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Engagement Based Learning for History Students

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And as public legislators, we are responsible for serving all Canadians and ... in a larger historical time frame, students gain a new perspective on the event. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Engagement Based Learning for History Students


1
Engagement Based Learning for History
Students 
Jill Colyer Marc Keirstead
http//www.history-ontheweb.co.uk/digimulti.gif
2
The stereotypical history teacher
  • Ferris Bueller clip

3
Not Us
  • Of course not.
  • But our kids arent as excited by our history
    courses as we want them to be.
  • We still make them read too much.
  • We still make them memorize too much.

4
What If...
  • We had them do history, rather than receive
    historical information?
  • We had them memorize less, and spend more time
    thinking critically about historical issues?
  • We presented historical issues and events in the
    complex, problematic way they were lived?

5
Maybe then...
  • Theyd love history as much as we do.
  • Theyd realize that people in the past suffered,
    wondered, and triumphed.
  • Theyd realize that history isnt a set of
    fixed events.
  • Theyd want to take more history courses.

6
We agree with...
  • Sam Wineburg who said that...
  • The role of history as a tool for changing how
    we think, for promoting a literacy not of names
    and dates but of discernment, judgment, and
    caution, does not receive prime billing in the
    public sphere.
  • And we think it should.

7
And we agree with Peter Seixas when he said...
  • Memorizing discrete and unconnected names, dates
    and places is the least useful, most tedious,
    most-likely-to-alienate approach to history. It
    may be good for Jeopardy! and an occasional
    crossword puzzle, but it's not much use for
    anything else.

8
That is why we do believe...
  • That we need to help our students think
    critically about historical issues and events,
    rather than ask them to memorize dates and events
    in a particular chronology.

9
And that is why...
  • We want to spend some time exploring the
    conceptual framework for historical understanding
    developed by Peter Seixas.
  • Professor Seixas has developed six interrelated
    concepts central to students ability to think
    about history.
  • We will briefly introduce the six concepts and
    then suggest how teachers might use a selection
    of these competencies in our history classrooms.

10
The Historical Thinking Competencies
  • 1. Historical Significance
  • Historians can not include all that has happened
    in the past.
  • How do we decide whether an historical event is
    significant event for everybody or just some
    people?
  • 2. Evidence
  • How do we know what happened? Which version of
    events should we believe?
  • Issues of evidence invite students to explore the
    role of sources in constructing accounts of the
    past.

11
The Historical Thinking Competencies
  • 3. Continuity and Change
  • Two historical stereotypes exist either nothing
    really changes over time or events that occurred
    long ago must be completely unlike modern times.
  • Students need to discern what has changed or
    stayed the same over periods of time, and to
    realize the subtleties of change and continuity
    are difficult to discern.

12
The Historical Thinking Competencies
  • 4. Cause and Consequences
  • These dimensions focus on the contributing
    influences in history.
  • Understanding these influences makes it possible
    for students to see the factors that shape their
    world.

13
The Historical Thinking Competencies
  • 5. Historical Perspective
  • Historical perspective requires understanding the
    social, cultural, intellectual, and emotional
    contexts that shaped peoples lives and actions.
  • Without this perspective, students will remain
    trapped in a simplistic view of the past, seeing
    events through present experiences and values.

14
The Historical Thinking Competencies
  • 6. Moral Judgment
  • Students must learn to consider the complexities
    and dangers associated with passing judgment on
    historical events and people.

15
Can we use the HTCs to change the way we teach
history?
  • Yes, we think we can.

16
  • Use the HTCs to Launch your course
  •  
  • Why study history? 
  • Our answer
  • ? the past is crucial to understanding the
    present
  • ? if we dont explore the past we are doomed to
    repeat our mistakes
  • ? history is relevant to your lives -- you are
    living through history today

17
  • It might be interesting to ask the question
  • Why study history? at the end
  • of our introductory lessons, at the
  • end of the first unit, or at the end
  • of the course, rather than the beginning.

http//lhs.loswego.k12.or.us/z-hoppesk/Top/Cartoon
20-20Why20Study20History.jpg
18
  • Historical Significance and Canadas Civil
    Marriage Act (2005)
  •  
  • Question for students To what degree was the
    passage of same-sex marriage legislation in
    Canada in 2005 historically significant?
  •  
  • Have to define, or unpack, the term
  • significance
  •  
  • Teaching strategy ? Ask students how the could
    determine short- or long-term impact? How can
    they determine the scope? What information would
    they have to locate?  

19
  • Dimensions of Historical
  • Significance
  •  
  • 1. Significance depends on perspective.
  •  
  •  
  • ? Canadas same-sex marriage legislation will
    likely be seen as more significant to members of
    the gay and lesbian community, and people with
    conservative social values, than to others.

20
  • Different Perspectives on Same-Sex Marriage
  •  
  • Marriage is not just any relationship between
    human beings. It was established by the Creator
    with its own nature, essential properties and
    purpose. No ideology can erase from the human
    spirit the certainty that marriage exists solely
    between a man and a woman, who by mutual personal
    gift, proper and exclusive to themselves, tend
    toward the communion of their persons. In this
    way, they mutually perfect each other, in order
    to cooperate with God in the procreation and
    upbringing of new human lives.
  •  
  • Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger and Angelo Amato,
  • Considerations Regarding Proposals to Give
  • Legal Recognition to Unions Between
  • Homosexual Persons, June 3, 2003
  •  

21
  •  
  • "The public recognition and acceptance of
    homosexuals as a couple may be of tremendous
    importance to them and to the society in which
    they live. To deny homosexual couples the right
    to make that choice deprives them of the equal
    benefit of the law."
  •  
  • Supreme Court of Canada, Egan v. Canada, 1995

22
  • Certainly, many of us in this House, myself
    included, have a strong faith, and we value that
    faith and its influence on the decisions we make.
    But all of us have been elected to serve here as
    Parliamentarians. And as public legislators, we
    are responsible for serving all Canadians and
    protecting the rights of all Canadians.
  • We will be influenced by our faith but we also
    have an obligation to take the widest perspective
    -- to recognize that one of the great strengths
    of Canada is its respect for the rights of each
    and every individual, to understand that we must
    not shrink from the need to reaffirm the rights
    and responsibilities of Canadians in an evolving
    society.
  •  
  • Address by Prime Minister Paul Martin on Bill
    C-38
  • (The Civil Marriage Act), February 16, 2005,
  • House of Commons, Canada

23
  • Teaching strategy ? Ask students to locate quotes
    that reflect three different perspectives on
    Canadas same-sex marriage legislation.
  •  

24
  •  
  • 2. Significance is not simply a matter of
    personal reaction.
  •  
  • When determining significance it is not
    sufficient to rely on an individuals or groups
    felt reactions to an event.
  •  
  • ? Although significance is influenced by ones
    perspective, events that have the greatest felt
    effects are not necessarily the most significant.
    For example, a student may look upon a recent
    breakup as his most personally significant event.
    But, other events, like moving to a new
    neighbourhood when he was younger, may have had
    more life-altering implications.

25
  •  
  • 3. Significance depends on purpose.
  •  
  • The significance of an event depends upon its
    role in the larger narrative or story the
    historian is attempting to tell.
  •  

26
  •  
  • 4. Significance varies with time.
  •  
  • The significance of an historical event may not
    be fixed in time but may moderate depending on
    subsequent events and current priorities.

27
  •  
  • 5. Significance depends on context.
  •  
  • An event that is significant in one context may
    not be as significant in another context. For
    example, the 2005 Civil Marriage Act may not be
    seen as radical when put in context of other
    changes to Canadas marriage laws over the years.

28
  • Recap
  • Instead of beginning our history courses with
    the question Why study history? choose a
    contemporary event in history, that is
    problematic, to explore through the lens of the
    HTCs.
  •  
  • Have students prepare a response to the question
    To what degree was the passage of same-sex
    marriage legislation in Canada in 2005
    historically significant?

29
  • Using the HTCs to Develop Entire Units
  •  
  • The HTCs can be used to provide a framework for
    an entire unit of study, rather than just as a
    way to explore particular issues or events
  • The HTC continuity and change, for example, can
    be used to explore a unit on Contemporary
    Canadian History
  •  
  • Possible unit question To what degree has the
    period 1989 to the present been one of profound
    change?
  •  

30
  • Continuity and Change
  •  
  • The concepts of continuity and change are the
    basis for exploring how lives and conditions are
    alike over periods of time and how they changed
    from the people and societies that came before or
    after.
  •  
  • These concepts ask us to consider that
  •  
  • ? Change and continuity are ongoing and ever
    present
  • ? Change can occur at different rates
  • ? Change and continuity can be both positive and
    negative
  • ? Comparisons can be made between points in
    history and between the past and the present

31
  • Change and continuity are ongoing and ever
    present
  •  
  • 2005 - Canada becomes the fourth country in the
    world to give same-sex couples the right to
    legally marry
  • 2003 - British Columbia rules in favour of equal
    marriage
  • 2002 - court cases in Ontario, Quebec, and
    Manitoba rule that the ban on same-sex marriage
    is unconstitutional
  • 1995 - Supreme Court of Canada rules in Egan v.
    Canada that sexual orientation should be
    protected under section 15 of the Charter
  • 1989 - Canadian Human Rights Commission defines a
    homosexual couple as a family
  •  
  • Teaching strategy ? Students can be asked to
    consider whether or not the same-sex marriage
    provision was rapid or not and whether the change
    was ongoing or not.

32
  • Shifting the Historical Lens
  •  
  • By placing the event in a larger historical time
    frame, students gain a new perspective on the
    event.
  •  
  • 2005 - Canada becomes the fourth country in the
    world to give same-sex couples the right to
    legally marry
  • 1985 - The Divorce Act was substantially revised
    with the introduction of no fault divorce,
    permitting couples to obtain a divorce simply by
    living separately for one year
  • 1983 - Rape within marriage becomes a criminal
    act
  • 1978 - Introduction of the Family Law Reform Act,
    extending statutory recognition for the first
    time to heterosexual couples who had been "living
    in sin" or "without benefit of clergy"
  • 1968 - The Divorce Act simplified divorce, and
    marital breakdown was included as a ground for
    divorce

33
  • 1925 - Removal of double standard whereby a
    husband could sue his wife for divorce on the
    grounds of adultery alone, but a wife was
    required to prove that her husband had committed
    adultery coupled with another marital offence in
    order to obtain a divorce
  • 1911 - The Saskatchewan Deserted Wives'
    Maintenance Act requires husbands to pay support
    if they deserted their wives or forced them to
    leave
  • 1884 - Ontario grants married women the right to
    own property and deal with it or sell it without
    consulting her husband
  •  
  • Teaching strategies
  • ? Students could be asked to consider whether or
    not the same-sex marriage provision was rapid or
    not and whether the change was ongoing or not.
  • ? Students could be asked to consider whether or
    not their opinion about the historical
    significance of the legislation has changed
    because of this additional information.
  • ? Students could be asked to consider how this
    timeline could affect their response to the unit
    question To what degree has the period 1989 to
    the present been one of profound change?

34
  • Continuity and change can be both positive and
    negative 
  • Change does not necessarily imply progress nor
    does continuity necessarily imply stagnation.
  • The assumption underlying many textbooks is one
    of progress. And many students seem to believe if
    something is new it must be better. 
  • Teaching strategy ? Have students consider
    whether the same-sex marriage change is positive,
    negative, or both. Point out that change can
    occur in both legislation and attitudes.

35
A Psychiatric Problem
http//archives.cbc.ca/politics/rights_freedoms/to
pics/599/
36
The More Things Change .
  • "It's impossible for prices to go down this
    year.
  • Gary Watts Orange County Association of Realtors
    Feb. 13, 2006
  • "I think investors will have a good reason to
    come out here and buy again.
  • Jeromith Sutton NAR Investment Advisor 2006
  • "I have no fear of another comparable decline."
  • Arther W. Loasby President Equitable Trust
    Company October 25, 1929
  • .despite its severity, we believe that the lump
    in stock prices will prove an intermediate
    movement.." ".and not the precursor of a business
    depression."
  • Harvard Economic Society November 2, 1929

37
Historical Competencies-Continuity and Change,
and Cause and Consequence
  • Cause and consequence, and Change and continuity
    are related
  • Are causes and consequences similar between the
    two time periods?
  • Are there similarities in the role of individual
    agents as causes that promote change or
    continuity?

38
Cause and Consequence
  • Key elements
  • Key role of individuals as
  • causal agents
  • Causes are related but are
  • distinguishable from motivations
  • Causes are layered
  • Identification of causes by historians can be
    susceptible to historians frame of reference
  • Human cause change but are restricted by the
    natural environment, geography, historical
    legacies
  • Actions often have unintended consequences
  • Peter Seixas-http//www.edu.gov.mb.ca/k12/cur/socs
    tud/foundation_gr8/tns/tn1.pdf

39
Evidence
  • Read a source for evidence vs for knowledge
  • Identify type of source
  • Identify author and possible frame of reference
  • Reveals information about purposes of the author
    as well as authors values
  • Needs to be read in historical
  • context
  • Peter Seixas-http//www.edu.gov.mb.ca/k12/cur/socs
    tud/foundation_gr8/tns/tn1.pdf

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http//www.cbc.ca/national/blog/special_feature/ar
chive/canada_votes/stephen_harper_live.html
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History
  • Can be helpful it can also be dangerous. It is
    wiser to think of history, not as a pile of dead
    leaves or a collection of dusty artifacts, but as
    a pool, sometimes benign, often sulphurous, which
    lies under the present, silently shaping our
    institutions, our ways of thought, our likes and
    dislikes.
  • (Margaret MacMillan. The Uses and Abuses of
    History, 2008, p. x)
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