Teaching History in the Digital Age

September 19, 2006

Chasms, Breaches, and Other Arroyos

Filed under: Uncategorized, historical thinking, ken, sotl — Ken @ 12:45 pm

The image of academic historians dropping like lemmings into an abyss, futilely piling on top of each other in their efforts to translate their craft into classroom lessons is an amusing metaphor. But it is precisely the implication of the language employed in some of this week’s readings.

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September 12, 2006

Missing the Bus

Filed under: Uncategorized, historical thinking, ken — Ken @ 3:35 pm

I had a post all set to go for when I returned on Sunday night, but when I arrived home, I saw that my copy of Understanding by Design had finally arrived in my absence. I thought it would be good to at least peruse it and try to incorporate it into my ideas a bit. I wish I hadn’t.

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September 11, 2006

What history education means to you

Filed under: historical thinking, jamesf — James @ 3:46 pm

Throughout much of the reading, there is a common thread on the importance of historical education, and I was just curious as to what everyone in class personally felt is the value of historical education?

So much of the fight to revamp the curriculum around the turn-of-the-19th-century, as mentioned in the Orrill and Shapiro article, centered around trying to establish a case for the necessity of historical education. But I’d like to explore this topic a little further. What does history education mean to all of us? I think one of the most important aspects of it, and this was mentioned by Wineburg, is the critical thinking skills that historical scholarship cultivates in the student. These are the skills that leap outside the boundaries of historic thought, and are the skills that will stay with an individual long after they have forgotten what day Fort Sumpter was fired upon. But does is historical education the only system that imbues students with that skill? Philosophy, English, and even scientific inquiry I think also focus on the importance of critical analysis. Are the skills taught by history somehow unique? And if not, what then is left to defend the importance of history?

Here’s the dilemma I’m struggling with in my head: thinking critically is the most important element of historical education, and the largest facet of that is trying to break away from the presentism that steers us toward the familiar, or worse, steers us to misinterpreting the strange for the familiar. Now, an effective history education should assist the student in overcoming this obstacle – to be able to properly contextualize events, individuals, themes within a historical framework. But what now? How will that ability then be used by the student for the betterment of society? For being a better citizen?

If presentism is an incorrect approach to history, then so must the converse – the attempt to understand present-day situations by comparing them to historical events. The notion that we, as a society, can learn from past mistakes is based on the assumption on which presentism rests; that there is a certain degree of constancy thoughout history. If all this is true (and I’ll admit, in my ramblings I’ve made an awful lot of assumptions) then how can history be used in the creation of better citizens? Does simply knowing a countries history make one a better citizen, even if that knowledge may not be able to better inform one’s decisions in the present?

I’m very curious to hear the class’s thoughts on this, either on the blog or in the class. I do apologize for the rambling nature of my posts, which seem to resemble think-alouds!

James

September 10, 2006

The Devil’s Advocate: Historical Thinking (Post 2)

Filed under: historical thinking, kevin — Kevin @ 11:55 pm

Samuel S. Wineburg’s interesting study of the way history is poorly taught, badly practiced and largely misunderstood by the greater population was quite insightful to a student of the historian’s craft. However, if I were a middle or high school teacher, with little expertise in the workings of the historian’s mind I would find the book far less useful. The obstacles that Wineburg throws at teachers hoping to enlighten their students to historical thought appear far too formidable, regardless of Wineburg’s suggestions. In spite of the fact that Wineburg hopes to alleviate the problems of teaching history I feel that he does little more than complicate them. How can we expect teachers to imbue students with an appreciation of their national history while professional historians are formally acknowledging that we are limited by “presentism?” Most young people will not become professional historians. Therefore teachers should not seek to burden them with the subtleties of history. Rather, the goal should be to present them with the most accurate portrayal of American history available. It is the professional historian’s role to explore the intricacies and subtleties of history and uncover the mysteries of the past as the evidence is examined. Possibly, the profession would best support the general public and the interests of history by updating the public view of events as necessary through scholarship, while engaging and nurturing the historical interests of America’s youth in order to influence those few who are destined to be the historians of the future.

Lendol Calder continues the discussion of Wineburg, “Teachers may like to think they are “furnishing the mind,” but since the late 1950s, investigations of human mental functioning have shown that this metaphor falls apart when taken too literally. Facts are not like furniture at all; they are more like dry ice, disappearing at room temperature.” While Calder goes on to make different points, I feel that this one is essential. Most students will forget what they learn as time passes, regardless of how it is taught. Only knowledge that is used remains in the forefront of the mind. I firmly believe this through personal experiences in martial arts and wrestling. Although in high school I was an avid wrestler, those skills dwindled after a period of hibernation. I feel that the same is true of academic work. Wrestling and martial arts rely a great deal on executing specific moves and countermoves according to the actions of one’s opponent. I find this to be not unlike Calder’s description of basic historian’s skills, “Can beginning students learn to do history the way professionals do it? Of course not. But my studies have found they can learn to execute a basic set of moves crucial to the development of historical mindedness. I want students to learn six such moves, or cognitive habits: questioning, connecting, sourcing, making inferences, considering alternate perspectives, and recognizing limits to one’s knowledge, all in the service of understanding American history since 1945.” Unfortunately, I find a fault with Calder’s logic, human memory. Those students in a survey course that do not major in history will see those skills dwindle as they are not exercised. It is those that do pursue the historian’s craft that will need those skills, and they should receive the most support. While this is a rather bleak viewpoint of survey history courses, it is not meant to denote that they should not exist, or be brushed aside as trivial. These courses require the best efforts of instructors and should be given adequate attention (the dollar amount of modern college tuitions only highlight this point), but nonetheless the future of history resides in a much smaller pool of students. The survey course is simply a method of creating a basic intellectual foundation upon which all college graduates must build. In short, upper level classes should be the subject of books like Wineburg’s and articles like “Uncoverage: Toward a Signature Pedagogy for the History Survey.”

Douglass on Understanding by Design

Filed under: historical thinking, susan — Susan @ 10:44 pm

Susan on Understanding by Design: Standards are potentially very useful on many levels, and certainly the backward design idea is at the heart of the movement at its best. Having sat on standards-writing commissions, complex instructional design, and ordinary lesson-planning sessions of my own and with teachers, I also believe that it is essential to know what the students are supposed to come away with. The outcome determines the steps that need to be taken to bring the students there. So many times, teachers and materials fail to recognize that intermediate steps have been omitted in the lesson, and the desired result is not forthcoming. For example, teaching elementary students about latitude and longitude with the goal of having them identify cities by their coordinates is a clear goal, but the requisite steps to get them to be able to do that are missed on the September Map Skills pages in every social studies book. We have to realize that we are asking students to understand and be able to use a four-quadrant grid, when they may not yet be familiar with the idea of coordinates at all. It is necessary to start with “Bingo” and go through the intermediate steps to the complex system that gives us the Global Positioning System. Another part of the skill is the divisions of degrees on a compass or clock apparatus. It is too easy to think of the end without breaking it down into components.

There are teachers who teach their subject, and there are teachers who teach kids. They are not mutually exclusive, but the former could teach just as well to an empty room. The Stages of Backward Design model looks simple at first, and has certainly come to be incorporated in instructional design of late. The model hides within it, however, a lot of complexity, because there are scales at which instruction functions: the “desired results” include demonstrable skills, knowledge, and concepts. So instruction is not linear, but moves up and down scales, zooming in and out from smaller to larger fields of vision. Fig 3.3 illustrates these multiple scales in one possible way (p. 71). By the end of the book, the process seems so complex that it threatens to engulf its subject. I may be very wrong, but the elaborate discussion of understanding seems like a huge detour.

It was surprising that the example of nutrition featured a standard that was governed by the vague and unmeasurable verb “understand” The essential questions were quite diffuse, and the “understandings” only gave way to performance-based goals as three skills objectives (headed up by “students will be able to read and interpret…analyze…plan.”) Instead of performance objectives like these, performance tasks were laid out. The sequence of learning experiences was quite exhaustive, however. The three stages laid out in the UbD standards are a very tall order, but do make sense as an aspiration to attain. The wrenching title of chapter 2 “Understanding Understanding” testifies to this embedded problem. What good design ought to do—if the goal of learning is unfortunately stated that way—is to tease out what student performance will provide evidence of that understanding. This has to involve action verbs, like “explain, list, describe, organize, identify, etc., bringing the designer into Bloom’s taxonomy territory. The book, on p. 36, again goes past these specific verbs by telling the designer that benchmarks are formulated with the phrase “students know, or students know how.” This just adds another layer. HOW do we assess that students know and understand? Because they can show us by doing something, they couldn’t do unless they know and understand. I think it adds an extra layer. Cut to the chase. A huge amount of the book is devoted to unpacking understanding, and I believe that an overly complex schema is laid out that would be horribly intimidating to the teachers who use it either to actually design lessons, units and yearly plans. In working with teachers, I have found that it is extremely difficult to get them to go through complex superstructures like this.

Wiggins and McTighe are respected experts on this, but to me their analysis of broad and narrow standards falls short, and makes the mistake that many critiques of standards make. That is the failure to note that all of the national standards documents (looking especially at history) represent levels or hierarchies of specificity. As they state, there are separate skills standards that are really prerequisites for gaining knowledge. There are broad knowledge standards that encompass major areas of focus, and these are then broken down into bullet items on what students do to engage with this broader material. At the most specific level are exemplars that suggest activities for the classroom. No standards document is inclusive of these. Some of these national and state documents are good teaching guides, useful and intelligible, while others take existing knowledge standards, for example, and dis-integrate them by tossing them up on graphic organizers. They are most assuredly not equal from document to document.

Wiggins and Tighe, as well as Calder in his specific way, seek to provide answers to some of Wineburg’s deep questions. They break down the process to create a reproducible technique for designing lessons that ideally can be applied by any teacher or instructional designer. In education schools everywhere, I imagine, teachers are diligently trying to absorb and apply this method in excruciating detail. I am sure it is helpful, but I fear it is too complex to affect change in more than a general way, and I am even more worried that the design process will become codified into another jargon-based recipe that education colleges and education bureaucracies will beat into a dead horse. It isn’t that I want to dismiss it, but it runs the risk of being so refined that it pulps the creativity out of lesson design. The test mavens, on the other hand, will find in it evidence that their assessment items that involve bubble sheets can be proven to give the desired results. Like the guy on the Internet who put out a challenge that he can develop a lesson on anything using Legos®, the people in the testing business will claim that their assessments, can demonstrate learning if their process of backward design is followed. It is an odd form of teaching to the test. Having said that, there is much to think about in Wiggins and Tighe, if it doesn’t get imposed on one mechanistically.

Douglass on Historical Thinking

Filed under: historical thinking, susan — Susan @ 8:03 pm

Wineburg, Historical Thinking: It is a pleasure to finally read a book I have heard so much about and read excerpts from. The historical overview of the research is itself a lesson in reading the past. Like the historical overview of the Western Civ course and other aspects of history in the US education system, his survey reveals the odd collection of ideas on which the dogmas about teaching are built. Most striking is the persistent theme of asking the wrong questions, and not being able to dig deep enough to formulate ideas about how to improve classroom practice, or even to prepare practitioners. Calder is an example of a gifted teacher whose work is worthy of study in Wineburg’s scheme.

Among the important aspects of Wineburg’s study, which has not entered the public debate at all, is the critique of standards-setting as an exercise. He mentions the Bradley Report of 1989 that set history standards on what seemed to be a good course—in the direction of bringing historical scholarship back in. Bradley looked at not merely what is taught, but the framework in which it is taught from K-12. Unfortunately, a fork in the road happened with the controversy surrounding the Natl History Standards, which did attempt to set parameters for study, and was taken to task precisely because it tried to draw teachers’ attention to historical research. It was the exemplars, not the standards that were denigrated, and with it the whole document. The organization that continued to carry the Bradley Report model, in contrast, produced a laundry list of history topics to be “covered,” along with a set of questions that were quite biased, at least in world history. The central virtue—at least potentially–of the standards movement, is not addressed by Wineburg. Instead of doing what state curricula have done for decades — tell what classroom teachers TEACH–the writing of good standards can turn that equation on its head, laying out instead what STUDENTS are supposed to be able to DO. Curriculum can be taught to an empty room and still be curriculum. Standards involve backward design—starting with the end point, the skill or objective to be achieved. The other aspect of standards that Wineburg—and most everybody discussing them in the press—is the restructuring of teaching for greater meaning, while incorporating the wealth of knowledge gained in the past 50 years or so. On the way to state standards in the various disciplines, however, much of this has been lost. History standards have fallen prey to the politics of the “Johnny doesn’t know who the President is” folks whose efforts to test students into the Stone Age Wineburg chronicles during the 20th century. It is very thought-provoking how he peels back every effort to analyze history teaching, including his own, to determine that we still don’t know what we are looking for in terms of shaping excellent teaching. Fortunately, not a few students who have come to love history as a study did so because of a teacher.

Reading the whole book almost at one sitting, the way in which it comes full circle struck me; he begins with the politicized efforts of our self-appointed cultural nannies to wag their fingers at the schools who are supposedly teaching the students nothing, leaving each successive generation less aware of the national past (most don’t care a fig for world history knowledge and never test it in their surveys). Wineburg began by questioning the truth of these assessments as indicators of historical un-consciousness, and ends by showing how history in fact figures into the national life in the last chapters. In the intervening chapters, a lot is said about the techniques and possibilities for teaching history. Some very specific techniques are laid out on the example of gifted teachers, but little analysis of how those techniques can be replicated is given. This is freely admitted. To me, an aspect that is very dear to my own efforts at creating and fostering integrated curriculum through my work with teachers is mentioned near the end of the book, namely how the educational experience as a whole can be shaped for maximum effect. The standards movement—if its broadest impulses and serious work are heeded—has the potential to achieve this integration across the curriculum. Not only do we now have a finely graduated picture of what might be taught in each discipline from K-12, but we also have a near-perfect congruence of skills development across the disciplines. That ought to send the message that integrated curriculum is probably the only way to achieve that mass of expectations. The content standards as a group present a veritable buffet of knowledge integration potential that was not accessible to curriculum planning teams before, because each discipline worked in isolation.

September 8, 2006

Week 3: thinking like a history

Filed under: ammon, historical thinking — Ammon @ 2:12 pm

“Facts must come first, a lot of history teachers will say. Only after a groundwork of factual knowledge has been laid can students go on to more advanced interpretive work.” from Calder
That statement is upsetting. But that’s totally how it goes. I did have a few classes in undergrad that taught me how to analyze and try to think like a historian, but not how to read like one. Some might bring in the chicken or the egg bit, but in practically all real world cenarios you have to have the tools before you can do the work. Now, what about knowing how to use the tools before you can actually use them? Well, in cases where you’ll die if you use the tool improperly it’s a good idea to learn first, but in most cases, the best way to learn how to use a tool, is to use it! with someone who already knows how helping you learn.

“One does not collect facts he does not need, hang on to them, and then stumble across the propitious moment to use them. One is first perplexed by a problem and then makes use of facts to achieve a solution.9
That’s a great teaching idea.  Instead of shoving facts around, first develop a problem, then bring in some facts to help solve it.  That would work for any field, math, physics, engineering, history, etc.  It’s kind of the reverse of how everybody does it now.  “here’s this problem students, what can we do to solve it…?”  I like that.

Anyhow, I really like Calder’s article and site about changing the paradigm of teaching the history survey course.

More thoughts to come as I read more….

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