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  1. The Wave, by Todd Strasser, aka Morton Rhue, is a novel that is set in the Spring of 1969 at Gordon High School in California.The novel is a fictionalized account of an actual classroom experiment ...

  2. Setting: Though the setting of The Wave is ambiguous, the real-life events on which it is based occurred in Palo Alto, California in 1967. Climax: Ben Ross calls a schoolwide rally to show the students of Gordon High, who have become fanatically obsessed with his social experiment, The Wave, the true face of their “leader”—Adolf Hitler.

  3. www.shmoop.com › study-guides › wave-bookThe Wave Setting - Shmoop

    The Wave is based on an informal classroom experiment conducted by high school teacher Ron Jones around 1967 (check out "In a Nutshell" for more on this). In the 1960s and early 1970s, using school as a setting for experiments in human behavior was quite the rage.

  4. The Wave Full Book Summary. Previous Next. On an otherwise typical day at Gordon High School, history teacher Mr. Ross shows his students a film about the Holocaust, displaying horrific scenes of starved, tortured, and killed prisoners inside Nazi concentration camps. Students watch in shock, though the film’s lasting impact varies.

  5. The Wave Summary. On an ordinary day at Gordon High, Ben Ross shows his history class a film about the Holocaust as part of their unit on World War II. While some students—like the popular and bright Laurie Saunders, editor of the Gordon Grapevine, and her best friend Amy Smith —are moved by the film, other students like Laurie’s ...

  6. Soon, The Wave flows through all of Gordon High and its members grow increasingly fascistic. They fill the school with propaganda, blindly obey Mr. Ross’s dictatorial orders, willingly concede to being spied on by monitors, threaten non-members, and cause harm to others. Before long, a Jewish sophomore is beaten up and called an anti-Semitic ...

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  8. In 1967, Ron Jones, a young teacher at Cubberley High School, decided to try an innovative method to teach his students about fascism. He introduced them to a movement he called The Third Wave, based on discipline and community. Many of Mr. Jones's ideas are the same as the ones Strasser describes in The Wave ––for example, Strasser lifts ...

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