Transcript Slide 1

A Student’s-Eye View of Historiography
Marcus Collins, Loughborough University
[email protected]
For this assignment, I would like you to
write a historiographical analysis of the
history you studied at school.
For this assignment, I would like you to
write a historiographical analysis of the
history you studied at school.
• Did you learn more ‘traditional’ history than ‘new’ history?
• Was the study of history presented to you as being more of a
‘science’ than an ‘art’?
• In what ways do you think politics shaped the history
curriculum and the way in which it was taught?
• To what extent did your schooling achieve the declared aim
of the national curriculum in history of ‘promoting citizenship
[and] … pupils’ spiritual, moral, social and cultural
development’?
Certainly it is much simpler to teach traditional history rather than
new history and I believe this is the reason that at a lower age,
traditional history is the fundamental way of teaching.
[A] more ‘traditional’ form of history was taught [at primary school]
because it is simpler to teach the basics in order to understand
more broad history later on.
‘[T]raditional’ history ... is the easier of the two to participate in
from a younger age and lower ability of analysis.
The choice of choosing ‘traditional history over its more modern
‘new’ counterpart is one which younger people enjoy I believe.
Key stage three in secondary school was aimed at setting a
structure to subjects with clear aims and also introduced more
complex topics, such as social standings and to a degree economic
influences ... which shows ‘new’ history in action.
Growing up, I was taught ‘Traditional’ History. ... However, almost
ten years later, the History I knew begun to change ... I had not
previously encountered such as the study of society and the study
of groups of people. This, I now know as ‘New’ History.
GCSE was focused primarily around learning dates, facts and figures
on events in order to be able to regurgitate them for the exam in
the summer. The emphasis on elites was clear... [But at A-Level]
Instead of focusing of the role of the individual upon history, we
focused on the way history impacted the individual.
When I came to study A level I was told to almost ignore what I was
told at GCSE.
Key stage three in secondary school was aimed at setting a
structure to subjects with clear aims and also introduced more
complex topics, such as social standings and to a degree economic
influences ... which shows ‘new’ history in action.
Growing up, I was taught ‘Traditional’ History. ... However, almost
ten years later, the History I knew begun to change ... I had not
previously encountered such as the study of society and the study
of groups of people. This, I now know as ‘New’ History.
GCSE was focused primarily around learning dates, facts and figures
on events in order to be able to regurgitate them for the exam in
the summer. The emphasis on elites was clear... [But at A-Level]
Instead of focusing of the role of the individual upon history, we
focused on the way history impacted the individual.
When I came to study A level I was told to almost ignore what I was
told at GCSE.
Key stage three in secondary school was aimed at setting a
structure to subjects with clear aims and also introduced more
complex topics, such as social standings and to a degree economic
influences ... which shows ‘new’ history in action.
Growing up, I was taught ‘Traditional’ History. ... However, almost
ten years later, the History I knew begun to change ... I had not
previously encountered such as the study of society and the study
of groups of people. This, I now know as ‘New’ History.
GCSE was focused primarily around learning dates, facts and figures
on events in order to be able to regurgitate them for the exam in
the summer. The emphasis on elites was clear... [But at A-Level]
Instead of focusing of the role of the individual upon history, we
focused on the way history impacted the individual.
When I came to study A level I was told to almost ignore what I was
told at GCSE.
Throughout my school life, history was taught in its traditional
sense as designed by Ranke ...
Throughout my time at school I have only been taught traditional
history, under the impression that this is the only way to study
history. Only by coming to university have I encountered new
history.
I overwhelmingly studied history from a ‘traditional’ viewpoint with
very little ‘new’ history that I can remember. The focus of the
history was virtually always on the big events from the period and
very rarely focused on the social effects and changes.
I suppose the studies I performed at A level were traditional history.
Focusing on the ‘great men’ of the time, and the ‘politics’, but there
is more to life than that, and there is more to History than that.
Throughout my school life, history was taught in its traditional
sense as designed by Ranke ...
Throughout my time at school I have only been taught traditional
history, under the impression that this is the only way to study
history. Only by coming to university have I encountered new
history.
I overwhelmingly studied history from a ‘traditional’ viewpoint with
very little ‘new’ history that I can remember. The focus of the
history was virtually always on the big events from the period and
very rarely focused on the social effects and changes.
I suppose the studies I performed at A level were traditional history.
Focusing on the ‘great men’ of the time, and the ‘politics’, but there
is more to life than that, and there is more to History than that.
[T]he studies never veered away from issues that didn’t directly
affect Britain.
In my teaching, Britain was viewed as a country that would not
stand for inequality and stood by many strong principles
regarding the welfare of human beings.
Britain was always presented in a positive, patriotic light.
Our country and its way of governing are continually portrayed as
the perfect model for a state ...
Up until my first year of history in University I had taken an
extremely Eurocentrism view of the world ... [T]he teaching in
schools is a very bias view of world history, a snippet of
knowledge in such a wide historical spectrum.
The near total dismissal of world history ... is fundamentally
Eurocentric, as well as being, in some ways very Whiggish.
Islamic, Chinese and South American Histories are seemingly
absent or at the most relegated to the status of fillers during the
lower levels of school ...
If there is not a sustained movement towards world history in future
National Curriculums I fear that students will be terribly unaware
of the complexities and wonders that other nations have to offer.
The moral lessons learnt when studying about topics such as slavery
and Apartheid were invaluable ...
I feel the liberal approach adopted by the national curriculum is
necessary for multicultural societies to function.
We were taught to avoid war as it brings with it huge loss of life and
many other consequences. We were taught not to promote
nationalism as this can contribute largely to the creation of wars
as seen in both world wars.
[T]he pedagogues ... insisted on making us ‘learn from the mistakes
of the past’, seemingly with the intention of making us walk out
of the classroom thinking ‘I must not appropriate Africans from
their homeland and sell them for profit as non-wage labourers to
American cotton and tobacco producers’.
The moral lessons learnt when studying about topics such as slavery
and Apartheid were invaluable ...
I feel the liberal approach adopted by the national curriculum is
necessary for multicultural societies to function.
We were taught to avoid war as it brings with it huge loss of life and
many other consequences. We were taught not to promote
nationalism as this can contribute largely to the creation of wars
as seen in both world wars.
[T]he pedagogues ... insisted on making us ‘learn from the mistakes
of the past’, seemingly with the intention of making us walk out
of the classroom thinking ‘I must not appropriate Africans from
their homeland and sell them for profit as non-wage labourers to
American cotton and tobacco producers’.
I do not think the national curriculum promoted my cultural
development much as I did not study any country outside of
Europe and America.
I personally find it incredible that if you did not make it too the
second year of A level, then you most likely do not know of the
atrocities that Britain committed in years gone by, that you
associate concentration camps with Hitler and the holocaust, but
not Britain and the Boers.
I do not think the national curriculum promoted my cultural
development much as I did not study any country outside of
Europe and America.
I personally find it incredible that if you did not make it too the
second year of A level, then you most likely do not know of the
atrocities that Britain committed in years gone by, that you
associate concentration camps with Hitler and the holocaust, but
not Britain and the Boers.
• a frustration with the preponderance at school of ‘traditional’
history of an empirical and high-political bent
• a perception that ‘new’ history and world history are more
comprehensive, democratic and inclusive
• a greater degree of ‘new’ history taught at later stages of schooling,
taken by students to indicate that it is more challenging than its
traditional counterpart
• a tendency to view the concentration on British history as insular,
biased, nationalistic and associated with a ‘traditional’ approach
• widespread concern over a Eurocentric curriculum, with what little
extra-European history on offer concerning the impact of the West
upon the non-West in slavery, imperialism and the United States
• concerns over the Hitlerisation of the curriculum somewhat offset
by the subject being taught as ‘total history’ and with reference to
historiographical debate
• a general desire for the study of history to include a moral
dimension
• dissatisfaction with the curriculum even among those who go on to
study the subject at university
[I have] almost a sense of feeling cheated by the syllabus.
Why do we study what we do?
• the most traditional of historical educations being received by
overseas students
• an awareness that ‘traditional’ methods could prevail even when
studying topics that lent themselves to ‘new’ historical approaches
(for example, industrialisation or Native American history)
• little exposure to pre-modern history, historiography or archival
research prior to university
• a perceived tension between intellectual inquiry and ‘teaching to
the test’