24 results on '"HISTORY education"'
Search Results
2. History of education in Central and Eastern Europe: past, present and future.
- Author
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Gulczyńska, Justyna, Rébay, Magdolna, and Kasperová, Dana
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HISTORY of education , *CROSS-cultural differences , *HISTORY education , *NATIONALISM - Abstract
This article presents the origins, development and perspectives of history of education in Central and Eastern Europe. Both the issues and the region are very broad, as they concern many countries with quite large cultural and identity differences, but also with a relative geopolitical similarity. This similarity has created and continues to create similar conditions for researching activities in and teaching of the history of education. Moreover, after 1990, the opening up and development of the history of education in the international space can be observed in the region. To explore the presented issues, three countries in this region of Europe are presented as individual case studies: Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic. A stroll down the path of the history of education in the countries indicated allows for a close and in-depth look at the genesis, development and perspective of the history of education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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3. Bright Nordic Lights: a revitalised interdisciplinary history of education in the massified higher education of the Nordics.
- Author
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Westberg, Johannes
- Subjects
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HISTORY of education , *HIGHER education , *HISTORY education , *EDUCATIONAL sociology , *EDUCATION policy - Abstract
The history of education is, and can be, many things. In this article, I argue that the history of education in the Nordic countries is marked by three phases, based on its institutional setting. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the history of education was written by schoolmen for schoolmen. In the post-war era, the discipline of education took increasing responsibility for the field. Since the 1980s, it has been a multidisciplinary research field based on the disciplines of education and history where history of education was combined with research in history education, sociology of education, child studies and educational policy. While the development of the history of education varied across the Nordics, this setting proved to be fertile. In terms of active researchers, output and coordination, the Nordic history of education clearly stands stronger now than it did 20 years ago. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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4. Irish history at school, its transnational nature and its international contexts, 1980s–1990s: convergence and divergence between the Irish state and Northern Ireland.
- Author
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Fischer, Karin
- Subjects
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HISTORY of education , *HISTORY textbooks , *CURRICULUM , *HISTORIOGRAPHY ,IRISH history - Abstract
A comparative analysis of Irish history at school in the two parts of Ireland from 1921 to the 1990s is proposed here through an examination of history curricula and textbooks. The main focus is on the 1980s and 1990s, which were pivotal decades, usually described as having brought about a gradual convergence between the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland in terms of the treatment of Irish history within a wider context and related conceptions of Irish identity. The article argues that the new perspectives in fact reveal a dual trend, with elements of convergence but also enduring or even consolidated aspects of distinctiveness or divergence, in the treatment of both Irish history and European history: the more open, more transnational approaches of Irish history went hand in hand with a consolidation of state and regional identifications, as well as with a different view of the place of European history. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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5. 'Talk about the questions of the day, shun them not': three late Victorian voices on the place of history in English schools.
- Author
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Smith, Joseph
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HISTORY education , *HISTORY education in elementary schools , *CITIZENSHIP , *PATRIOTISM , *HISTORIOGRAPHY , *CURRICULUM , *VICTORIAN Period, Great Britain, 1837-1901 - Abstract
This paper brings together the ideas of three writers from the 1880s who argued for an enhanced status for history in the school curriculum. Although there is superficial agreement between the writers in calling for history to develop children's citizenship and patriotism, each conceives these values differently. Focusing on the teaching of history to children in elementary and third-grade schools, this paper suggests that the considerable plurality of views among advocates of history reflects the underdeveloped disciplinary identity of history in the Victorian academy. However, the paper also contends that, in considering the pedagogic complexity of teaching history to children, these writers were engaging with epistemic debates – about the place of myth-histories and the processes of narrativisation – that would not exercise historical philosophers until the late twentieth century. Then, as now, the school curriculum proved fertile ground for discussion about what history is, and what it is for. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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6. Beyond the curriculum: teaching history in Israeli classrooms, 1970s–1980s.
- Author
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Tal, Nimrod and Hofman, Amos
- Subjects
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HISTORY teachers , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *HISTORY education , *ISRAEL-Arab War, 1973 , *ARAB-Israeli conflict - Abstract
While the literature on the history of history education in Israel is vast, little has been written about it from teachers' perspectives. This article focuses on teachers' motivation for teaching history and explores what formed the ways in which they understood their profession in the 1970s and 1980s, a period of great social and political change in Israel. By focusing on history teachers' reaction to the Yom Kippur War (1973) and the Israeli–Palestinian conflict, to the introduction of a new history curriculum (1975) and to the diversification of the Israeli society, the article shows that, in a rapidly changing world, these teachers saw themselves first and foremost as the ones in charge of maintaining unbroken links between their students and their national past. This often put history teachers in conflict with their professional surroundings, giving rise to heated arguments over the question: what should be the purpose of history education? [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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7. Educating girls based on the biographies of illustrious women from Spanish history (1900–1960).
- Author
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Jiménez Pablo, Esther and Muñoz García, Gemma
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EDUCATION of girls , *BIOGRAPHY (Literary form) , *ROLE models , *GREAT men & women , *HISTORY education , *CHILDREN'S literature - Abstract
This study analyses how different political regimes used the study of history to promote a patriotic identity among schoolchildren between 1900 and 1960 in Spain. Qualitative methods were employed to examine a sample of the reading material most widely used in Spanish schools throughout the aforementioned period. These readers contained the biographies of famous figures from Spanish history that primary and secondary school students had to study, memorise and, above all, imitate. The scarcity of historical female models as opposed to their male counterparts is striking, and hence the need during the Franco era (starting in 1939) to increase the number of biographies of illustrious women to impose a model for girls to follow. The two female figures that appear in all the biographical works, in which their domestic as opposed to public aspects were stressed, are Queen Isabella the Catholic and Saint Teresa of Jesus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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8. Reteaching/retouching Heimat: expellees, home and belonging in German schools' post-war curricula.
- Author
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Redding, Kimberly A.
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GERMAN Reconstruction, 1939-1951 , *WORLD War II -- Forced repatriation , *WORLD War II refugees , *GERMANS , *HISTORY , *EXPATRIATION , *HISTORY education , *CURRICULUM , *NATIONAL character , *SCHOOL children - Abstract
This essay explores how both German and international educators mobilised history curricula to reshape German collective identity between 1945 and 1950, focusing particular attention on depictions of the deutsche Vertriebene (German expellees) in curricular plans and textbooks. In the mid-1940s, 12–15 million ethnic Germans were forcibly ousted from Poland, the Soviet Union and other Eastern European states. However, while international authorities considered them 'German', expellees were typically understood as problematic outsiders by the local residents and officials of their neue Heimat (new homeland). It will be suggested that, rather than helping integrate young expellees into post-war societies, post-war curricular reforms reinforced an identity rooted in loss and collective exclusion. More than 70 years later, ageing expellees still challenge public narratives, describing themselves as perpetual outsiders, at home neither in the Federal Republic of Germany, nor in the places and cultures of their memories. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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9. The 'World Politics' course: changing thinking on international relations education in Ontario Secondary Schools, 1850–1970.
- Author
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Allison, John
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INTERNATIONAL relations education , *EDUCATION , *CURRICULUM , *EDUCATIONAL change , *HISTORY education , *TEENAGERS , *SECONDARY education , *HISTORY of education ,HISTORY of Ontario, Canada - Abstract
What do secondary school students in Ontario, Canada, need to know about the world in which they live in? How did a secondary school 'World Politics' course that emerged in Ontario in the 1960s address this question? The 'World Politics' course that emerged in the 1960s clearly came about as a result of societal and educational developments. Educators in nineteenth-century Ontario felt no need for such a course. In more recent times, post-Second World War, the discipline of history underwent dramatic upheavals. The opportunities for new courses meant possibilities to reach out to new groups of students. Simultaneously, with this change, the importance of international relations in the history curriculum was reduced but this also allowed for its re-emergence elsewhere. Finally, 'World Politics' emerged as one of the responses to the need for an understanding of a much more complex world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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10. 'History taught in the pageant way': education and historical performance in twentieth-century Britain.
- Author
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Bartie, Angela, Fleming, Linda, Freeman, Mark, Hulme, Tom, Hutton, Alexander, and Readman, Paul
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PAGEANTS , *HISTORY education , *COMMUNITY theater , *DRAMA criticism , *POPULAR culture , *COLLECTIVE memory , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORIOGRAPHY ,HISTORY & criticism ,20TH century British history - Abstract
Historical pageants were important sites of popular engagement with the past in twentieth-century Britain. They took place in many places and sometimes on a large scale, in settings ranging from small villages to industrial cities. They were staged by schools, churches, professional organisations, women's groups and political parties, among others. This article draws on contemporary studies of heritage and performance to explore the blend of history, myth and fiction that characterised pageants, and the ways in which they both shaped and reflected the self-image of local communities. Pageants were important channels of popular education as well as entertainment and, although they are sometimes seen as backward-looking and conservative spectacles, this article argues that pageants could be an effective means of enlisting the past in the service of the present and future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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11. The treatment of the Holocaust in high school history textbooks: a case study from Spain.
- Author
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González-Delgado, Mariano
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HOLOCAUST, 1939-1945 , *HISTORIOGRAPHY of the Holocaust, 1939-1945 , *HISTORY textbooks , *HISTORY education , *SECONDARY education , *EDUCATION ,EUROPEAN history textbooks - Abstract
The Holocaust was one of the most significant events of contemporary history and still has great relevance for current times. This paper analyses the portrayal of the Holocaust in secondary education history textbooks in Spain. As this type of research has grown in the international arena, the need to review critically this event in Spanish textbooks has become ever more evident. This paper reviews what has already been written on this subject in the international arena and makes a number of methodological observations both quantitatively and qualitatively. In the review, a number of deficiencies in the representation of the Holocaust were found. This strongly indicates the need to contextualise the study of the Holocaust and frame it within a structural perspective that would account for its multi-causal origin. Attention is also drawn to the need to improve the content, dispel some myths and improve deficiencies identified in textbooks on the subject. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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12. The house that Hugh built: the Adelaide history department during the Stretton era, 1954-1966.
- Author
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Munro, Doug
- Subjects
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ACADEMIC departments , *UNIVERSITY faculty , *COLLEGE curriculum , *HISTORY teachers , *HISTORY education , *HIGHER education , *YOUNG adults , *TWENTIETH century , *MANAGEMENT - Abstract
In 1954, Hugh Stretton took charge of a threadbare history department at the University of Adelaide. By the end of his tenure as department chair in 1966, staff numbers had increased fivefold and the department was recognised as one of the best of its kind in Australia. Stretton wanted his department to 'teach history interestingly', which was his overriding criterion in making new appointments. He also ran a democratic department that went against prevailing notions of 'God-Professor' departmental governance. As well as highlighting the singular features of the Adelaide department, the present paper places the growth and the character of 'The House that Hugh Built' within wider Australian and global contexts. The 'Stretton era' straddled a period of rapid expansion of the university sector both locally and internationally, which entailed a move from a generalist to a more specialised curriculum, with a greater emphasis on research and publication, and a less male-dominated faculty. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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13. The transformation of school knowledge in the late Ottoman Empire: conflicting histories.
- Author
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Açıkgöz, Betül
- Subjects
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HISTORY education , *EDUCATIONAL change , *OTTOMAN Empire , *HISTORY of schools , *THEORY of knowledge , *ISLAM , *HISTORY , *EDUCATION ,SOCIAL aspects ,TURKISH history ,ISLAM & society - Abstract
As a result of developments in public education in the nineteenth-century Ottoman state, pedagogic professionalism began to direct school studies by setting scientific discourse against conventional epistemology. However, the strong conviction that the late Ottoman Empire was secularised progressively over years leads to the neglect of the tensions and conflicts in active authorship, and nullifies the role of textbooks as battlefields for ideologies. This article examines the tensions and resistances to modern knowledge that were deemed to be transferred in a smooth transition from the old to the new epistemology, in the history of education literature. The article discusses the discursive views in the general history textbooks. The contrasting conceptions of history, the first man, civilisations and tribal societies demonstrate the failure to form standard school knowledge in the Second Constitutional Period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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14. The art of the organiser: Raphael Samuel and the origins of the History Workshop.
- Author
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Scott-Brown, Sophie
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HISTORY conferences , *HISTORY education , *COMMUNISM , *ADULT education , *ADULTS , *HISTORY - Abstract
The History Workshop movement took its stance on the democratisation of history making, becoming notorious for its exuberant gatherings and impassioned ‘histories from below’. At the centre of the early Workshop was the British historian Raphael Samuel, who has been described as the personification of its intellectual and ethical politics. This paper examines Samuel’s role in the Workshop arguing that his distinctive intellectual personality was critical in shaping its early form and ethos. Drawing on a biographical approach, it explores the development of this persona over the course of his formative years. It argues that Samuel’s life history provides an insight into the renewed appeal of libertarian ideas in post-war British radical political and educational thought and that as an individual he illuminates the application of these ideas to the social role of the historian-educator. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
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15. Bring up the children: national and religious identity and identification in Dutch children’s historical novels 1848– c .1870.
- Author
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Parlevliet, Sanne
- Subjects
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NATIONALISM , *HISTORICAL fiction , *CHILDREN'S literature , *CITIZENSHIP , *HISTORY & politics , *HISTORY education , *NINETEENTH century , *HISTORY ,19TH century Netherlands history - Abstract
Historical fiction is a powerful way of transmitting national history to later generations. It emerged in the nineteenth century as a means of building identity and fostering solidarity. This article investigates Dutch historical novels for children. First, it explores the relation between educational ideas and historical novels for children, distinguishing between two groups of children’s novels: novels written in the spirit of ideas on national non-denominational education and novels opposing Christian neutrality in education, by glorifying orthodox Protestantism and inculcating combativeness and intolerance. Second, the literary strategies employed to relate history are analysed. Both groups of novels use the same strategies, such as fictional characters as figures of identification, narrators mediating between the present and the past, and restructuring the past in favour of a triumphant ending to the story. However, there is a striking difference in character development. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
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16. Political partisanship, bureaucratic pragmatism and Acadian nationalism: New Brunswick, Canada’s 1920 history textbook controversy.
- Author
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Helyar, Frances
- Subjects
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HISTORY education , *WORLD War I , *EDUCATION , *NATIONALISM , *CATHOLICS , *TEXTBOOKS , *TWENTIETH century ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
During a time of post-war sensitivity to Canadian nationalism and patriotism, public feeling was aroused in 1920 New Brunswick regarding a world history textbook with a new chapter about the First World War. The American author made no reference to Canada’s war efforts. The subsequent public discussion focused on issues of patriotism, citizenship, history education and schooling, but it eventually dissolved into longstanding conflicts over language and religion. This case study investigates how questions about history education were interpreted through the lens of the political partisanship of the newspaper editor, the bureaucratic rationality of the educational administrator, and the Acadian nationalism of the Roman Catholic Bishop. The controversy depicts a loosening but not breaking of postcolonial ties, and uncovers the political nature of public memory, along with the complex intertwining of religion and language rights within schooling, history education and citizenship in post-war Canada and New Brunswick. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
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17. Australia’s 1988 Bicentennial: national history and multiculturalism in the primary school curriculum.
- Author
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Sharp, Heather
- Subjects
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CURRICULUM , *HISTORY education , *SOCIAL sciences education , *MULTICULTURALISM , *CULTURE conflict , *EDUCATION ,AUSTRALIAN history - Abstract
As in many countries, such as Germany, Turkey, the United States and Japan the history/culture wars of the past two decades have increased public interest in what is taught in schools. This has resulted in rigorous debates in the general community, encouraged and sustained through regular media coverage. Partly as a response to this, History has been designated as a separate subject in the first wave of planning and implementation of the Australian National Curriculum. Two of the reasons for this include first, to recognise the importance of teaching historical skills as a distinct subject; and second there is an ongoing bipartisan political interest in privileging history disciplinary knowledge and content to ensure that national history narratives are taught to students. To contribute meaningfully towards the development and implementation of a National Curriculum, it is important to understand past curriculum constructions, so that the disciplinary knowledge and content of history remains independent, and not subsumed within current (or future) political trends. Based on examples of national history from the Queensland Social Studies syllabus and government endorsed sourcebooks in the lead-up to the 1988 Bicentennial of British colonisation of the Australian continent, this article examines the influence and role of multiculturalism in History teaching in primary schools. Particular attention is paid to Indigenous representations and British heritages, as an example of two groups that have often been represented as binaries to each other throughout Australian history. An analysis of the curriculum materials illuminates the differences between multiculturalism and history—highlighting how the two are merged at the expense of accurate historical knowledge and concepts, particularly in the area of national history. This study will demonstrate that as a result of the infiltration of multiculturalism into history content within the Social Studies curriculum, historical knowledge becomes silenced in the school curriculum – resulting in vague and sometimes historically inaccurate information being presented to students; and the privileging of certain types of multiculturalism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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18. Representing two worlds: illustrations in Spanish textbooks for the teaching of religion and object lessons (1900–1970).
- Author
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Badanelli, Ana Maria
- Subjects
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TEXTBOOKS , *RELIGIOUS education textbooks , *ART in textbooks , *RELIGIOUS studies , *HISTORY education , *EDUCATION - Abstract
This article aims to give an overview of the use and the meaning of images in two types of school textbooks used in Spain from the early twentieth century until the end of the 1960s: the textbooks Lecciones de cosas (‘object lessons’) and those used for the teaching of religion. For this analysis the iconographic-iconological method will be used as it is applied in the study of art history. In this way it will be seen how it is possible to arrive at didactic and pedagogic conclusions that can help to understand the intentionality of the school textbooks as they were used in the process of teaching and learning. The goal is to show that the illustrations used did not merely aim to transmit information and facts; rather, the artistic code chosen played a fundamental role in transmitting ideas and teachings of a far broader scope. It will also be seen how the illustrations differ not only in the contents that they were meant to transmit, which is to be expected, but in the didactic use that was made of them and, more importantly, in the behaviour and attitudes that they strove to encourage in the students who studied them. It is proposed to contrast the way in which these textbooks used images to teach about the world around us with the way they attempted to show another ‘world’, one not normally perceptible to children’s senses. The article will also delve into the question of how illustrations translated this paradox between this life and the ‘other life’, establishing differences and similarities in the way such content and teachings were transmitted. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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19. University historians and their role in the development of a 'shared' history in Northern Ireland schools, 1960s-1980s: an illustration of the ambiguous social function of historians.
- Author
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Fischer, Karin
- Subjects
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HISTORIANS , *PUBLIC history , *HISTORY education , *SOCIAL role , *HISTORIOGRAPHY ,HISTORY of Northern Ireland ,QUEENS University (Belfast, Northern Ireland) - Abstract
A common history curriculum was introduced for the first time in Northern Ireland schools in 1991, which attempted to bridge the longstanding gap between Catholic and state schools in this field. This paper outlines the various aspects of the crucial role played by a number of historians from all the major universities in Ireland, North and South, but especially from Queen's University, Belfast, in making this change possible, through the development of new historiographical perspectives on Irish history, but also through their more direct and deliberate drive to popularise these perspectives within Northern Ireland society from the 1960s to the end of the 1980s. This engagement of many historians above and beyond their work as researchers shows that they tried to reconcile their scientific work as academics with a recognition of their social role, thus providing a good illustration of the ambiguous nature of the social function of historians in contemporary democracies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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20. The path of history: narrative analysis of history textbooks - a case study of Belgian history textbooks (1945-2004).
- Author
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Vanhulle, Bert
- Subjects
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NARRATIVE inquiry (Research method) , *HISTORY education , *TEXTBOOKS , *CURRICULUM , *HISTORIOGRAPHY , *HISTORY of education ,BELGIAN history - Abstract
The philosophical background of the subject history in secondary education has been mainly addressed through research based on 'obvious' source types (curricula, discussions in committees or journals, ...). This article proposes a narrative method of analysing history textbooks in order to study the underlining historical philosophy of history education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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21. An 'energetic and controversial' historian of education yesterday and today: A. F. Leach (1851-1915).
- Author
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Simon (1915–2005)1, Joan
- Subjects
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HISTORY education , *HISTORY of education , *HISTORIANS , *HISTORIOGRAPHY , *SOCIAL history , *EDUCATION & politics , *EDUCATION research - Abstract
This article is posthumously published as the late Joan Simon's most recent contribution to ongoing debates in historiography of education. Joan remained an active writer and a contributor to this journal and submitted the present article only months before her death, with characteristic determination to engage in historiographical debate, and to contextualize and defend her own contribution to the field. Like other periods preceding the Industrial Revolution, the later Middle Ages and Renaissance tend to have been neglected by historians of education in recent years, and the discussion below reminds us how recently, and for good reason, debate concerning the Reformation remained central to the historiography of education. Implications of the contemporary politics of education for historical interpretation are well illustrated. But the autobiographical threads of this piece also reveal the significance of personalities and academic politics in the configuration of prevailing interpretations of history. These factors impinge on the publication and editing of learned journals as well as more generally on the positioning of research in education history between its originating intellectual discipline on the one hand, and on the other the field of practice to which its insights contribute. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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22. Sources as interpretation: sources in the study of education history.
- Author
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Cunningham, Peter
- Subjects
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HERMENEUTICS , *DEBATE , *HISTORY education , *ANTIQUITIES , *ARCHIVES , *CURRICULUM - Abstract
qFocuses on the critical discussion of sources genres, problematics of interpretation and interpretive debates relating to individual documents, images and artefacts and sites in studying history. Promotion of the study and research in the history of education; Factor affecting the extension of the academic content of courses with the development of the Bachelor of Education degree; Identification of five types of nation as leaders in the state superseding Church control of education.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
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23. 'Poisoned history': a comparative study of nationalism, propaganda and the treatment of war and peace in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century school curriculum.
- Author
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Marsden, William E.
- Subjects
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CURRICULUM , *HISTORY education , *GEOGRAPHY education - Abstract
Presents a comparative study of nationalism, propaganda and the treatment of war and peace in the late 19th and 20th century school curriculum. Implication of World War I on the study of history and geography in Great Britain and the United States; Features of the early 19th century pervasion principle in religious instruction; Implementation of product, process and propaganda.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. History teaching, nationhood and politics in England and Wales in the late twentieth century: a historical comparison.
- Author
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Phillips, Robert
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY education , *HISTORIOGRAPHY - Abstract
Highlights the documentation of history teaching in England and Wales during the 20th century. Historical background of English schools; Information on the making of the National Curriculum history; Themes of history teaching in England and Wales during the 20th century.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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