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Seg. 1: Audience Takes Sides During Kansas City Gun Program. Seg. 2: Teaching 9/11 As History.

To teach her students about the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, history teacher Jeanette Jones addresses Islamaphobia. "It's important for us to separate these acts from the religion," she said.
Luke X. Martin
/
KCUR 89.3
To teach her students about the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, history teacher Jeanette Jones addresses Islamaphobia. "It's important for us to separate these acts from the religion," she said.

Segment 1: American Public Square panelists agree on securing firearms in the home and little else during conversation on ways to prevent children dying from gun violence. 

According to the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, every day in this country seven children die from gun violence: four are murdered, three die from suicide and one is killed unintentionally. In a search for common ground when it comes to protecting our kids from gun violence, KCUR and American Public Square teamed up for "Up in Arms: Kids and Guns." Today, we listened to excerpts from the panel discussion that had audience reactions breaking the Square's civility rules.


Segment 2, beginning at 28:58: How educators talk about 9/11 to students not alive or too young to remember terrorist attacks.

It's been seventeen years since planes flew into the towers at the World Trade Center, long enough now that students in K-12 schools have no memory of that day. So what are they taught about 9/11? Today, one history teacher told us about pushing students to examine the event that left them growing up in the shadow of terrorism.

Copyright 2021 KCUR 89.3. To see more, visit KCUR 89.3.

Steve Kraske is an associate teaching professor of journalism at UMKC, a political columnist for The Kansas City Star and has hosted "Up to Date" since 2002. He worked as the full-time political correspondent for The Star from 1994-2013 covering national, state and local campaigns. He also has covered the statehouses in Topeka and Jefferson City.
Danette (Danie) Alexander first came to KCUR in 2007 as an intern for Up to Date after completing her B.A. in Communications at the University of Missouri – Kansas City. After her KCUR internship was completed, Danie continued to spend her mornings assisting senior producer Stephen Steigman as a volunteer with the show. Her radio experience also includes stints with public radio's New Letters on the Air as a broadcast engineer and on local public radio as host of a weekly overnight call-in show.