#NeverAgain — Storytelling for Understanding, Action and Change

This six-lesson unit for grades 8-12 explores personal and family stories about the incarceration of people of Japanese heritage during World War II. Countering a myth of Asian American passivity in the face of injustice, “Never Again” explores how experience inspires action and how storytelling helps us understand , heal and make change.

Arts-based activities with each lesson help students discover how personal narratives expand and complicate other stories they may have learned.

 As an extension, an Action Civics Project – grounded in 10 Questions for Young Changemakers from Harvard University’s Democratic Knowledge Project  – guides students in creating their own changemaking story projects. The 10 Questions offer a lens for linking media literacy and activism, helping students stay thoughtful and safe while planning and drafting their projects.

Photo by Alexander Novati, 2013, Creative Commons license CC-BY-SA 3.0

Audio excerpts from the 2021 “Never Again” radio series are provided with each lesson above — full episodes available here.

“Never Again” is intended to supplement other/ongoing learning about the incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II — additional resources on this topic listed here.

California curriculum standards in History/Social Science, Common Core English Language Arts and Visual and Performing Arts described here.