you agree with this statement? What
resources are needed to resist authority? How might someone acquire or
develop these resources?
? Some people make a distinction between obedience and “blind obedience.”
How can you explain the difference between these concepts? Under what
conditions might someone obey “blindly”?
The Think-pair-share or fishbowl teaching strategies can be used to structure a
class discussion. Or, small groups of students can select one or more of these
questions to discuss and then they can share the highlights of their discussion
with the larger class.
Obedience and resistance in Nazi Germany: While most Germans obeyed the Nazis’ policies,
they did not do so to the same degree: some barely obeyed while others went even farther
than the Nazis’ orders. And, a minority of Germans resisted Nazi authority. The following
readings in the resource book reflect the range of responses to Nazi policy:
 “Birthday Party,” pp. 237–40
 “A Matter of Loyalty,” pp. 240–41
 “Models of Obedience,” pp. 235–37
 “Rebels without a cause,” pp. 249-250
Students can read one of these and then meet in a small group to share what the text reveals
about obedience and resistance in Nazi Germany. Groups can then discuss how this evidence
supports and/or refutes the results of Milgram’s study.
Exploring the ethical dimensions of obedience and resistance: For societies to function it is
critical that individuals obey authority. The purpose of this lesson is not for students to come
away with the idea that obedience is “bad” but to develop their ability to draw distinctions
between situations when it is appropriate to obey authority and situations that call for
resistance to authority. Here are some ways you can help them hone this skill:
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Section 7: Conformity and Obedience
page 22
 Ask students to create examples of situations when it is good, and even vital, that
individuals obey authority. For example, as a matter of public safety, when a mayor asks
citizens to leave town before a hurricane, it is important that residents of that town
listen. Then, ask students to brainstorm examples that call for resistance to authority.
These examples could come from history or from students’ own experiences.
 Working in groups, students can create at least one obedience scenario and one
resistance scenario. After presenting a scenario to the class, the “audience” can suggest
if they think that scenario calls for obedience or resistance. If there are scenarios where
the class does not agree about the appropriate course of action, give students the
opportunity to explain their positions and to listen to the ideas of others. This also could
be structured as a barometer activity.
 After this exercises, students can determine the criteria they might use to evaluate
when it is acceptable or unacceptable to obey authority or conform to the norms of the
group. Groups can present their criteria to the class verbally. Or they can record their
criteria on a poster, put their posters on the wall, and do a gallery walk of the room. A
final activity might ask students to determine their own “obedience and conformity
criteria,” drawing on the ideas from the various posters.
Assessment ideas (for class work and/or homework)
Any of the journal prompts or discussion questions included in this lesson idea could be used as
the basis for formal or informal essay writing. Or you might ask students to synthesize their
understanding of conformity, propaganda and obedience in Nazi Germany by addressing the
following prompt:
This section focused on the themes of obedience, conformity and propaganda. For each
of these terms, do the following: 1) Define the term in your own words, 2) Identify at
least two specific examples of how this concept played out in Nazi Germany, 3) Explain
how the concept relates to experiences in your own life, and 4 )List one question that you
have related to this concept. Encourage students to use their journals to help them with
this assignment.
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