Wyoming Holocaust & Genocide Education Summary

Legal Status

  • Mandated by law: No
  • As of 2025, Wyoming has not enacted any legislation requiring Holocaust or genocide education in public schools
  • State social studies standards may include generic content on World War II, but no specific mandates on genocide/Holocaust instruction

How the Holocaust Appears in Standards

  • Holocaust education is not legally mandated and, when offered, is integrated at local discretion
  • Any related content appears within broader World History, civics, or human rights instruction

Supplemental Teaching Tools Encouraged

  • Individual districts and educators may use:
    • National curricula (Echoes & Reflections, U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum)
    • Survivor testimony videos and primary source materials
    • University or museum partnership programs

Teaching Notes for Wyoming Educators

AreaGuidance
Mandated by LawNo statewide requirement
Curriculum InclusionOptional and locally determined
Grade LevelsVaries by district
Instructional FlexibilityHigh – educators decide materials and scope
Professional DevelopmentNot state-supported; rely on external providers

Conclusion

Wyoming does not require Holocaust or genocide education by law, leaving content choices up to local school districts and teachers. While general World War II topics may be part of state social studies standards, genocide and Holocaust-specific lessons are optional. Educators seeking to include this material can draw from national curriculum resources, survivor testimony, and external partnerships to enrich student understanding and civic awareness.

Select a State below, to check the Holocaust educational standards: