The Foreign Policy Research Institute educates the public and “teaches the teachers” through a variety of programs and events.
In 1990, the Foreign Policy Research Institute established the Wachman Center (formerly known as the Marvin Wachman Fund for International Education), which is dedicated to improving international and civic literacy by providing enrichment for high school teachers. [read more about the Wachman Center]
In 1996, the Wachman Fund inaugurated a series of weekend History Institutes for secondary school teachers, chaired by Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Walter McDougall and FPRI Senior Fellow David Eisenhower. [read more about the History Institute for Teachers]
FootNotes is an FPRI bulletin intended for educators. It seeks to “teach the teachers” drawing both upon the work of FPRI research staff and scholars as well as lectures, papers, and talks presented at FPRI forums and special events. [go to Footnotes archive]
Since 2002, FPRI has partnered with Mason Crest Publishers on three book series for middle school and high school students:
The Mason Crest volumes are beautifully designed, including numerous maps and photos, and the content, while accessible to students, is neither "dumbed down” nor subject to the “political correctness” characteristic of college campuses. They are sophisticated enough that adults profit from reading them. The School Library Journal wrote that the Modern Middle East Nations volumes, particularly the volumes on Israel and the Palestinians, were “the best introductions to the political conflict currently in print for this age group.” And one reviewer wrote of Alan Luxenberg’s more recent The Palestine Mandate and the Creation of Israel, part of the Making of the Middle East series:
The reader will be treated to a clarity of writing rarely seen in social studies series books for pre-college age students. S/he will also meet with a striving for objectivity that is the hallmark of the discipline of historical writing. From the Ottoman background to World War II’s aftermath, from modern Zionism’s origins to the development of Arab nationalism, the author chronicles the attempts, successes, and setbacks in the effort to satisfy the nationalistic drives of the two nations—Arab and Jewish—of Palestine. Trivia is excluded while the essentials of the historical record are told; the glossary and timeline entries are concise and devoid of propaganda…. This imprint has succeeded in setting a standard that puts to shame the amateurish, error-ridden, biased work one too often finds in other publishers’ social studies series. Includes an index, glossary, timeline, short bibliography and list of Internet resources plus maps and archival photographs. (Association of Jewish Libraries Newsletter, May-June 2008)
For the complete review of these books and other books in the series, visit www.ottnpublishing.com/mideast.htm.
Currently under development or discussion are joint FPRI-Mason Crest series of volumes on Islam and terrorism, as is an update of the Modern Middle East Nations series.
FPRI regularly sponsors lectures for the general public covering a variety of topics in world affairs, as well as special forums and lectures for members.
FPRI is also proud to support the One Book, One Philadelphia, a joint project of the Mayor’s office and the Free Library of Philadelphia.
Visit our Events section for a calendar of upcoming lectures, or e-mail fpri@fpri.org for more information.
For members, FPRI offers impromptu briefings on events in the news, and, for sponsors, FPRI convenes Sponsor Forums that typically feature an FPRI scholar reporting on a recent trip abroad.