This is quite a remarkable story. Samuel Freedman wrote in the New York Times in 2008 about a social studies teacher in Alliance, Nebraska. He wrote about a world geography class in 1993 where students learned about genocide. Their teacher was Tim Walz.
After studying the circumstances that set the climate for horrific mass murder, Mr. Walz gave a final exam in which the students identified a country where genocide might happen. They picked Rwanda. Mr. Walz was a good teacher.
The story in 2008 begins:
In 1993, when Travis Hofmann was a freshman of 15, he had traveled little beyond the sand hills that surrounded his hometown, Alliance, Neb. He was the son of a railroad engineer, a trumpeter in the high school band, with a part-time job changing the marquee and running the projector at the local movie theater.
In Travis’s class in global geography at Alliance High School, however, the teacher introduced the outside world with the word and concept of genocide. The teacher, Tim Walz, was determined that even in this isolated place, perhaps especially in this isolated place, this county seat of 9,000 that was hours away from any city in any direction, the students should learn how and why a society can descend into mass murder.
Mr. Walz had already taught for a year in China, and he brought the world into his classroom in the form of African thumb pianos and Tibetan singing bowls. For the global geography class, he devised something far more ambitious than what the curriculum easily could have been the identification and memorization of capitals, mountain ranges and major rivers. It was more ambitious, too, than a unit solely on the Holocaust of the sort many states have required.
“The Holocaust is taught too often purely as a historical event, an anomaly, a moment in time,” Mr. Walz said in a recent interview, recalling his approach. “Students understood what had happened and that it was terrible and that the people who did this were monsters.
“The problem is,” he continued, “that relieves us of responsibility. Obviously, the mastermind was sociopathic, but on the scale for it to happen, there had to be a lot of people in the country who chose to go down that path. You have to make the intellectual leap to figure out the reasons why.”
So Mr. Walz took his students Brandon Bell, the wrestler; Beth Taylor, the cheerleader; Lanae Merwin, the quiet girl always reading some book about Queen Elizabeth; and all the other children of mechanics, secretaries and a town dentist and assigned them to study the conditions associated with mass murder. What factors, he asked them to determine, had been present when Germans slaughtered Jews, Turks murdered Armenians, the Khmer Rouge ravaged their Cambodian countrymen?
“It was different and unusual, certainly not a project you’d be expecting,” Mr. Hofmann, now 31, of Phoenix, remembered recently of the class. “The biggest part was just the freedom to explore things. No matter how abnormal or far-fetched an idea might sound, you can form an opinion. Instead of just going in and having a teacher say, ‘Here’s information, learn it, know it, you’ll be tested on it,’ it was, ‘Here’s an idea, run with it.’ ”
For nine weeks through the winter and early spring that school year, through the howling blizzards and the planting of the first alfalfa on the plains, the class pored over data about economics, natural resources and ethnic composition. They read about civil war, colonialism and totalitarian ideology. They worked with reference books and scholarly reports, long before conducting research took place instantly online.
Most, like Mr. Hofmann, had spent their entire lives in and near Alliance. A few had traveled to Washington, D.C., with the school marching band. A few had driven four hours to Denver to buy the new Nirvana CD. Mostly, though, the outside world was a place they built, under Mr. Walz’s tutelage, in their own brains.
When the students finished with the past, Mr. Walz gave a final exam of sorts. He listed about a dozen current nations Yugoslavia, Congo, some former Soviet republics among them and asked the class as a whole to decide which was at the greatest risk of sliding into genocide.
Their answer was: Rwanda. The evidence was the ethnic divide between Hutus and Tutsis, the favoritism toward Tutsis shown by the Belgian colonial regime, and the previous outbreaks of tribal violence. Mr. Walz awarded high marks.
Then summer arrived and school let out. The students did what teenagers did in Alliance over the summer. They water-skied at the reservoir, swam in the Bridgeport sand pits and mostly “cruised the Butte,” endlessly driving up and down Box Butte Avenue.
THE next April, in 1994, Mr. Walz heard news reports of a plane carrying the Rwandan president, Juvenal Habyarimana, being shot down. He told himself at the time, “This is not going to end up good.”
It did not. Over the next three months, militant Hutus killed 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus. The reports reached even The Alliance Times-Herald, the local daily newspaper. Mr. Walz’s students, now juniors, saw their prophecy made into flesh and blood.
“It was terribly chilling,” Lanae Merwin, now 31, of Hastings, Neb., recalled in a recent interview. “But, to us, it wasn’t totally surprising. We’d discussed it in class and it was happening. Though you don’t want a prediction like that to come true.”
Mr. Hofmann remembered having a similar reaction. “It was just strange to know that something was discussed not too long before that could actually happen,” he said. “Just a surreal feeling. To everyone else, it’s 8,000 miles away no one cares. How can you grasp it? But to us, it was, we talked about it. For us, it was something that reached us directly.”
Years have passed. Mr. Walz left Alliance and moved to his wife’s home state, Minnesota; he is the only active teacher now serving in the United States Congress. His former geography students have moved as adults to Arizona, Nevada, Colorado and New York. Ms. Taylor lived in Poland for a while.
Now, in 2008, April has come again. It is, among other things, the month for genocide remembrance the month when Rwanda was convulsed, when the Khmer Rouge conquered Cambodia, when Armenians commemorate what they call the Great Catastrophe, when Yom HaShoah, Holocaust memorial day, almost always falls. (Though this year, because of the Jewish lunar calendar, it will be observed on May 1.) The lessons of a classroom in Alliance 15 years ago still matter.
“You have to understand what caused genocide to happen,” Mr. Walz said, with those grim anniversaries in mind. “Or it will happen again.”

All I can say is, “WOW!’
Walz is remarkable man and teacher. I wish I had him as a teacher.
Go WALZ! Kamala made a GREAT choice in a running mate.
Thank you for this post, Diane.
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What a great piece Diane. Thank you
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Walz did his Masters thesis on Holocaust education.
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It is a tribute to Walz and his teaching expertise that former students still remember what was taught more than a decade later. It is clear that Walz was a relevant, thought provoking teacher. In fact, Walz’s lesson is applicable to our country today with all of the divisive tactics of the authoritarian extremists and their deliberate attempts to marginalize, vilify and dehumanize anyone that does not share their biased, regressive views. Scapegoating is a precursor to isolating and targeting political and social targets. Walz has several lessons he can and should teach our polarized nation.
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It is a great that Walz is not teaching in Florida today. He would likely be fired for making students feel “uncomfortable.” He would be accused of teaching “divisive concepts.” Unfortunately, sometimes history is violent, and it can and should make people uncomfortable. We cannot and must not ignore the truth, even if it is uncomfortable. Sometimes discomfort leads to growth that can help us to avoid past mistakes, and it has nothing to do with a lack of patriotism, a common claim of right wing extremists.
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And not just Florida, but a lot of states. He would be fired in Utah, too
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If you don’t learn from history, you are doomed to repeat it. If you don’t learn from social studies… TODAY defines either the failure to learn, or the failure to teach. If one DOESN’T learn, are they being taught?
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“When the students finished with the past, Mr. Walz gave a final exam of sorts. He […] asked the class as a whole to decide which [nation] was at the greatest risk of sliding into genocide.”
He asked the class as a whole! The class answered as a whole!
Now, what sense would it have made to ask questions like: Who was the best student? Who got the best grade? Etc.
Tim Walz exposed the folly of “instruction delivery” and “achievement” mindedness. Kamala Harris did good by choosing him to be her VP. The possibility that a brighter future lies ahead suddenly seems so much more likely, now.
Thank you, Diane, for posting this story. It should be widely shared to show what authentic teaching and learning looks like.
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The more I hear about him, the more I want him to lead the country.
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With goosebumps and tears in my eyes I write this comment.
Dedicated teachers, 180+ school days each year, turn their classrooms into exciting and content rich places where students’ curiosity is lit on fire and the knowledge of the world is shared, minds opened, and made relevant and personal…..even in Nebraska.Reading this NYT article reminded me of so many wonderful teachers I had the honor to teach with, supervise and guide throughout my long career. Mr. Tim Walz is such a spark who influenced his students for years. His years of teaching, serving as a soldier, a senator and governor are honorable, he is THE BEST of the BEST among us – and now he’s taking on his largest classroom – the USA. Saving us from TYRANNY and to rebuild a Trump damaged nation moving forward. We are incredibly lucky to have Kamala Harris and Tim Walz on our team. We owe it to them and their outstanding efforts to make this a better place for all.
Diane, thank you for sharing this great NYT article – I plan to send it to many educators. Public Education has been the vulnerable shy kid in the corner where lousy humans have taken out their evil for decades, to a point of almost no return. With Harris/Walz we have HOPE!
Tim Walz is outstanding, but also rather typical of thousands and thousands of great teachers. We have a real ally, a colleague, a true Mensch heading toward the White House.
VOTE💙
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The last year I taught, we had a period of time set aside for enrichment and remediation. I offered a seminar in human genocide. We had just a bit of time, but the discussion was informative and student led.
It was probably unrelated, but the most perceptive student in the class took his own life that year. I have always worried about that. His mother was one of my former students.
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During my 30 years as a public-school teacher, I always ignored the district admin who told us what we should teach (always tied to raising test scores), and at times also gave us scripts to follow and told us what we couldn’t do, that I also ignored. Once, the admin recruited students as spies to make sure us teachers were doing what we’d been told to do and not do.
I got in trouble that time, but still didn’t stop. I just got sneakier.
But nothing I did as a teacher comes close to Tim Walz’s style.
If I had taught at the same school and knew him, he would have seriously influenced me as a teacher, and I would have taken my teaching to his level for sure.
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Great!
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I wish I had been that good at teaching when I needed to design a class plan for a middle school geography class. Did teach about Afghanistan in Fall of 2001. We didn’t even have a decent set of atlases. I don’t recall where I found the map of Afghanistan. The low quality ones we had were ordered by someone who had little knowledge of any social studies topic.
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Here are 20 things to know about Tim Walz, the Democratic candidate for Vice President:
Walz grew up in the small town of Butte, Nebraska, population 400, where his high school graduation class was just 24. “There are real stories in small towns,” he says.
Walz enlisted in the Army National Guard when he was 17 and served for 24 years, rising to the rank of Sergeant Major before retiring from the 1-125th Field Artillery Battalion in 2005 so he could run for Congress. Joe Eustice, who served in the Guard with Walz for years, says that although he disagrees with Walz politically, Walz did not avoid combat duty and was a good soldier. Walz retired A FULL YEAR BEFORE his unit received orders to deploy to Iraq. In contrast, in order to keep Donald Trump out of military service his father, Fred Trump, got one of his renters, a storefront podiatrist, to say that Donald had “bone spurs” on the heels of his feet that made him unfit for military service. Neither Donald nor his sons, Donald Jr. and Eric, ever wore our country’s uniform. Trump’s VP running mate, JD Vance, only served safely behind combat lines in public relations.
Walz’s father died of lung cancer when he was 19. Walz strongly supports lower-cost health care for everyone because “The last week of my dad’s life cost my mom a decade of work to pay off the hospital bill.”
Walz graduated from Chadron State College in 1989 and earned a Master of Science degree from Minnesota State University, Mankato in 2001.
Walz met his future wife, Gwen Whipple, a native Minnesotan, while they were both high school teachers in temporary classrooms. Gwen says that he caught her attention because his loud voice disrupted her next door class through the room’s flimsy walls.
After marrying, they moved to Mankato, Minnesota, where they both taught at Mankato West High School and he taught geography and coached high school football. Asked about his baldness, Walz answered that he “supervised the lunchroom for 20 years — and you do not leave that job with a full head of hair. Trust me.”
The Walz’s have two children, Hope and Gus. Hope recently graduated from college in Montana, and Gus is in public high school in St. Paul.
Both of their children were conceived through IVF and fertility treatments: “There’s a reason we named our daughter Hope,” he notes.
The people of Minnesota first elected Walz to Congress in 2006, making him the highest-ranking enlisted soldier ever to serve in the U.S. House.
Walz was re-elected to Congress five times by the voters in southern Minnesota’s rural, conservative 1st District, and he served in the House for 12 years.
He became the ranking member of the House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs in 2017 and focused on issues such as veterans’ mental health, suicide and pain management. He also called for funding to research medical cannabis treatment for veterans struggling with post-traumatic stress disorder and chronic pain.
At one time Walz had an “A” rating from the National Rifle Association and the group’s endorsement. In 2016, Guns & Ammo magazine included him on its list of top 20 politicians for gun owners. But Walz lost his rating because he supports bans on assault rifles and other such weapons.
Walz remains an avid hunter and scoffs at JD Vance for talking about guns saying: “I guarantee you he can’t shoot pheasants like I can.”
In 2019, Walz ran for governor of Minnesota and defeated Republican candidate Jeff Johnson by more than 11 points.
Walz frequently defends his policies, such as the universal school meals bill signed into Minnesota law earlier this year, as being simply common sense: “Kids are eating and having full bellies so they can go learn, and women are making their own healthcare decisions.”
Thirty years ago after getting DWI in Nebraska, he quit drinking. His favorite drink these days is Mountain Dew.
Walz is a runner, who has participated in multiple running competitions in Minnesota’s Twin Cities: “I’ve found that before the most stressful political events, if I’ve gone for a run, I’m calmer and more collected.”
He likes to tinker on his vintage blue International Scout, a four-wheel-drive vehicle that International Harvester stopped producing in 1980.
Walz’s favorite song is “Forever Young” by Bob Dylan, one of Minnesota’s most famous celebrities. Walz views the song as a “timeless message from a dad to his son.”
“We don’t have the Ten Commandments posted in our classrooms — but we do give hungry kids free breakfast and lunch.” — Tim Walz
Sing along!!!
(Feel free to copy and pass this info along.)
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