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41. Death Penalty: Failures Of 3 Main Arguments
Objection 1 Imagine a psychological test for high school students whereby it is shown that those who fail One last argument against the death penalty.
http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/27a/081.html
From: hume@aol.com (Hume)
Newsgroups: alt.activism.death-penalty
Subject: Failures of 3 Main Arguments
Date: 22 Jun 1997 16:38:53 GMT
Death penalty: Failures of 3 Main Arguments
22 June, 1997 Murder is unjustified intentional killing. It is not sufficient that there be justification (a sound reason) to kill somebody, the person doing the killing must kill for that reason. Thus, if I should shoot some random person in a driveby shooting, only to have it discovered later that, quite by coincidence, this was somebody who deserved to die, this would not mitigate against the fact that I committed murder. The three most common reasons offered for capital punishment do not justify killing.
1. Specific deterrence: capital punishment is justified to prevent the commission of a future crime.
Objection 1: Imagine a psychological test for high school students whereby it is shown that those who fail are as likely to commit a future crime as are those arrested for having committed that crime in the past. The ability to prevent a future crime would be the same in both cases. If it is permissible to kill to prevent a future crime, than we are just as justified in killing those highschool students who fail this test as we are those who have committed murder. Or, in other words, if preventing a future crime does not justify killing these high-school students, it does notjustify capital punishment for murderers.
Objection 2: (This is actually a way of rephrasing above), a person being executed to prevent a future crime is, in effect, being punished for a crime that he did not commit. Not only is he being presumed guilty (rather than being presumed innocent unless proved to be guilty), he is being presumed guilty of crime that does not exist.

42. TCLA Bill Of Rights High School Exit Exam
One in three California students attends an overcrowded school or one in George Ryan called for a moratorium on his state s use of the death penalty.
http://www.tcla.gseis.ucla.edu/rights/latest/7/hs_exit_op_ed.html
About TCLA Background Calendar Features ... Home Diploma Penalty Misplaces Blame
by Jeannie Oakes and John Rogers
Reprinted in the Los Angeles Times October 6, 2002 Jeannie Oakes is presidential professor and director of UCLA's Institute for Democracy, Education, and Access (IDEA). Professor John Rogers is IDEA's associate director L ast Monday, the state released the latest round of scores on California's High School Exit Exam. More than half of the 431,000 10th-graders who took the exam last spring failed itmost for the second time. They will have more chances to pass, but unless something extraordinary happens, they can forget about a high school diploma. They can also forget about attending any of California's public universities, even if they've had all the right classes, gotten good grades and taken the SAT. The exit exam is a blunt instrument, useful for exposing the California schools in greatest need of attention and resources. But it should not be used to bludgeon students whose misfortune it is to attend those schools. Consider the prospects of 11th-graders at L.A.'s Crenshaw High School. After one month of school, many have not yet received textbooks for their classes. More than a third of their teachers lack full credentials. This is not an exceptional year for these students, who have faced similar or worse conditions year after year. Now, though, the state has come along and threatened their futures with a test that their school has not prepared them to take.

43. NewsHour Extra: The Juvenile Death Penalty -- Lesson Plan
He was senior class president, and was runner up for his high school s title of students should understand that each state has its own death penalty
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/extra/teachers/lessonplans/socialstudies/juvenile_de
THE JUVENILE DEATH PENALTY
Background, analysis and critical thinking
By Michelle Parrini, a Chicago-based editor and writer of teaching materials Subjects: Law, Government, Civics Time: Two Days Lesson Objectives: The purpose of this lesson is to teach students about the Eighth Amendment and how the U.S. Supreme Court makes determinations about what constitutes cruel and unusual punishment through the example of the death penalty for juveniles. Overview: On January 26, 2004, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to reconsider whether the juvenile death penalty violates the Eighth Amendment's prohibition against cruel and usual punishment. The case will probably be heard by the court in October or November of 2004. During this lesson, students will read and discuss a NewsHour article and learn key facts about the juvenile death penalty in the U.S. Then students will discuss how the court has made decisions in the past about what constitutes cruel and unusual punishment. Finally, students will judge for themselves whether the juvenile death penalty today violates the Eighth Amendment by applying previously established principles of law to their analysis. Materials:
The NewsHour article " Supreme Court to Review Execution of Juvenile Killers
Handouts all presented in printer-friendly PDF format

44. Teacher Previews: March 13-19, 2005
high school students create a Web site focusing on dating violence for teens, Court Abolishes Juvenile death penalty PBSOL Middle / high school
http://www.pbs.org/teachersource/previews/archives/20050313.shtm
search options
Tuesday, September 20, 2005
March 13-19, 2005 Welcome to PBS Teacher Previews, the weekly newsletter from PBS designed specifically for preK-12 educators. Program times listed below are for PBS's national schedule and may not be accurate for your station. If you would like to customize your newsletter, please visit http://www.pbs.org/teachersource/preferences
MATH

SOCIAL STUDIES

PBS KIDS ARE READY TO LEARN
...
BLYTHE BENNETT'S RECOMMENDED SITE OF THE WEEK

The resources listed below are grouped into subject areas that correlate with those found on PBS TeacherSource ( http://pbs.org/teachersource/ ), PBS's Web site for preK-12 educators. Grade level, resource type and extended taping rights codes are also indicated for each listing. To make the most effective use of this publication, please consult the " Teacher Code Key " at the end of this document. Note: Please always check with your local PBS station for a complete schedule of exact dates and times for PBS television programs. PBS television schedules are created at the local level, so some national programs may not be available in your area. All PBS programs listed in this newsletter allow for off-air taping and subsequent classroom usage of one year or more. For complete details, please visit the TV For Teachers section of PBS TeacherSource at http://pbs.org/teachersource/tvteachers.htm

45. Citizen Advocacy Center
*Lesson plans that are geared for high school and middle school students are easily adaptable for The death penalty The Judicial System (high school)
http://www.citizenadvocacycenter.org/teacher lesplns.htm
238 N. York Rd, Elmhurst, IL 60126
HOME - PROGRAMS CALENDAR PUBLICATIONS ... Directions to the Center Citizen Advocacy Center The Civic Empowerment Zone Lesson Plans
A healthy democracy requires informed, active and sustained community participation. For over a decade, Center community lawyers have promoted hands-on civic education to teach young people how to develop healthy civic habits that last a life time. With the assistance of the McCormick Tribune Foundation, the Center has created more than thirty fresh and innovative lessons to help teachers translate the concept of good citizenship into practical activities that use the community in which student's live as their, "civics lab."
The Center's lesson plans include the following*:
  • Specifically identify met Illinois State Learning Standards and Goals; Hands-on activities;and

46. Sourcebook - Table List, Section 2
Attitudes toward the death penalty, United States, selected years 19652001 (Table students perceptions of availability of drugs. high school seniors
http://www.albany.edu/sourcebook/tost_2.html

Advanced search
Sections
  • Criminal justice characteristics Public opinion Crime, victims Arrests, seizures Courts, prosecution, sentencing Parole, jails, prisons, death penalty
Section 2
Public attitudes toward crime and criminal justice-related topics
Data tables are available in Acrobat (.pdf) and spreadsheet (.wk1) files. A free viewer is needed to access Acrobat documents; download it from the Adobe website. Spreadsheet software, such as Excel or Lotus 123, is needed to read .wk1 files; these applications can be used as helper applications with many browsers.
Capital punishment
Back
Applied to select groups

47. Consul General Matthew M. Rooney Meets With Brandenburg High School Students - C
Munich Consul General Matthew M. Rooney met with thirty high school students ranging from Iraq and combating violence in schools to the death penalty.
http://munich.usconsulate.gov/munich/cg_brandenburg_students.html
About Us U.S. Citizen Services Visa Information Meet the USA ... Deutsch You Are In: Home About Us Programs and Events Consul General ... About the Consulate Programs and Events Selected Events 2005 Selected Events 2004 Job Openings Information Resource Center
Selected Events 2005
Consul General Matthew M. Rooney Meets With Brandenburg High School Students
February 3, 2005.
Munich Consul General Matthew M. Rooney met with thirty high school students and teachers from Brandenburg on a "security policy" excursion to Munich at the invitation of the Bundeswehr. During the program at the Amerika Haus, the Consul General discussed American policy and the students' concerns, ranging from Iraq and combating violence in schools to the death penalty.
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48. Poll: Five Percent Of High School Students 'Identify As Gay' -- 10/07/2004
Poll Five Percent of high school students Identify As Gay By Susan Jones Supreme Court Justice Notes Flaws in death penalty
http://www.cnsnews.com/ViewCulture.asp?Page=\Culture\archive\200410\CUL20041007a

49. Court Takes Missouri Death Penalty Case - Medill School Of Journalism - On The D
Faculty/Staff Directories Cherub Program for high school students Court Takes Missouri death penalty Case. On Mon., Oct. 18, 2004, the US Supreme
http://www.medill.northwestern.edu/~secure/docket/mt/archives/001867.php
Register Login Search Help
On the Docket
Northwestern
Prospective Students General Information
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50. Medill School Of Journalism - Northwestern University
Faculty/Staff Directories Cherub Program for high school students Sister Helen Prejean opposes the death penalty not only for humanitarian reasons,
http://www.medill.northwestern.edu/medill/inside/news/dead_man_walking_author_ex
Register Login Search Help
Medill
Northwestern
Prospective Students General Information
Admissions

Faculty/Staff

Directories
...
for High School Students

Students Current
Admitted

Student Work
Alumni General Information Career Services Give to Medill Alumni Clubs ... Communications (IMC) Employers General Information Integrated Marketing Communications Program Undergraduate Journalism ... Career Services Industry Professionals General Information Career Services Faculty/Staff Directories ... Crain Lecture Series Friends of Medill General Information Give to Medill Integrated Marketing Communications Program ... Crain Lecture Series Medill School of Journalism General Information Medill Mission Medill News Medill Affiliations ... Crain Lecture Series Integrated Marketing Communications IMC Home General Information Prospective Students Residency Program ... Career Services Undergraduate Journalism General Information Areas of Study Admissions Faculty/Staff ... Directories Graduate Journalism

51. Comm Tech Lab - Products - Death Penalty High School Curriculum
The death penalty Information high school curriculum site has received The curriculum is designed for upper middle and high school students in such
http://commtechlab.msu.edu/products/dphs/
Death Penalty High School Curriculum Web Site
Click to visit the TEACHER web site.

Click to visit the STUDENT web site.
Content Experts: Richard Dieter, Michael Millman
Director of Software Development: Carrie Heeter
Team: Matt Leach, Deon Foster, Pete Maziak, Laura Portwood-Stacer The death penalty in the United States has always been a controversial issue and recent developments concerning the death penalty have once again made an appearance in the public sphere. The purpose of this curriculum is to encourage civic participation, critical thinking and the development of research skills among students utilizing a topic of current interest. This Web site and its accompanying materials are designed to assist both teachers and students in an exploration of capital punishment, arguments for and against its use, as well as issues of ethics and justice that surround it. The authors of the curriculum have made every effort to ensure that the educational approach is balanced, respecting the views of all sides in this often-spirited debate. The sites were principally designed by the Michigan State Communication Technology Laboratory. Parallel site structures for teachers and students allowed us to optimize the content for ease of use in the classroom. Teacher educators in conjunction with practicing teachers, in the fields of social studies, history and religion, worked together to develop the curriculum. Factual content was provided by the Death Penalty Information Center, a non-profit organization that conducts research on issues related to capital punishment. The Center utilized a broad spectrum of case decisions, news accounts, books, and scholarly journals in assembling the content. Funding for the project was provided by grants from the Soros Foundation and the Columbia Foundation.

52. Civics
Do you have strategies for teaching civics to high school students? The death penalty Curricula for high school Individual state laws determine whether
http://www.eduref.org/Resources/Subjects/Social_Studies/Civics.html
Home Subjects Social Studies
Civics
EduRef Lesson Plans Archived Responses Internet Sites Organizations
EduRef Lesson Plans: * Civics
Lesson plans written by education students and teachers and submitted to AskERIC for inclusion on our website.
http://www.eduref.org/cgi-bin/lessons.cgi/Social_Studies/Civics

Archived Responses: * Where can I find resources for lesson plans on the Presidential Inauguration?
http://eduref.org/cgi-bin/printresponses.cgi/Virtual/Qa/archives/Subjects/Social_Studies/ Civics/inauguration.html
* Where can I find some resources for teaching about the upcoming presidential election?
http://eduref.org/cgi-bin/printresponses.cgi/Virtual/Qa/archives/Subjects/Social_Studies/ Civics/Election.html
* Do you have strategies for teaching civics to high school students?
http://eduref.org/cgi-bin/printresponses.cgi/Virtual/Qa/archives/Subjects/Social_Studies/ Civics/civics.html

Internet Sites: * Justice Learning
Justice Learning is an innovative, issue-based approach for engaging high school students in informed political discourse. The web site uses audio from the Justice Talking radio show and articles from The New York Times to teach students about reasoned debate and the often-conflicting values inherent in our democracy.
http://www.justicelearning.org/teachingmaterials.asp

53. School Partnership Programs
Topics include the drinking age, the death penalty and land use. UWMadison students read the high school students writing and return letters of
http://www.chancellor.wisc.edu/schools/10.html
Community Service Programs
Community service and outreach to schools and the community are major initiatives at UW-Madison. This section highlights just a few of the many comunity service programs sponsored by UW-Madison in 1996. 90. Earth Partnership Program
Sponsored by the Arboretum, the Earth Partnership Program aims to increase awareness of the natural world and explore the idea that human beings can have a positive relationship with nature through restoration of native biological communities. The program includes teacher training, work with school children of all ages, community action projects and family workshops. Earth Partnership for Schools also provides training institutes for teachers.
  • Workshop Training: 48 teachers, 8 schools
  • Special Earth Partnership Tours: approximately 2,350 students
  • Earth Partnership Staff Inservice: more than 200 teachers 91. Student Presented Interactive Chemistry Experience
    The Department of Chemistry, Institute for Chemical Education, sponsors SPICE, an outreach program designed to encourage children's interest in science and chemistry. SPICE volunteers present a series of chemical demonstrations based on a common theme, which stimulates enthusiasm and excitement in the audience. SPICE volunteers portray science as an interesting, exciting and integral part of society.
  • Fall 1996: 870 students
  • Summer 1996: 725 students
  • Spring 1996: 3,930 students
  • 54. Jesse Sharkey: Get The Military Out Of Our High Schools
    Unmerciful Judge, Merry Executioners the death penalty as the True Measure of Preying on high school students. IN THE fall of 2002, Garrett Jones was a
    http://www.counterpunch.org/sharkey10202004.html
    home subscribe donate about us ... events What's Inside the New Print Edition of CounterPunch! What Business Wanted from Welfare Reform by Stephen Pimpare: How Democrats and Corporate Think Tanks Dismantled Welfare; Poverty and Hunger Up, Federal Aid to Poor Down; The Objective: Cheapening the Cost of Labor; A Report from a Black Organizer in South Carolina by Kevin Alexander Gray: ABB versus Movement Building; Why the Nazis Banned Fractura by Alexander Cockburn. CounterPunch Online is read by millions of viewers each month! But remember, we are funded solely by the subscribers to the print edition of CounterPunch. Please support this website by buying a subscription to our newsletter, which contains fresh material you won't find anywhere else, or by making a donation for the online edition. Remember contributions are tax-deductible. Click here to make a (tax deductible) donation If you find our site useful please: Subscribe Now!

    55. Newark Charter School - Excellence In Academics And Decorum For Grades 5-8
    National Coalition to Abolish the death penalty The Student Center is designed for middle and high school students, and the Explorers Club is for
    http://www.k12.de.us/ncs/mediactr/links.htm
    TOPICS Resources for... Students/Families Teachers Parents Quick Facts ... Contact Us
    or choose About NCS Board of DiRectors DRess Code Enrollment Find NCS Media Center NCS Council NCS-PTO Staff List School StoRe Home Media Center Newark Charter School Media Center
    Media Home
    Research Plagiarism Links ... Teacher Resources Mrs. Mundell Name the Panda Science Careers Health Care Salaies Job Profiles All Purpose, Resource, and General Research Sites UD Lib/Search Research -It: Your-One-Stop-Reference Desk Reference.com Refdesk.com ... Unit Converter Almanacs Infoplease.com FactMonster (easier to Read version of Infoplease) The Old Farmers' Almanac World Almanac for Kids African-American Almanac Ref Desk's Daily Almanac Dictionaries Cambridge Dictionaries Online Merriam-Webster Online OneLook Roget's II: The New Thesaurus ... Word Spy Encyclopedias LibrarySpot.com

    56. AxisofLogic/ U.S. Military
    death penalty Economy Editor s Choice Education Fine Arts Some data on high school students already are given to military recruiters in a
    http://www.axisoflogic.com/artman/publish/article_18694.shtml

    Fair Use Notice
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    57. WKCD - What Kids Can Do
    Some 700 junior and senior high school students and 200 parents are expected to participate in Supreme Court Strikes Down death penalty for Juveniles.
    http://www.whatkidscando.org/Wire/Wire.asp?SearchCase=FindCat&CatCode=Other

    58. Tufts Summer Study
    Summer Programs for high school students. Home; Programs In society and government, consider gay marriage, the death penalty, abortion, censorship,
    http://ase.tufts.edu/summer/globalcitizenship.htm
    Summer Programs for High School Students
    • Home Programs Applying Address
      108 Packard Ave.
      Medford, MA 02155
      Telephone
      Fax
      Email

      summer@tufts.edu Tufts Summer Study Ethics and Global Citizenship Considering today's mess of corporate, church, and governmental scandals, it is easy to lose trust in many of our leaders. In these cases, influential people made decisions that were selfish, costly, and just plain wrong. Perhaps some of them could have benefited from a stronger background in ethics.
      Many of today’s issues, however, aren't so black and white, so it is natural to get caught up in moral ambiguities. In science, consider cloning, artificial fertilization, hormone use (in our food supply and in ourselves). In society and government, consider gay marriage, the death penalty, abortion, censorship, and so forth. Globalization and the decision to go to war take questions of right and wrong to the world arena How do you make judgments on these topics? Do your arguments stand up to scrutiny by family and friends? Hard questions about life and death issues affect everyone. If you plan a career in a profession where such moral questions affect the lives of people (say in medicine, law, education, finance, etc.), ethics should be a central concern for you. The decisions you make in your career can have far reaching consequences.

    59. Shorts - Volume 17 No. 3 - Spring 2003 - Rethinking Schools Online
    Minnesota high school students who were erroneously told that they failed their The Juvenile death penalty Initiative in Chicago, Ill., a coalition of
    http://www.rethinkingschools.org/archive/17_03/shor173.shtml
    Search Rethinking Schools Help Home Archives Volume 17 No. 3- Spring 2003 Shorts
    Shorts
    -photo: ©2003 The New Yorker Collection. From Cartoonbank.com
    School Named for Civil Rights Leader
    Spring 2003 Bayard Rustin, a controversial civil rights leader and aide to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., will have a Philadelphia-area school named after him. The suburban West Chester school board voted 6-3 to name the new $63 million high school after Rustin, who graduated from the district in 1931. In December, critics tried to prevent the board from naming the school after Rustin because he once belonged to the Communist party, spent time in jail for refusing to serve in World War II, and was gay. Rustin, who died in 1987, was one of Dr. King's key aides in the Montgomery, Ala., boycott and lead organizer of the 1963 March on Washington. He often conducted his work out of the media spotlight for fear that the public would not accept an openly gay activist.
    CASE Erased
    Chicago Public Schools decided in December to dump its troubled high school standardized test, the Chicago Academic Standards Exam (CASE).

    60. Introduction: Teacher Edition Of High School Curriculum On The Death Penalty
    The curriculum is designed for upper middle and high school students in such The death penalty Information high school curriculum site has received
    http://teacher.deathpenaltyinfo.msu.edu/intro.htm
    Welcome to the TEACHER EDITION of our High School Curriculum on the Death Penalty site. The death penalty in the United States has always been a controversial issue and recent developments concerning the death penalty have once again made an appearance in the public sphere. The purpose of this curriculum is to encourage civic participation, critical thinking and the development of research skills among students utilizing a topic of current interest. This Web site and its accompanying materials are designed to assist both teachers and students in an exploration of capital punishment, arguments for and against its use, as well as issues of ethics and justice that surround it. Teachers will find detailed lesson plans for two possible two-week units. However, teachers are encouraged to take a look at the rationales of the units and explore strategies of their own. Supplementary research materials and Internet links to a wide array of other resources are provided. The curriculum is designed for upper middle and high school students in such courses as social studies, history, civics, US Government, ethics, public speaking, and current events. Students will find an innovative and interactive Web site that is ideally suited for classroom use involving group work, class discussions, and independent reflection. However, students doing independent projects may also use the site. The

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