2018
August
29
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

August 29, 2018
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Who adjusts to whom?

As schools open their doors after summer break, educators are wrestling with how to reach the new Generation Z: a hyperconnected crowd that has never experienced a world without ubiquitous devices. Their attention shifts quickly (some say after 8 seconds), and accepted teaching styles don’t always resonate. A returning sophomore at the University of California, San Diego notes, “I’m always having to adapt to education rather than having education adapt to me.”

Teachers have long worked to adapt, of course, out of necessity. A high school ROTC instructor told me he sought his college daughter’s counsel in frustration after some very quiet classes. The dynamic quickly changed after he deployed YouTube videos, TED Talks, and game-based online quizzes. 

At Harvard, a senior professor ticks off ever more prominent features in his lectures. He uses more visuals – they're catchy, sometimes funny, and more readily available. He offers a break after 20 minutes: “It is clear students feel they need to check phones.”

Older generations – perhaps even Gen Z’s Millennial elders – often sniff at the habits of younger generations. But openness to new approaches is central to learning. So why shouldn’t it come from both sides? With the right guidance, the Harvard professor notes, “the data and sources that are online actually help students produce better work than past generations.”

Now to our five stories, about withstanding sanctions, improving school safety, and breaking barriers.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Remembering and celebrating a prominent senator with a storied career would not long ago have been entirely uncontroversial. But in today’s hyperpartisan environment, even eulogies have been weaponized.

Sanctions are often seen as an effective tool for encouraging nations to change their behavior. But when it comes to Russia, the United States may soon learn that too many sanctions can have an opposite effect.

Red Huber/Orlando Sentinel/AP
Manatees swim with their calves at Blue Spring State Park in Orange City, Fla. According to Florida wildlife officials, there have been more manatee deaths so far in 2018 than all of last year. About 100 deaths are blamed on red tide.

The environment and the economy are often pitted against each other in a zero-sum game. But, as Floridians dealing with an epic red tide are experiencing, environmental problems can exact an economic toll.

What does school safety look like across the US?

Keeping schools safe is top of mind as classrooms open again. Lawmakers and educators are working out the right balance of protection and prevention in the wake of the Parkland, Fla., shooting. We decided to see how they are doing.

SOURCE:

National Conference of State Legislatures, Education Commission of the States, Giffords Law Center, American School Counselor Association

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Story Hinckley, Jacob Turcotte, and Karen Norris/Staff
Vibeke Sefland/Ascend
Hanifa Yousoufi is the first Afghan woman to summit her country’s highest mountain, Noshaq (24,580 feet), as part of a team led by the non-profit NGO Ascend: Leadership Through Athletics, which aims to develop Afghan women mountaineers to serve as role models in their society.

Hanifa Yousoufi just became the first Afghan woman to summit Mt. Noshaq. In publicizing her achievement, she challenged another barrier: threats to high-profile women in a deeply conservative society.


The Monitor's View

AP Photo
Myanmar's civilian leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, speaks with university students at Yangon university Aug. 28.

Not every country has had its identity challenged by the United Nations. Nor had Facebook remove the social media accounts of its most powerful figures for hate speech.

Yet that is exactly what happened to Myanmar on Monday with the release of a UN investigation into the killing of more 10,000 Rohingyas by the military last year and the forced exile of nearly 700,000 of the minority Muslim group.

The UN report accuses six top generals in the Southeast Asian nation of “genocidal intent” and recommends they be prosecuted in an international tribunal. But with little chance of such trials soon or the Rohingya refugees being able to return safely, the report makes a point of highlighting possible reforms within the country itself.

Notably, it cites this blaring need: “There is no unifying ‘Myanmar’ national identity.”

Indeed, of all the countries lately trying to define their identity mainly by ethnicity or religion – such as China, Hungary, and Israel – Myanmar stands out in the extreme. Its military has long seen itself as the only institution representing the majority Burmese, who are largely Buddhist. Few in its rank and file are non-Burmese. And despite limited moves toward democracy since 2008, the military remains the dominant political force. That fact has greatly restrained the reform efforts – and any criticism of the military – by Aung San Suu Kyi and her party on the civilian side of this hybrid democracy.

Yet nearly a third of Myanmar’s 52 million people consist of other ethnic or religious groups. For decades, many of them have fought for autonomy or independence, chafing at the military’s control of their resources.

The Rohingya, who were considered citizens after independence in 1948, have been treated as stateless since 1982. They are also easy targets of hate for the top brass who feel a need to boost their public standing. Last year the commander in chief, Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, posted on Facebook that the task of getting rid of the Rohingya was an “unfinished job.”

The military’s atrocities reflect Myanmar’s struggle as a nation-state to form bonds of loyalty based on civic rights, such as the protection of individual liberties and respect for ethnic or religious differences. Myanmar has yet to see diversity as central to its identity. The UN report recommends that it promote a concept of the state and nation that is “inclusive, based on equality and respect for the human rights of all.”

In her position as state counsellor, Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi has held several national dialogues among the ethnic groups to come up with a new distribution of power. In July, the Nobel Peace Prize laureate described her efforts to design a democratic federal union this way: “Our approach has to be holistic and inclusive.”

When recently asked if the military deserves amnesty for its past wrongs, she said, “The term we use is “national reconciliation.” One indication of possible change: The military has lately begun to recruit a few officers from minority groups.

It may be a long time before Myanmar will hold its military accountable for the recent mass atrocities. Yet both the national dialogue and the military’s halting reforms are signs that it is at least trying to find its integrity and identity. Or as Aung San Suu Kyi puts it, Myanmar is constructing a nation “founded on a lasting unity created out of diversity.”


A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

Each weekday, the Monitor includes one clearly labeled religious article offering spiritual insight on contemporary issues, including the news. The publication – in its various forms – is produced for anyone who cares about the progress of the human endeavor around the world and seeks news reported with compassion, intelligence, and an essentially constructive lens. For many, that caring has religious roots. For many, it does not. The Monitor has always embraced both audiences. The Monitor is owned by a church – The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston – whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.

Inspired by her country’s racially diverse World Cup-winning soccer team, today’s contributor considers the spiritual basis for valuing ourselves and each other and thriving together.


A message of love

Afolabi Sotunde/Reuters
A worker prepares the red carpet before the departure of British Prime Minister Theresa May from Abuja, Nigeria, Aug. 29. During her visit, Ms. May announced increased military aid to Nigeria, as well as 10.5 million pounds ($13.5 million) to aid victims of modern slavery. In conjunction with France, Britain will also offer to help Nigeria and Niger with border cooperation to prevent trafficking of migrants to Libya and Europe.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Tomorrow, you'll hear Ryan Lenora Brown's report from Juba, South Sudan. Talk of a treaty-signing there tomorrow has brought hope to the war-torn country, but also a common refrain: South Sudanese will believe in peace when they see it for themselves.

More issues

2018
August
29
Wednesday

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