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Social Education, 1983
The Committee on the Present Danger, Inc., the Committee of Atomic Bomb Survivors in the United States, the World Friendship Center in Hiroshima, two authors, physics and education professors, an English and history teacher, and a high school student comment on nuclear education. (RM)
Descriptors: Educational Needs, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education, Nuclear Warfare
Totten, Sam – Georgia Social Science Journal, 1985
Of the many serious problems now facing the world, the most important is threat of nuclear destruction. Social studies educators should provide ample classroom time for discussing and examining the facts concerning nuclear warfare, and they must make sure that various points of view are presented. (RM)
Descriptors: Educational Needs, Elementary Secondary Education, Nuclear Warfare, Nuclear Weapons

Reardon, Betty; And Others – Social Education, 1983
The schools must confront and deal with the issues of the nuclear weapons controversy on pain of ceasing to be relevant to the critical needs of the rising generation. Every aspect of the nuclear arms controversy needs to be discussed in secondary and university classrooms. (RM)
Descriptors: Educational Needs, Educational Objectives, Higher Education, Nuclear Warfare
Fleisher, Paul – Phi Delta Kappan, 1985
The existence of nuclear weapons is the most pervasive political and military fact of the past 40 years, and children need to be informed about nuclear concerns if they are to become good citizens. It is therefore educators' responsibility to teach the subject, however uncomfortable. (PGD)
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Educational Needs, Educational Responsibility

Barnet, Richard J. – Teachers College Record, 1982
Information about nuclear weapons and their effects must be taught without imparting hopelessness and despair. Suggestions for teaching about the arms race from an historical perspective and about alternative security systems--international law, conventional weapons, nonviolent resistance--are given. (PP)
Descriptors: Citizenship Responsibility, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Disarmament, Educational Needs