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Wisconsin Senate set to pass genocide education requirement

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FILE - Ruth Fayon, left, David Planer, center, and Georges Loinger, survivors of Holocaust, join in a prayer during a ceremony to mark Israel's Holocaust day at the Place de la Nation, outside the UN headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland, Monday, April 20, 2009. (AP Photo/Keystone, Salvatore Di Nolfi)

MADISON, Wis. (AP) — The state Senate was poised Tuesday to pass a bipartisan bill that would require schools to include instruction on the Holocaust and other genocides.

Under the proposal, public schools, charter schools and private voucher schools would have to include instruction on the Holocaust and other genocides at least once in grades 5-8 and once in grades 9-12.

The state superintendent would develop model curricula in consultation with an organization in Wisconsin and state agency in another state that has developed such curricula. The bill does not name an organization or state agency.

Five school-related associations, including school administrators and school business officials, have registered as neutral on the bill, according to the state Ethics Commission. The Wisconsin Catholic Conference, the Wisconsin Council of Churches and the Wisconsin Education Association Council, the state teachers union, have registered in support. No groups have registered against the bill.

The Senate was expected to pass the proposal during a floor session Tuesday afternoon. Passage would send the bill to the Assembly.

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