Maine Holocaust Education Network

Never Again: promoting Holocaust, genocide, and human rights awareness

Jim Burke
  • Male
  • West Paris, Maine
  • United States
Share 
  • Blog Posts
  • Discussions
  • Events
  • Photos
  • Photo Albums
  • Videos

Jim Burke's Friends

 

Jim Burke's Page

Latest Activity

May 21

Profile Information

Name
Jim Burke
About Me:
Western Maine MLTI Coach/Mentor

Learning in Maine Blog

Comment Wall (2 comments)

You need to be a member of Maine Holocaust Education Network to add comments!

Join this Ning Network

At 9:52pm on June 4, 2008, Jim Burke said…
Glad to assist, Ernie. A wonderful use of the Ning network.

jim

Learning in Maine
At 9:20pm on June 4, 2008, Ernie Easter said…
Thanks for joining us Jim. I hope by next year we can have other teachers and their classes join us in the conversation about the Holocaust and human rights issues.

Thanks again for featuring us on your Learning In Maine blog.
 
 

twitter.com/holocaustmuseum

HHRC Michael Klahr Center Dedication May 25, 2008

The Michael Klahr Center

Gerda Haas, Founder, HHRC

Sharon Nichols, Executive Director, HHRC, 1989 - 2007

Phyllis Jalbert

Michael Klahr Exhibit

Entrance to "Were The House Still Standing"

Badge

Loading…

Announcement: Change in appearance - no ads

You will notice a change on our website. All ads have been removed. This was made possible through actions that Ning, Google, and the educaitonal community undertook on behalf of all educational nings which involve students. From my perspective this is a much appreciated action that they have taken.

Thank you,
Ernie Easter

The Maine Holocaust Education Network was Nominated for an Edublog Award 2008


http://edublogawards.com/2008/best-educational-use-of-a-social-networking-service/
Thank you to all members for your participation in our Ning and your continued interest in trying to understand the Holocaust and working towards preventing future ones.
 

© 2009   Created by Ernie Easter

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Privacy  |  Terms of Service