The Effect of Time and Safety on the Retention of Peace Education Concepts

dc.contributor.authorSchupp, Julie Rebeccaen
dc.contributor.committeechairAhram, Ariel I.en
dc.contributor.committeememberAllen, Amy Elizabethen
dc.contributor.committeememberLevinson, Chaden
dc.contributor.committeememberPeters, Joelen
dc.contributor.departmentPublic Administration/Public Affairsen
dc.date.accessioned2026-03-20T08:00:21Zen
dc.date.available2026-03-20T08:00:21Zen
dc.date.issued2026-03-19en
dc.description.abstractPeace education programs are widely implemented in schools and community settings worldwide, most often through short-term or time-limited interventions. Although these programs are widely used, research often measures success based on immediate, visible changes rather than on how children retain and express learning over time. This limitation is especially consequential for elementary-aged learners, whose learning develops gradually and is expressed in developmentally specific ways. This dissertation examines how elementary-aged children engage with and retain peace education concepts following a short-term instructional intervention, with particular attention to time and perceived safety. Using a mixed-methods design, the study integrates survey data and semi-structured interviews collected at multiple time points. Research was conducted in the Khanke Camp in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq, a displacement-affected setting where participants were Yezidi children living in an IDP camp, and Culpeper County, Virginia, a comparatively stable educational environment examined as a smaller, exploratory case. Findings indicate that short-term peace education programs generate recognition-based engagement and surface alignment with program values but rarely produce sustained conceptual retention over time. Children most often recalled peace education concepts through narrative memory, repetition, and emotionally salient experiences rather than through abstract explanation. Physical safety and institutional stability did not function as straightforward predictors of retention; instead, learning gained salience when program content intersected meaningfully with children's lived experiences and social environments. By conceptualizing learning as a developmentally mediated process of meaning-making and foregrounding recognition alongside articulation, this study challenges evaluation models that equate learning with immediate behavioral change or verbal sophistication. The dissertation contributes a developmentally grounded and contextually responsive framework for evaluating short-term peace education interventions with children, emphasizing the analytic importance of time, context, and ethical restraint.en
dc.description.abstractgeneralPeace education programs are widely used around the world to help children develop skills such as empathy, cooperation, and peaceful conflict resolution. Many of these programs are short and are often evaluated based on what children say or do immediately afterward. However, this approach may not reflect how young children actually remember and make sense of what they learn over time. This study explores how elementary-aged children understand and retain peace education concepts following a short-term program. Using surveys and interviews collected at multiple points in time, the research was conducted in two settings: Khanke Camp in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq, where Yezidi children live after being displaced by conflict, and Culpeper County, Virginia, a smaller comparison site in a stable community. The findings show that short-term programs often lead children to recognize and agree with messages about peace, but deeper understanding tends to fade over time. Instead of explaining ideas in abstract terms, children most often remembered lessons through stories, repeated messages, and emotionally meaningful experiences. Physical safety alone did not determine what children retained. Learning was most meaningful when program content connected to children's everyday lives and social environments. These results suggest that young children's learning develops gradually and may not be fully captured by traditional evaluation methods. The study offers a developmentally informed approach to evaluating short-term peace education programs that emphasizes time, context, and children's lived experience.en
dc.description.degreeDoctor of Philosophyen
dc.format.mediumETDen
dc.identifier.othervt_gsexam:45717en
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10919/142394en
dc.language.isoenen
dc.publisherVirginia Techen
dc.rightsIn Copyrighten
dc.rights.urihttp://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/en
dc.subjectpeace educationen
dc.subjectknowledge retentionen
dc.subjectprogram evaluationen
dc.subjecteducation in emergenciesen
dc.subjectmixed methods researchen
dc.subjectinternally displaced personsen
dc.subjectelementary studentsen
dc.titleThe Effect of Time and Safety on the Retention of Peace Education Conceptsen
dc.typeDissertationen
thesis.degree.disciplinePlanning, Governance, and Globalizationen
thesis.degree.grantorVirginia Polytechnic Institute and State Universityen
thesis.degree.leveldoctoralen
thesis.degree.nameDoctor of Philosophyen

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