Ethics and Strategies of Non-Violence:
Teaching toward Constructive Activism Part II


The Peace Education Certificate Program at Teachers College, Tokyo is pleased to announce a special introductory workshop course with Dr. Betty Reardon this spring. Enrollment is limited so if you are interested in attending please download the Registration and Application forms and return them to TC by mail or fax.

Instructor: Dr. Betty Reardon, Founding Director of the Peace Education Center at Teachers College, NY
Date & Time: Saturday November 20th, 2004,  11:00am-6:00pm

COURSE DESCRIPTION
The ever increasing levels of violence throughout the world at all levels of social organization from family through global, call upon concerned educators and activists to consider with more intensity, the possibilities for change inherent in nonviolence. This workshop will present a basic introduction to the philosophy and theory of nonviolence illustrated by practical examples of nonviolent action for change suitable for adaptation to formal education and citizens' struggles for justice and peace.

This is the second of a two part special course/workshop. The particular focus and cases addressed will differ from those covered in Part 1. While it relates conceptually to the first session, Part 2 is an independent learning experience, so that participants who did not attend Part 1 will be able to join this workshop.

REGISTRATION AND CREDIT DETAILS
•    This special workshop can be counted as a 1/2 credit towards the peace education certificate.
•    Special introductory offer
1.   If this is your first certificate course at TC Tokyo tuition is 19, 500 yen
2.   Non-credit Registration – 18,000 yen
3.   Certificate credit Registration-  24,000 yen
 •    Attend the workshop with you colleagues! Group discounts of 10-20% are available for groups of 2 or more from the same school or institution.

INSTRUCTOR BIO
Betty A. Reardon is the founding Director of the Peace Education Program at Teachers College Columbia University and the International Institutes on Peace Education, and holds a doctorate in education from Columbia University and a masters degree in history from New York University. She has taught at universities in several countries and has broad experience in education at all levels, both formal and non-formal. She brings to her specialization in peace education a broad and comprehensive perspective which integrates into the field issues of human security, sustainable development, human rights, ecology and gender. She was one of the initiators of the Hague Appeal for Peace Global Campaign for Peace Education and Director of the Peace Education Center at Teachers College Columbia University.
      She has 40 years of experience in the international peace education movement and 25 years in the international movement for the human rights of women. She has served as a consultant to several UN agencies and has published widely in the field of peace and human rights education, gender and women's issues. Among these latter publications are SEXISM AND THE WAR SYSTEM (Syracuse University Press, 1996, first published Teachers College Press,1985) WOMEN AND PEACE: FEMINIST VISIONS OF GLOBAL SECURITY, SUNY Press, 1992) and TOWARD WOMEN'S AGENDA FOR A CULTURE OF PEACE, Co-edited with Ingeborg Breines and Dorota Gierycz (UNESCO,1999). Her most recent book is EDUCATION FOR A CULTURE OF PEACE IN A GENDER PERSPECTIVE (UNESCO, 2001)

If you have any questions or need more information please contact:
Michele Milner
Peace Program Coordinator
milnermw@tc-japan.edu