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Teaching and Learning History 11–18
Teaching and
Learning History
11–18
UNDERSTANDING THE PAST
email: [email protected]
world wide web: www.openup.co.uk
Copyright © Alison Kitson and Chris Husbands with Susan Steward 2011
All rights reserved. Except for the quotation of short passages for the
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INTRODUCTION
Reading and using this book 1
PART 1
History in schools 5
1 What is school history? 7
2 History and the curriculum 18
3 Teaching and learning in classrooms and beyond 25
PART 2
Learning history in schools 35
4 What do pupils want from learning history? 37
5 What do we know about pupils’ understanding of history? 44
PART 3
Teaching history in schools 53
6 Evidence and enquiry in history teaching 55
7 The key concepts of history teaching 65
8 Communicating and assessing history 89
vi CONTENTS
9 Long-term planning: making history more than the sum of its parts 105
10 History teaching for all 118
PART 4
Making history matter in schools 135
11 Is there a history pedagogy? 137
12 Making history matter: relevance, diversity, heritage and morality 144
References 160
Index 175
List of text boxes
This book has been influenced by many people and there is insufficient space to
acknowledge them all here. However, some deserve a particular mention. Our former
colleague Arthur Chapman was exceptionally generous in allowing us to draw heavily
on his work in parts of Chapter 7, especially around causation and interpretations, and
his general support and good cheer have always been greatly appreciated. The fre-
quent references to the work of Peter Lee, Ros Ashby and Denis Shemilt in Chapters
5, 6 and 9 are testament to their enormous contribution to history education in general
and to their work on children’s understanding of history in classrooms in particular.
Specifically, the opening of Chapter 7 was inspired by Peter’s work (e.g. 2005) and
discussions with Ros were especially influential on our thinking about evidence and
we are deeply grateful for her time and generosity. We are very fortunate to work with
many wonderful colleagues at the Institute and we thank all those who have influenced
and supported the writing of this book, especially Katharine Burn, Paul Salmons,
Robin Whitburn, Stuart Foster, Jonathan Howson, Gunther Kress and Carey Jewitt.
Katharine’s influence can be felt throughout the book, especially in Chapter 10, where
her determination not to label pupils and to provide engaging and challenging learn-
ing opportunities for all finds strongest expression. Paul has helped us to think more
carefully about why we teach history through his exemplary work on the Holocaust
Education Development Programme, and conversations with Gunther Kress and
Carey Jewitt were enormously helpful in shaping parts of Chapter 8. Of the many
outstanding history educators in the United States, Keith Barton and Linda Levstik
have had the greatest influence on our thinking, not least because of the way they bring
a welcome sense of perspective to the teaching of history in schools which is rooted in
the reality of classrooms and the reality of the world outside. Keith’s work with Alan
McCully in Northern Ireland helped us to understand the way in which pupils make
sense of a controversial past and reconcile it (or not) with versions of the past encoun-
tered elsewhere. Christine Counsell has influenced the book in many ways, through her
own work – including her work on literacy, diversity and history for all – and through
her role as editor of Teaching History. This would have been a very different book
without Christine’s tireless work on – and transformation of – that journal. Michael
Riley’s work on historical enquiry provides the foundation for Chapter 6 while Jamie
x ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Byrom was the inspiration for our argument about ‘resonance’ in Chapter 12: both
are brilliantly attuned to what motivates, engages and inspires children to learn about
the past and they have, in turn, inspired us too. We lean heavily on Ian Dawson’s work
in Chapter 10 and are grateful to him for discussions about his work. The support he
has given to teachers through his excellent website (http://www.thinkinghistory.co.uk),
through his textbooks and through his thinking about thematic stories is unparal-
leled. Martin Roberts was, as ever, stimulating and rigorous in helping our thinking
about content. Throughout the book, we draw on examples of work from schools,
lesson observations and interviews with pupils in schools in London, south eastern
and eastern England. We are grateful to those teachers who so generously allowed us
access to their classrooms and discussed their work with us so openly: Ruth Oji and
Paul Cornish at Pimlico Academy, London; Ian Startup and colleagues in the history
department in King Edward VI Upper School, Bury St Edmunds; Victoria Payne,
history colleagues and pupils at Highams Park School,Waltham Forest; Jo Philpott and
colleagues in Dereham Neatherd High School; Rebecca Bealey and her department
in Norwich High School for Girls; Karen Reynolds, history colleagues and pupils
in North Walsham High School, who shared their oral history work with us; David
Leece and sixth form historians in Notre Dame High School, Norwich and Carol
McWilliams at Mossbourne Academy, Hackney. Finally, our thanks to history PGCE
students at the Institute past and present for continually asking questions and for being
hungry to learn: they have inspired us to write this book. In spite of all this help and
guidance, we have undoubtedly got things wrong: the interpretations, arguments and,
of course, the errors are ours alone.
No book is ever written easily, and this one has taken us too often and too long
away from our families; Darren, Nicky and Harry have, for each of us, been forbearing
and supportive throughout, and we are very grateful to them.
INTRODUCTION
Reading and using this book
This book has been written for history teachers, both novice and experienced. We
hope that it provides several important resources to support successful classroom
practices. First, we hope it provides information, insights and ideas which help to
make sense of the contexts in which history teachers work. Secondly, we hope that by
offering descriptions and accounts of practice it provides understandings of the nature
of practice in real classrooms. Thirdly, and as a result of the first two, we hope that it
provides a basis for developing the practice of history teaching in the complex world
of the twenty-first century classroom. The book draws on a wide range of research
and perspectives on the teaching and learning of history from around the world, but
more importantly on insights gained from teachers and their pupils in schools we are
privileged to have worked with and visited.
As we explain throughout the book, history is a deceptive subject to teach and
to learn. Beneath the seductive simplicity of a strong narrative thread of the human
past are profound questions about the nature of knowledge, the nature of learning
and the complexities of modern society. Underpinning the book are four themes, and
it is worth setting these out here. We did not start with these themes as organizing
principles for the book; rather, they emerged from our engagement with the practice
and issues we explored in classrooms and schools. The themes, crystallized during the
writing of the book, encapsulate our vision for teaching and learning history in schools.
By setting out the themes explicitly, we hope to provide readers with a framework for
their understanding of history teaching.
The first theme relates to history in the contemporary school curriculum.
The school curriculum is changing rapidly and, in some schools, profoundly. History
is under considerable threat in schools as a result of diminishing curriculum time,
pressures from competing disciplines and a genuine sense of doubt about what the
curriculum needs to be if it is to prepare young people for life in the twenty-first cen-
tury. Although we do not necessarily take a position on issues of curriculum structure
or the way timetables are organized, central to our approach is the conviction that
learning about the past forms part of the irreducible entitlement for all learners in
contemporary schools, and that the realities of a changing world make this more, not
less, pressing.
2 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
At the core of the book, and central to our purpose, is the learning of young peo-
ple in real classrooms in contemporary schools. Taken as a whole, the book offers a
radical way of thinking about history teaching, which is nonetheless grounded in what
we have seen and found in schools. We hope that it will, in equal measure, challenge
and inspire history teachers, providing them with some tools to develop the quality
of what they do and to articulate a rationale for the subject in a rapidly transforming
curriculum. Throughout the book we use ‘text boxes’ scattered through the chapters
to provide examples or evidence to crystallize our thinking.
This book explores the decision-making history teachers engage in as a result
of the underlying problems which arise from the choices with which they are pre-
sented or which they create. It sets out to analyse the issues which impinge on these
choices, to clarify the ways teachers address them, and to understand ways in which
they interact with learners as a result. Of course, all teachers, whatever their subject
discipline, are required to make decisions about the way they choose, organize, present
and assess subject matter. We draw on work in relation to teachers’ decision-making
and on teaching and learning more generally, but our primary concern is to illuminate
the issues in the context of teaching and learning about the past, and to do so in ways
which support teachers in developing their own decision-making and the quality of
their pupils’ learning experiences. Our starting points for this are classrooms, and the
ways in which teachers and pupils develop understandings of the past in classrooms,
and we do this in the context of the choices which teachers make in developing history
teaching.
Part 1
History in schools
‘History’ is a widely used and misleadingly simple word which conceals complexity:
‘history’ refers to ‘the past’ (things happened ‘in history’) as well as the process by
which we understand the past (we ‘do history’). ‘History’ is an academic discipline,
produced by scholars working in archives, and yet ‘history’ is all around us in the
buildings we pass every day, the institutions which govern us and the languages we
use. ‘History’ is communicated in extensively researched books and popularized for
television and film. ‘History’ is the result of years of study, and something which we all
carry in our everyday assumptions.
The first section of this book explores the processes by which history ‘inside
schools’ relates to history ‘outside schools’ – the academic discipline of history and its
popular manifestations. In the first chapter we consider the choices which underpin
the history curriculum in schools. In the second chapter we look in more detail at
the nature of the school history curriculum, at its aims, its content and some of the
pressures on the history curriculum and history teachers. In the third chapter we move
from the curriculum and the school into the places where history is taught and learned –
mostly into classrooms, but also to historic sites and other out-of-school learning
environments.
1
What is school history?
In this opening chapter, we explore some of the central challenges facing school history through
three lenses. The first is the lens of curriculum content and the choices which underpin the
selection and presentation of content for the school history curriculum.The second is the lens
of learning history, exploring some of the ingredients which combine to make up the process
of learning about the past. Finally, we relate the challenges of content and learning to ideas
about the nature of history as an academic and intellectual discipline.
The content of the school history curriculum has always been disputed (Ferro
1984). In many countries in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, school history
was seen as way of promoting ideas about the development of the nation state. Priority
was given to content related to the formation of the nation and national institutions –
government, monarchy, parliament, and struggles for independence, or to events
and individuals which crystallized ideas about national myths. Curricula and text-
books rarely gave prominence to the experiences of marginalized or oppressed groups
(Chancellor 1970). In the later twentieth century, as interest grew in social and eco-
nomic history and as school populations became more diverse, the experiences of
these groups were often explored in greater detail in schools. In the early twenty-first
century all over the world, greater attention is often given to international history, to
histories of migration and interdependence, to the emergence of a global world, to the
legacies of imperialism, diaspora and post-colonialism (e.g. Lo 2000). Increasingly,
schools have come to be seen as more or less autonomous in matters of curriculum,
so that the national and governmental-level debates about the history curriculum have
also been played out in schools themselves. There, concern is often expressed less in
terms of particular periods or topics but rather in terms of the underlying concepts on
which understanding history depends – ideas about causation, significance, change,
continuity – or the perceived ‘needs’ of particular groups of learners. Each approach
reflects assumptions about how to allocate the limited time available for learning about
the past, and each perspective carries implications for pupils’ understanding of the
past and its relationship to the present (Chapman and Facey 2004). The underlying
challenge of teaching history in schools arises from decisions about what to teach,
how to structure the content which is to be taught, what methods to adopt, and how to
assess and evaluate the effectiveness of what is taught.
Box 1.1 What is worth knowing about Charles Darwin? A six-lesson enquiry for Year 9
By the end of the sequence it is hoped that Year 9 pupils will know who Darwin was, what
he was like as a man and what he achieved, setting this in the broader context of the
nineteenth century and the industrial and scientific revolutions. Pupils will understand
why many people found his ideas threatening at the time and hopefully realize that it
is possible to change the world by having ideas. Ultimately, the enquiry focuses on
significance, not in terms of whether Darwin is significant, but rather in terms of what
10 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
it is about Darwin that is ‘worth knowing’. The enquiry question assumes that the
answer is not straightforward and that individuals make choices about what is worth
knowing that are highly influenced by their cultural and social contexts. In this sense,
the enquiry is quite a sophisticated attempt to explore the ways in which significance
is closely linked to interpretation. However, the primary aim behind the question is to
persuade pupils, quite overtly, that Darwin is worth knowing about and to have them
explain why. The sequence starts with a lesson which explores who Darwin was. This
is followed by a brief explanation about Darwin’s theory of evolution, drawing on work
already done in science lessons. The third lesson examines what people at the time
thought about Darwin’s theory while the fourth lesson brings it up to date by asking
whether Darwin’s big idea has changed the world. The final two lessons pull the enquiry
together as pupils decide for themselves what is worth knowing about Darwin and write
a one-minute introduction to Darwin’s home, persuading people to visit.
At the fortress town of Meerut, forty miles north-west of Delhi, 85 skirmishers of the 3rd
Light Cavalry were court-martialled on 9 May 1857 for refusing to accept the cartridges
of new Enfield rifles, which were greased with a combination of pig fat and grease.
Assembled on a dusty parade ground in stifling heat, the cavalrymen were ceremonially
stripped of their uniforms, chained and marched off to begin a ten-year sentence. At
sunset next day, wrote Elisa Greathed, resident in Meerut, ‘disturbance commenced
on the Native Parade ground. Shots and volumes of smoke told of what was going on’:
in the course of the evening, about 50 officers and other British residents were killed
by the soldiers, who burned and plundered the residency buildings before marching
on Delhi. The rising in Meerut triggered a wider rebellion and focused a series of long-
running grievances against the East India Company: the increasing drive to Christianize
the country by western missionaries, who had first been admitted in 1813, a concerted
British attack on Indian customs and religious practices, the annexation of independent
princely states, and reform of traditional revenue systems. Over the next six weeks,
what was in England called the ‘Indian Mutiny’ spread across northern and central
India, threatening British control of large parts of the sub-continent. The rebellion saw
atrocities on both sides. At Kanpur, besieged Europeans who had apparently been
offered a safe passage after surrendering were massacred as they climbed into boats.
At Fatehpur, nearby, the British commanding officer ordered all villages beside the Grand
Trunk Road to be burned and their inhabitants to be hanged. It was not until June 1858
that the British were in control of India once more and they embarked on a savage policy
of repression, including large numbers of executions and a crackdown: taxes on salt,
for example – an essential for daily life – were increased and vigorously enforced. To
ensure that the mutiny could never happen again, the army was reorganized and Indian
soldiers were issued with rifles inferior to those used by their British counterparts. But
it has also been argued that the events of 1857–58 marked a long term turning point in
the development of policy towards India. Attempts at Christianization were abandoned.
Universities were established, and a local white-collar Indian professional class began
to develop.
History teachers try to use techniques and resources which interest, engage and
stimulate learners, and which also introduce them to the provisional nature of histori-
cal knowledge. But most of the resources available to them present difficulties of one
sort or another: the textbook summarizes too quickly, the monograph is too dense.
Making the past accessible is difficult. The difficulties are nowhere more apparent
than in video or film clips, often used to communicate some aspects of history teach-
ing. Filmic portrayals are not ‘history’, but entertainment (see Box 1.3) borrowing
from some history, but easing in and out of the documented past at will and, perhaps,
telling us more about ideas of the past than the past itself. Portrayals of Robin Hood
are a good example, presenting anachronisms and distortions, mixing fictional stories
with a backdrop which is partly historical – deploying ‘real’ historical characters,
12 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
treating the past as backdrop – but more imagined, and playing fast and loose with his-
torical setting. The psychologist Andrew Butler has argued that inaccuracies in screen
presentations of historical events are so likely to confuse young people that they should
be used with caution (Butler et al. 2009) or not at all. And yet more young people will
have seen one or more of these movies, if only on a wet afternoon of old TV repeats
or on http://www.youtube.com, than will ever read a textbook on medieval history.
Popular portrayals of the past are hugely influential; often historical, anachronistic
and plain wrong, but with some skill deploying ideas about place, time and moti-
vation. The question these portrayals pose of teachers is real: how to present history
in ways which are likely to engage pupils but which do not distort history to the point
of make believe. Moreover, for all their faults, the screen versions tell us something.
Errol Flynn’s version was a Robin for the 1930s, Richard Greene’s for the 1960s and
Kevin Costner’s for the 1990s. In this sense, they provide access to the dialogues with
the past of which classrooms are part. The choice history teachers have to make is how
to turn the way the past is represented into something which serves a purpose in the
classroom. Imaginative teachers have used clips from films precisely to open up ques-
tions about representations of the past and history.
Box 1.3 Story, myth and history: filmic portrayals of Robin Hood
Robin Hood appears to have been a historical figure – probably an outlaw in Barnsdale,
south Yorkshire, sometime in the early fourteenth century (Holt 1989). He was first
portrayed on the screen in 1938 in a swashbuckling Hollywood film starring Errol Flynn –
a Robin Hood by turns fearless, dashing and jaunty. Flynn’s men of Sherwood fight to
defend the liberties of the Saxon population against Prince John and the Norman lords.
Most film critics have seen the 1938 portrayal of Robin Hood in terms of contemporary
issues – the power of a small, committed band of well-motivated heroes to resist
wicked regimes, the need to stand up to fascism. In the early 1960s Robin reappeared
on the screen, now a teatime TV series with Richard Greene as ‘Robin Hood, Robin
Hood, riding through the glen, Robin Hood, Robin Hood, with his band of men, feared by
the bad, loved by the good, Robin Hood, Robin Hood’. Over four series, Robin and his
men outwitted, outfought and overcame John and the Sheriff of Nottingham. Greene’s
Robin Hood is different from Errol Flynn’s. The medievalist Stephen Knight dubbed him
‘squadron leader Robin Hood…He’s an officer class type, and the outlaws are very
much lower deck or non-commissioned officers or working class’ (Knight 1999). The
film historian Jeffrey Richards has called him ‘everyone’s favourite uncle’ (Richards
1977), with a steely determination and a friendly glint in this eye; a ‘Robin Hood for
the welfare state’ righting social wrongs in an imagined, but largely contented England.
Robin reappeared on the big screen in 1991 in Kevin Costner’s Robin Hood – Prince
of Thieves. The film begins not in Sherwood but in Jerusalem where Robin of Locksley
is an imprisoned Crusader. Robin acquires a Muslim companion, Azeem, played by
Morgan Freeman – Robin had saved Azeem’s life, so Azeem the Moor promises to stay
with Robin until the debt is repaid. Robin and Azeem return to England, where they find
Robin’s father has been murdered and his home destroyed by the Sheriff of Nottingham,
who runs a gang of devil-worshippers intent on conquering England. After meeting up
W H AT I S S C H O O L H I S T O R Y ? 13
with Marian, the younger sister of a dead crusading comrade, Robin and Azeem flee to
Sherwood Forest and join an outlaw band. Robin teaches them to fight back, and soon
they embark on bold robberies and attempt to thwart the sheriff. Costner’s Robin Hood
is a comic book hero projected onto a multi-cultural canvas for the 1990s; through
common (cross-cultural) endeavour, even the most intractable of (devil-worshipping)
evil can be conquered.
Three historical topics – Charles Darwin, the events of 1857 in India and the
legends of Robin Hood – competing for a position in a crowded history curriculum;
each providing a rich context for the exploration of challenging ideas about the past,
whether issues of significance, cause and consequence or the nature of historical evi-
dence and interpretation. Each topic, too, illustrates some of the potential and chal-
lenges of making a history curriculum from the enormous available range. In the rest
of this chapter, we consider what it means for learners to access this range.
experienced and recalled. Experience provides the basis for language and thinking:
‘Children between the ages of three and seven try to use the terminology of time
measurement’. They learn to sequence, to arrange, to categorize, and to understand
before and after, then and now. ‘They also engage through the immediate with the
key historical concepts of change and continuity. They know what has gone for good.
They also know that other things still exist’ (Hoodless 1996: 32). They explore the
past through story and through environment and learn to understand and to use the
language of time and change (Cooper 2005). Skilled early years practitioners deploy
familiar tools – language, experience, imagination – to encounter unfamiliar settings:
Magellan’s voyages, the Ancient Egyptians, or emotive stories such as the story of
Florence Nightingale or Guy Fawkes. Experience, encounters with the unfamiliar,
underlying concepts and, above all, language remain tools throughout the learning
journey.
Beyond the early years, ‘learning history is something of a social equivalent to
personal memory’ (Bage 2000: 12), built from the interplay of five aspects: time and
memory, historical knowledge and understanding, historical interpretations, historical
enquiry, and organizing and communicating. Language and memory, suggests Bage,
‘define humanity’, so that history in schools ‘entails asking questions about the past,
making selections from memories or records and joining these selections together into
an explanatory narrative’ – what others have called a ‘map of the past’ (Rogers 1987).
The idea of time – time on the short scale, such as the intensity of the moment by
moment stand-off over the Cuban missile crisis in 1962, or on the long scale such as
the long-term rise and then decline of the Roman Empire, the long-wave patterns of
migration and human movement associated with the development of early agricul-
ture – depends on pupils building up understandings over different contexts and over
time. We expect pupils to ‘remember’ implicitly – the history they have encountered
last week, last month, last year, in their primary school – but this is a tall order without
systematic teaching and support.
There is a deeply entrenched assumption in education that the idea of time is
developed simply through an over-arching chronological structure, so that younger
children study more historically remote periods and older children more recent his-
torical periods. In a spat between academic historians at the 2010 Hay Festival, Niall
Ferguson suggested that ancient history should be taught in the primary school cur-
riculum as it was ‘simpler and thus easier to understand than later societies’, provoking
a response from Richard Miles, a Cambridge historian of the ancient world, that ‘You
could only think the ancient world was simple if you knew bugger all about ancient
history’ (Guardian, 5 June 2010). The evidence for a chronologically structured his-
tory curriculum is weak. Extensive empirical research (e.g. Lee et al. 1993; Dickinson
et al. 2001) suggests that historical understanding is built through the interplay of
contexts and concepts. Put differently, a sense of chronology does not flow from the
chronological sequencing of the historical curriculum: it needs to be taught, and built
up, through careful visiting and revisiting.
The third aspect described by Bage, historical interpretation, involves building
and comparing accounts, including stories, and versions in order to develop an under-
standing that histories are always provisional. This is not simply about examining
accounts provided by different historians but of developing pupils’ ideas about the
W H AT I S S C H O O L H I S T O R Y ? 15
ways accounts are built up. Bage’s fourth aspect, historical enquiry, is a reminder that
using historical evidence in schools is not an end in itself: historians use evidence only
in response to an enquiry question. Finally, argues Bage, the organization and com-
munication of knowledge is critical to history teaching. It is often through organizing
knowledge that pupils realize what they know, and it is through communicating for a
purpose that facility in communication develops.
that make up pupils’ experiences are driven by choices about content, what purposes
content serves, and ideas we have about our relationships with it.
Keith Jenkins draws a distinction between what he calls ‘upper case History’ and
‘lower case history’. Lower case history refers to the way historians – and others –
believe they are explaining or describing the past ‘as it was’ – to ‘reconstruct’ the past.
Upper case, or ‘constructionist’ History is different: it refers to the past retold, reinter-
preted through the lens of a particular perspective – such as Economic History, the
Marxist Interpretation of History – or the lens of the analytical tools and procedures of
the Historian (Jenkins 1997; Evans 1997). Often, however, the two are confused. The
confusion comes from the interchangeability of the language: pupils, and often par-
ents and politicians, frequently believe they are learning lower case history by access-
ing knowledge ‘about’ the past. History teachers, and academic historians, are more
likely to believe that they are teaching upper case History – a set of tools, procedures,
concepts and techniques to develop not just an understanding of the past but a cast
of mind, a way of thinking, an approach. The confusion runs through presentations
of much of the debates over teaching history: the events of 1857 have a narrative (a
lower case history) but acquire meaning when seen through the lens of an upper case
History through processes such as the intensification of racism in the later nineteenth
century, the decline of the British Empire, and so on. They acquire meaning for learn-
ers only as part of a learning journey through those aspects of history which make up
their historical learning. Media portrayals of the Robin Hood myth are in no serious
sense lower case history; the twelfth century was not ‘like that’, but they tell us a great
deal about the time they were made and the audience they were made for (upper case
History), and their interrogation in the classroom may, through the exploration of
evidence and interpretation, help to constitute young people’s exploration of history.
This distinction between history and History is complicated by the distinction
between academic and popular histories. This is not simply a different way of repre-
senting the distinction between lower case history and upper case History. A television
documentary about the myth of Robin Hood is a form of popular upper case History,
concerned with evidence and its provenance, impact, influence and importance.
School history often falls between the demands of academic and popular history.
Young people often bring into school conceptions and misconceptions about the past
and these ideas can influence their attitudes to the subject, and their ability to learn
it. History teachers need to move between young people’s prior understandings, edu-
cational objectives and priorities, and the nature of history as an academic discipline.
Conclusion
We have begun to explore the complexity of the content of the history curriculum and
of the conceptual basis of ‘learning’ about the past, and we have considered some of
the ways in which History in schools relates to history outside schools. Each of these
issues will be explored in different ways throughout the book, recognizing the central
importance of, first, understanding pupils’ starting points and second, the challenge
that teachers face in addressing these complex issues in classroom contexts. There
are, however, two further underlying issues. The debate in this chapter has explored
some dimensions of history as a subject in schools, but we also need to indicate how
W H AT I S S C H O O L H I S T O R Y ? 17
the issues we have explored are underscored by a sense of the fragility of the sub-
ject in schools, and – not unrelated – a sense of the power relationships which shape
the school curriculum. Teaching about the past is often difficult and controversial.
Politicians seeking to shape a sense of national identity – and those seeking to trans-
form or undermine it – look to the way the past is taught in schools as a handy weapon.
This makes history a dangerous subject in school, and one endlessly subject to exter-
nal pressures. The temptation is to simplify, or ignore it: if there is no obvious agree-
ment on what should be taught, or too many debates about what matters, perhaps
curriculum planners might conclude that, after all, none of it is that important. If the
concepts and ideas are complex and challenging, perhaps the discipline does not have
a place in the education of all, but only in the education of a more literate minority. In
the rest of this book, we will explore the challenges which arise from the precarious
position of history in schools.
2
History and the curriculum
In this chapter we explore history in schools through the lens of the school curriculum and
history’s place in it. Although the place of history in schools is protected by a national cur-
riculum in England and elsewhere, in practice it is under enormous pressure. We consider
debates about what purposes history can serve in the school curriculum and set out an argu-
ment based on the entitlement of all learners to understanding the past in some form.We con-
sider the evolution of the national curriculum and the implications for teaching in schools.
History in schools
History occupies an ambiguous place in the school curriculum. On the one hand,
almost all governments expect schools to ensure that pupils gain an understanding of
the past – normally incorporating a version of the national past which reflects current
constitutional arrangements. On the other hand, few school systems provide adequate
time for the realization of the often lofty aims for the history curriculum. In many,
the subject is under pressure from other curriculum areas or other policy priorities;
at a time when education reform globally is focused on the skills demands facing the
twenty-first-century workforce, the study of the past in schools can feel marginal.
Margaret MacMillan’s analysis of the ‘uses and abuses of history’ observes that ‘edu-
cating the next generation and instilling in them the right views and values are things
most societies take very seriously’ (MacMillan 2009: 113), but in practice, the cur-
ricular, physical and time resources made available to do this are limited. In their 2007
report on history in English schools, Ofsted conclude, starkly, that ‘the biggest issue
for school history is its limited place in the curriculum’ (Ofsted 2007). The Historical
Association (2010b) found that in a significant number of schools curriculum time for
the subject has been reduced.
We saw in Chapter 1 how learning about the past involves five interlinked aspects
which shape the history curriculum over the learning journey: time and memory,
knowledge and understanding, interpretation, enquiry, and organization and commu-
nication. A nagging question is the extent to which they are distinctive features which
justify history’s place in the curriculum. There are a number of issues at stake here.
The first is about what history contributes to pupils’ overall curricular experience, and
HISTORY AND THE CURRICULUM 19
A strong and effective Social Studies program helps pupils make sense of the
world in which they live, it allows them to make connections between major ideas
and their own lives, and it helps them see themselves as members of the world
community. It offers pupils the knowledge and skills necessary to become active
and informed participants on a local, national and global level.
(New York City 2009: 3)
Such lofty aspirations provide a secure sociopolitical rationale for the teaching of
history in schools, but this is not ideologically value-free. As the South African exam-
ple makes plain, the content of history in the school curriculum is always influenced
by the political history of the nation. This is encapsulated in the views of one recent
English commentator, who argues that the teaching of history should ‘serve the civic
function of giving pupils the wherewithal for feeling justifiably proud of being British
and for being attached to their country and its traditions’ (Conway 2005: 21).
More recently, history’s claim to a distinctive position in the school curriculum
has been seen not simply in terms of the subject matter, but based on the extent to
which it is a vehicle for the delivery of generic curriculum aims. The school curriculum
is one of the means by which schools discharge their responsibilities for educating the
next generation of adults, though society’s demands on schools obviously change over
time. For example, by the beginning of the twenty-first century it was assumed that
schools would equip young people with ICT skills which simply did not exist twenty
years earlier. In many countries, it has become increasingly important for schools to
play a part in promoting social cohesion; and it may be that understanding of climate
change becomes a central feature of the school curriculum over the next twenty years.
From a whole-curriculum perspective, the question for any subject is how effective
20 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
it is in promoting wider curriculum aims. It is here that the argument becomes more
challenging for history teachers. On the one hand, there is a desire to defend the
contribution of history to pupils’ skills, for example in appraising and evaluating evi-
dence or communicating the results of enquiries. Such claims make a strong case for
history in a skills-led curriculum. On the other hand, history is not the only subject
in which pupils learn to use evidence: they use evidence in science, in geography, in
English. Although the nature of evidence may differ in each subject, what history
teachers would need to claim is that the distinctive nature of historical thinking is suf-
ficiently significant in young people’s general education to merit claims to extensive
curriculum time. While history may be a vehicle for organization and communication
– especially in constructing and deploying an argument – many other subjects develop
these areas: English, geography and modern languages.
The distinctive contribution of history to the school curriculum must therefore
depend on one of two things: either its intrinsic value because of the knowledge base it
provides – that is, that the knowledge acquired through learning history is sufficiently
important to command curriculum time – or its extrinsic value to pupils’ general edu-
cation through its particular combination of knowledge, attributes and skills. Neither
of these arguments depends on the importance of particular historical topics. It could
be argued that history provides young people with knowledge which helps them
understand the world into which they are growing. It could also be argued that history
offers young people an understanding of their own identity, of the ways in which other
individuals and groups differ, and that at different times people have organized their
lives and societies in quite different ways. It is a component in what it means to become
an educated person (Pring 2003). Nonetheless, this can be a difficult argument to
sustain, and the introduction of citizenship as a compulsory subject since 2002 made
it more so, since citizenship courses deal with issues of personal and social identity and
the development of democratic institutions. At a time when skills-based approaches to
curriculum planning are dominant, and vocationally oriented qualifications are being
promoted, the role of history in a general education is a difficult case to make, but it is
the case which needs to be made.
Curriculum reform and change is widespread in contemporary schools; there is
a drive to develop new curriculum forms which will prepare young people for what
is seen as being a rapidly changing world. In some versions of curriculum reform,
subjects are seen as part of ‘the problem’: they create barriers to learning, rather than
structures for learning, and reflect a largely nineteenth-century construction of the
curriculum which does not adequately reflect changes in knowledge and its produc-
tion. Schools in England are required to teach the content of the national curriculum,
but can organize its delivery in a number of ways. In some secondary schools, history
has been combined with geography, religious education and other subjects in humani-
ties courses; these may be thematic or modular. In other secondary schools, part of the
curriculum is taught through themes which draw together three, four or more subjects.
In these arrangements, there may be benefits to pupils’ learning – it makes little sense,
for example, to teach the geography and history of India without reference to each
other – but critics have argued that combining subjects dilutes their distinctiveness and
makes it more difficult to establish links and progression within subjects. Obviously, it
is desirable for learners to see links between subjects. Studying the poetry of Wilfred
HISTORY AND THE CURRICULUM 21
Owen in literature lessons while learning about the First World War in history makes
sense, just as learning about Darwin in history while studying evolution in science
is helpful. The difficulties arise when subjects are ‘merged’ in integrated structures
and the distinctiveness of each subject in terms of its conceptual structure is diluted
and taught by non-specialists (Seixas 1994). It may be possible to design lesson
sequences and outcomes which are faithful to the conceptual frameworks of more
than one subject but this is challenging and needs time to plan and develop. Subjects
offer learners and teachers a conceptual structure which sits behind content and
syllabus requirements and, as a result, provide a basis for pupils to understand more
than might otherwise be possible.
reasons’. Such innovative elements meant that many of the Working Group’s propos-
als commanded professional support, although in her own autobiography Margaret
Thatcher expressed regret that the national curriculum for history had become more
complex than she had ever envisaged (Thatcher 1995: 231). Even so, the structure of
the history national curriculum turned out to be constraining: the final report set out
prescribed and optional teaching units which were forbidding in detail, and removed
substantial elements of decision-making from teachers, including – except in relation
to some elements of local history – the ability to shape content to local circumstances
and to structure the curriculum distinctively. At one stage, Kenneth Clarke, the then
secretary of state, ordered that history teaching should stop short at 20 years before
the present day, making it more difficult for teachers to help pupils understand the
present in the light of the last. A 1991 political decision to remove history from the core
curriculum 14–16 effectively decapitated the ornate content structure of the History
Working Group.
In 1994 a major overhaul of the national curriculum took place to address what
had become an unworkably crowded structure. In history, Attainment Targets and
content were both slimmed, programmes of study were amended to fit a 5–14 rather
than 5–16 structure, and ‘key elements’ – underpinning ideas, such as interpreta-
tion and communication – were introduced to provide a more coherent structure for
school-based timetable planning, and to provide somewhat more space for individual
approaches to teaching and learning.
Subsequent reviews in 1999–2000 and 2007 brought about further changes in
three important respects. Following the 1997 General Election, citizenship was intro-
duced into the school curriculum as a compulsory subject in 2002. The Crick Report
on citizenship (QCA 1998) had argued that while History and citizenship shared
some preoccupations, History itself was not an adequate vehicle for the develop-
ment of political and participatory education in schools. Secondly, and especially in
the 2007 review, innovation was permitted in the structure and organization of the
school curriculum. Schools were encouraged to combine subjects, to develop the-
matic approaches, to organize their timetables in novel ways. These radical innova-
tions – adopted in small but growing numbers of schools – raised questions about the
nature, structure and organization of history in what was, in some schools, a radically
different curriculum structure. The third change relates to the organization of the his-
tory curriculum. The overall structure of the 2007 curriculum was provided by key
concepts, which define the planned outcomes, and key processes (‘enquiry’, ‘using
evidence’ and ‘communicating about the past’). Content prescription took a different
form, declaring that ‘the study of history should be taught through a combination of
overview, thematic and depth studies’ (QCA 2007a). Content requirements were set
out in general terms and provided overarching structures for organizing content.
This liberalized structure for the history national curriculum was largely a response
to critics from a variety of positions – some more well-informed than others. In 2007,
Ofsted, drawing on evidence from the period 2003–07, argued that ‘too great a focus
on a relatively small number of issues means that pupils are not good at establishing a
chronology, do not make connections between the areas they have studied and so do
not gain an overview, and are not able to answer the “big questions” ’ (Ofsted 2007: 2).
The academic historian and television pundit David Starkey railed that ‘the way we
HISTORY AND THE CURRICULUM 23
History, along with some other subjects, has been relatively neglected in pri-
mary schools in recent years as schools have focused on literacy and numeracy.
History’s limited role is also apparent in secondary schools. In Key Stage 4, only
just over 30 per cent of pupils study history and fewer still post-16. In addition,
there is evidence that the subject is becoming even more marginal with some
schools’ introduction of the two-year Key Stage 3 curriculum and the increased
interest in vocational subjects.
(Ofsted 2007: 28)
The Historical Association survey suggested that while 30 per cent of pupils study
history beyond the age of 14, in some schools the figure was considerably less.
Moreover, there was evidence that the figure tended to be smaller in more
24 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
innovative schools such as academies which had enjoyed greater curriculum freedoms
at Key Stage 3 than other maintained schools. Examining patterns in the take-up of
history beyond 14, the Historical Association uncovered evidence that significant
numbers of schools placed restrictions on pupils, choices beyond 14, and that these
were largely based on academic achievement. The authors concluded that ‘many
teachers expressed deep regret about the fact that history was effectively out of
bounds for lower attaining pupils’ (Historical Association 2010b: 21). Marked dis-
parities were found between and within schools: history was less likely to thrive in
schools with less affluent intakes, while within schools it was higher attaining pupils
who were more likely to be offered an academic curriculum including history.
This is the context for the teaching of history in the twenty-first century. The aims
and objectives which surround national history curricula emphasize the importance
of learning about the past, and of developing the understandings and competencies
which history as an academic discipline makes possible. The reality in schools is some-
what different: a fragile subject, competing for a place in a curriculum struggling to
adapt to the multiple demands placed on schools. There is some evidence that access
to history is increasingly confined to higher attainers and more affluent pupils, while
the majority of pupils abandon history before they have the maturity to address some
of the more complex and challenging issues history introduces. England is one of
just four European countries which do not require some study of history through
to the end of compulsory schooling: the others are Wales, Northern Ireland and the
Netherlands. This does not mean that all learners should be expected to take a single
subject history course to examination level at 16. However, it is a reminder that the
curriculum in schools can be constructed in ways which support rather than deny
access for all, and that if history is to meet the lofty objectives which national and state
curricula frequently set for it, imaginative curriculum structures may be necessary.
3
Teaching and learning in
classrooms and beyond
In this chapter we begin to explore the raw materials for teaching history in the
classroom – desks, walls, textbooks, but also the pupils and, most importantly, the teachers
themselves.We consider the knowledge base needed to teach successfully, the way this is used
by effective history teachers and some of the challenges posed by historical language.
of learning and interaction possible. Whether the possibilities are realized depends on
other things, and notably on the ability and willingness of teachers to use the technolo-
gies as tools for teaching in innovative ways.
The way classrooms and their physical resources are used depends fundamentally
on the ideas teachers have about teaching and learning. As Robin Alexander sug-
gested in his study of primary teaching in five countries, these ideas are often deeply
embedded in cultural assumptions about what teaching involves (Alexander 2000).
Ideas about teaching and learning can and do change. In the mid-twentieth century,
research into children’s learning and cognitive development was heavily influenced by
the work of the Swiss psychologist Jean Piaget, which emphasized the way in which the
child interacted with objects and experiences. Piaget’s approach to child development
emphasized three elements: the way a child explored her environment, the develop-
mental stages through which children passed in making sense of the environment and
the role of adults in assessing a child’s ‘readiness’ to learn. In later twentieth-century
research, Piagetian ideas were largely supplanted by constructivist theories of learn-
ing heavily influenced by the work of the Soviet psychologist Lev Vygotsky. In place
of the ‘lone’ child interacting with her environment, Vygotsky stressed the centrality
of language and dialogue. Learning, for Vygotsky, depended on social and cultural
interaction and, importantly on the role of an adult who is able to ‘scaffold’ a child’s
understanding through structured learning:
What the child can do in cooperation today he can do alone tomorrow. Therefore
the only good kind of instruction is that which marches ahead of development
and leads it...For a time, our schools favoured the ‘complex’ system of instruction,
which was believed to be adapted to the child’s way of thinking...In offering the
child problems he was able to handle without help, this method failed to utilize the
zone of proximal development and to lead the child to what he could not yet do.
(Vygostsky 1962, quoted in Alexander 2000: 431, emphasis added;
Alexander notes that the phrase ‘zone of proximal development’ is
perhaps better translated as ‘zone of potential development’)
Piagetian ideas were dominant in pre-service teacher training in the 1960s and
1970s, when training was more theoretical in orientation than it is now. Such ideas
emphasized the importance of the child’s interaction with the world and the impor-
tance of teachers’ ability to assess a child’s readiness for learning. Now, constructivist
theories tend to be dominant in research, with an emphasis on the importance of dis-
cussion, dialogue, the social context of learning and teachers’ ability to scaffold pupils’
learning beyond their current stage of understanding. However, few teachers are likely
to have a close acquaintance with these ideas as a direct result of their training so the
ideas have tended to spread in a relatively haphazard way. Although Vygotskyan ideas
underpin many of the theoretical arguments in favour of deploying group work in
classrooms, teachers who use group work need to be clear about their own practical
rationale for asking pupils to work in this way, and skilled at structuring group work
successfully (e.g. Woolnough 2006).
What this means is that the principal resource for learning – the resource on which
all else depends – is the teacher. There is now compelling international evidence that it
28 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
is teacher quality which is the single most important in-school factor in securing high-
quality learning outcomes (Sanders and Rivers 1996; Barber and Mourshed 2007).
Outstanding teachers inspire, motivate and cajole learners, extending their learning
through imaginative lessons, sophisticated long-term planning and judicious inter-
ventions in classroom interactions. All this is clear. What is somewhat less clear is what
determines teacher quality. Considerable recent attention has been focused on teach-
ers’ own cognitive ability (Hanushek and Welch 2006) and the importance of subject
knowledge as a basis for effective pedagogic practice. Obviously, classroom teaching
depends on much more than simply knowing a good deal about the subject, impor-
tant though this is. In this context, Lee Shulman’s 1986 paper on ‘pedagogic content
knowledge’ (‘PCK’) has been hugely influential. Shulman developed the concept of
‘pedagogic content knowledge’ as a way of connecting distinct bodies of knowledge
for teaching. ‘It represent[s] the blending of content and pedagogy into an under-
standing of how particular topics, problems, or issues are organized, represented, and
adapted to the diverse interests and abilities of learners, and presented for instruction’
(Shulman 1986: 8). PCK requires teachers to be able to deploy analogies, illustrations,
examples, explanations and demonstrations as conduits for their subject knowledge
to engage and enthuse pupils, to make decisions, often ‘on the hoof’, about what to
do, drawing on a range of understandings about subject and teaching. Studies since
1986 have suggested complex relationships between subject knowledge and peda-
gogic knowledge (Wilson and Wineburg 1988; Turner-Bisset 1999). More recently,
it has been argued that history teachers routinely draw on different types of knowl-
edge which work in relationship with each other. They are able to deploy knowledge
and understanding of subject. They ‘know’ how the discipline works and can call on
detailed contextual knowledge of the topics they are teaching. In addition they deploy
knowledge and understanding of pupils, including understanding of how pupils make
progress in learning history and of a range of pedagogic practices. It is the active
relationship between these sorts of knowledge which underpins successful classroom
teaching (Husbands 2010).
Most history teaching takes place in classrooms. But not all does. Some, perhaps
the most productive, takes place outside classrooms, on historic sites, in museums or
in galleries or simply in the environs of the school. Proponents of out-of-school learn-
ing argue that ‘learning outside the classroom supports pupils’ learning and devel-
opment. It has the potential to enrich and enliven teaching’ (House of Commons
Children, Schools and Families Committee 2010: para. 11). Realizing this potential
outside the classroom is no less challenging than securing high-quality learning inside
the classroom; pupils are no more likely to learn successfully outside the classroom
than they are inside it unless their learning is actively planned, managed and con-
solidated. Successful learning outside the classroom demands skilful planning; as with
all learning, it demands attention to learning objectives, but also to how pupils will
learn in different settings and the best settings to support different sorts of learning.
Although some sites – castles, museums, abbeys – may form particularly strong foci
for learning, almost every school has scope for supporting history learning outside the
classroom on its doorstep. In the 1970s, the Schools History Project proclaimed its
faith in ‘History Around Us’. The local war memorial can offer rich opportunities to
explore historical significance (Brown and Woodcock 2009), local oral history projects
T E A C H I N G A N D L E A R N I N G I N C L A S S R O O M S A N D B E YO N D 29
can motivate the most reluctant of learners (Johansen and Spafford 2009) and using
the local town as a case study renders the Industrial Revolution more relevant and
personal (McFahn et al. 2009). Museum-based learning offers rich possibilities for
enriching children’s understanding of evidence and the ways in which we build up
ideas about the past. Out-of-school learning offers the opportunity to explore new
surroundings. However, successful out-of-school learning involves going beyond the
nature of the experience of being out of school itself to think about how it engages
learners, and how the focus of the learning relates to what has gone before and comes
later (Hooper-Greenhill 2007).
Classroom – a very small room for 22 pupils but at least dedicated to history teaching.
Tables arranged in a horseshoe with two tables parallel to the sides. Some girls had
their backs to other girls and some were sitting at right angles to the board. There was
no fussing or any issues around seating – there was no evidence of a seating plan.
0:30 The vote! T told the girls to shut their eyes ‘to make it more exciting.’ The
vote took place twice as T had to clarify ‘who is to blame’.
(The only writing all lesson) On board: King 12, Parliament 9, Abstentions 2
T: ‘This group believes the King was to blame.’
T then asked class if they were interested in what she thought – they were
so she told them she agreed it was the King and gave her reasons.
Their homework was to make sure that they had written up their speeches
in the front of their books over Easter (most had done so anyway).
0:34 Ss were asked to write in their books: ‘The Civil War was the fault of …
I think this because…’
0:36 There was some discussion around the issues that came out of this
lesson. The news that morning (on BBC Radio 4) was that Gordon Brown
was going to repeal the 300-year-old law that the monarch or heir to the
throne could not marry a Catholic. Another girl had also listened to this
radio report – T picked up on this and reminded the class of the Human
Rights Act i.e. the freedom to marry who you want and of freedom of
religion. She said it was ‘about time’ and that these old laws were in
conflict with the human rights of the monarch.
0:40 Bell goes – class dismissed. No (need for?) formal ending or summing up
of what had been covered in the lesson.
of what were then – and in many ways still remain – transmission-based models of
teaching, what Ian Luff in 2001 memorably captured as ‘I talk, you listen’ (Luff 2001),
this closes down, rather than opens out the potential for teaching and learning history.
This model of history teaching has been enormously dominant. David Sylvester called
it the ‘great tradition’ in which the ‘history teacher’s role was didactically active; it was
to give pupils the facts of historical knowledge, and to ensure through repeated short
tests that they had learned them’ (Sylvester 1994: 18); it was overlain by a powerful
moral and interpretive mission.
The civil war example, although it demonstrates the extent to which access to the
past in history lessons is powerfully mediated through language, and depends on lan-
guage, was not dependent on teacher transmission talk but on extended speaking and
listening skills on the part of the pupils. There is extensive research to demonstrate the
power of structured speaking and listening in supporting pupils’ historical thinking,
and their learning more generally (Alexander 2000; Bage 2000; Coffin 2007).
Conventionally, history teachers have drawn extensively on paper and book
resources to supplement or extend their own expertise. In the vast majority of history
lessons, paper resources have been the artefacts through which the past is present-
ed and through which pupils access it. Paper resources take many forms: textbooks,
reproduced, and normally edited, extracts from primary historical documents, repro-
duced photographs, artworks, pictures of objects. For much of the period since educa-
tion became compulsory in 1870, the textbook has dominated the teaching of history.
There is an extensive tradition of textbook analysis, much of it subtle and sophisti-
cated, and textbooks have been used to illuminate the mediation of curriculum into the
32 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
classroom (Chancellor 1970; Nicholls 2006). Even so, textbooks can be misleading,
and teachers need to use them, not to be used by them (Foster and Crawford 2006).
Eamonn McCann recalled an extreme example in his experience of learning history
in Northern Ireland in the 1960s:
History lessons did not always follow the curriculum laid down by the Northern
Ireland Ministry of Education. One teacher, admittedly regarded as something of
an eccentric, was at pains to discredit English propaganda…At the beginning of
a new school year, he would lead the class through the set text books instructing
them to tear out pages of fiction…That done, the lessons could begin.
(McCann 1993)
The Schools Council History Project set out to provide pupils with the opportunity to
understand the process as well as the product of history in the 1970s and to grapple
with the challenges and fascination that the imperfect, incomplete traces of the past
present to the historian (Schools Council 1973). Linked with the late 1970s repro-
graphics revolution, SCHP encouraged history teachers to produce and reproduce
evidence extracts which underpinned classroom work.Textbook publishers responded
quickly too, and the standard history textbook ceased to be the analytical narrative text
and became instead a collection of authorial text and edited evidential extracts. We will
explore the practical implications of placing evidence and enquiry at the heart of the
history classroom, but the key point to make here is about the nature of the resources
at the disposal of the classroom teacher – his or her own voice, the work of textbook
authors, and extracts from historical source material – and the extent to which they
are all to some degree dependent on language. History is a school subject drenched in
language – the teacher’s language, the pupils’ language in response, the written texts,
and in a language with its own vocabulary, register and genres (Edwards and Furlong
1978; Husbands 1996). Partly for this reason, history has gained a reputation as one
of the most difficult of school subjects: learning history involves mastering much of the
language of historical times and ideas, and finding ways to express this in controlled
and sustained argumentation in order to convey the complexity of understandings of
the historical past (Andrews 1995; Counsell 1997).
Although history is predominantly explored through the written word, many of
the most promising of materials are non-written, and the skill of the successful history
teacher lies in combining text and non-textual resources to explore and develop the
language and ideas of historical thinking – whether inside the classroom or outside it.
Sixteenth-century conceptions of monarchy are perhaps best accessed through por-
traits of monarchs; the rise of Nazism through newsreel or extracts from newsreel,
and the legacy of the Roman Empire through Roman remains, whether on site or on
screen. Artefacts, whether encountered in handling sessions, in museums or remotely
through digital images, are more than simply objects. Frances Sword, in yet another
context – Egyptian mummies in a museum – puts it like this:
The functions of many objects are multi-faceted and complex. An Egyptian cof-
fin, for example, was made to hold not just a body but a belief system: the body
was contained in the coffin, and the belief system is contained in its style. The
T E A C H I N G A N D L E A R N I N G I N C L A S S R O O M S A N D B E YO N D 33
object contains many sorts of information but, as with so many artefacts, style is
the thickest cable of communication...Whatever the object, if it communicates
through its style, we are presented with ideas held in shape, form and colour which
are often far more important than those held by any other aspect of the artefacts.
(Sword 1994: 9)
In the contemporary history classroom the concept of the ‘thickest cable of commu-
nication’ is the critical one. Language, knowledge and resources are the raw materials
of the history teacher from which she fashions the ‘thickest cable of communication’.
The materials at the history teachers’ disposal are richer and more complex than ever
before. Box 3.2 provides one example of such a resource provided through the col-
laboration between the British Museum and BBC Radio 4 to trace the history of the
world in a hundred objects, from any number of perspectives, challenging conven-
tional perceptions of the past. However, rich though this resource is, it and others
are useful only in so far as they are used effectively in classrooms, and the practices
underlying their use are central to the craft of the history teacher.
Conclusion
History teachers themselves are pivotal to young people’s experiences of learning
about the past. Successful learning depends to a large extent on the ways in which
teachers make active use of the tools and resources at their disposal – the ways in
which they are able to use and navigate language, the ways they define historical prob-
lems and the ways they marshal the extensive resources at their disposal to support
learning. The best history classrooms are rich settings for children’s historical – and
general – learning, places where language, text and objects are combined to support
high levels of enquiry and thinking. In our work in classrooms for this book, we came
across another significant dimension of this: pupils’ own perceptions of the way their
teachers worked. Effective teachers appeared open to pupils’ ideas and interests – in
effect pupils felt they and their teacher were learning together. In some classrooms
there was a sense of a ‘shared experience’ where teachers also took part in the historical
explorations of their pupils. In one classroom the teacher ‘modelled’ a presentation he
had produced so the pupils could understand how to assess each others’ presentations,
‘because we can’t ask you [pupils] to do something that we [teachers] are not prepared
to do ourselves’.
The BBC ‘History of the World in a Hundred Objects’ is a hugely ambitious and accessible
attempt to trace major themes in world history through objects. A partnership between
the BBC and the British Museum, it uses radio programmes and a linked website –
from which the programmes are downloadable – to explore objects. The series travels
‘through two million years from the earliest object in the collection to retell the history
of humanity through the objects we have made’. Sequences of objects are tied to a
34 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
particular theme, such as ‘after the ice age’, ‘pilgrims and traders’ or ‘the beginning of
science and literature’.
The website provides rich resources for learning: http://www.bbc.co.uk/
ahistoryoftheworld/. Each object is available as a zoomable image, and a set of
commentaries provide context, together with interpretations of the objects offered by
academics. For example the Kilwa pot sherds are
broken pieces of pots … found on the shores of Kilwa Kiswani, an island off
Tanzania, which was once home to a major medieval African port. The pale green
porcelain pieces are from China, the dark green and blue pieces come from the
Persian Gulf and the brown unglazed pieces were made in East Africa. This rubbish
reveals a complex trade network that spread across the Indian Ocean, centuries
before the European maritime empires of Spain, Portugal and Britain. From around
AD 800 merchants from Africa, the Middle East, India, and later even China flocked
to the East African ports of Kilwa and Mombasa, which quickly grew into wealthy
cities. These merchants traded in pots, spices, ivory, gems, wood, metal and slaves.
A new language, Swahili, developed in this multicultural environment, combining
existing African languages with Arabic. Islam was adopted as the religion in these
ports, perhaps to aid in trade relations with the Middle East and also to protect
African merchants from being enslaved by other Muslims.
This one object – a pile of rubbish – is used quickly to highlight major themes of cultural
exchange and migration on a global canvas – to move from an object to a wide canvas,
on which a big picture can be sketched.
Part 2
Learning history in schools
In Part 1, our attention was focused on history as a subject and on the curriculum
framework in which it is embedded. In this section, we turn our attention to learners.
Too often, debates about school subjects and the ways in which they should be taught
can ignore the interests, needs and, indeed, voices of the learners themselves. In this
section we seek to remedy this, although of course it is not possible entirely to separate
discussion of learning from discussion of teaching. Chapter 4 begins with a general
review of the literature on ‘pupil voice’ before going on to explore what we know about
what pupils want from the study of history. Chapter 5 takes a different tack; given that
history is often seen as being one of the more difficult subjects for pupils to learn, we
try to use pupils’ own voices to explore what it is that they find difficult.
4
What do pupils want from learning history?
In this chapter we explore the perspectives of learners in the history classroom.We try to look
at the history classroom from the point of view of what learners want as a way of invit-
ing teachers to do the same. Like the previous section that considers the general issues of
history and history teaching, this section too focuses on learners in schools generally and in the
history classroom specifically.Throughout we have tried to include the voices of learners and
their teachers that we have met in the schools we visited.
Consulting children, that is those under the age of 18, about things which affect
them is an increasingly common feature of planning and delivering services for chil-
dren. Children can be, and increasingly are, consulted in a variety of ways. The roots of
current practice in consulting children lie in the UN Convention on the Rights of the
Child (1989), in particular Article 12 which states that each country ‘shall assure to the
child who is capable of forming his or her own views the right to express those views
freely in all matters affecting the child, the views of the child being given due weight in
accordance with the age and maturity of the child’. For all of its expansiveness, the UN
Convention had relatively little direct influence on practice in English education until
the early years of the twenty-first century, when a wider interest in understanding,
children’s perspectives through the Every Child Matters initiative (DfES 2003) began
to influence work in schools. Jean Rudduck, who developed much of the theoretical
understanding and the realization of the potential of children’s consultation in schools,
explained that
Rudduck and McIntyre define pupil consultation as ‘talking with pupils about things
that matter to them in the classroom and school and that affect their learning’. Ideally
consultation is a conversation that builds a habit of easy discussion between pupil and
teacher about learning. They add that real consultation occurs when pupils ‘know that
their views are being sought because it is expected that they will have something to
contribute’ (Rudduck and McIntyre 2007: 36).
There are practical and pragmatic reasons for ‘consulting pupils’. While
some teachers might be initially sceptical that not all young people would take
the consultation process seriously or that they might suggest ridiculous ways of
working, evidence from the Consulting Pupils project (Flutter 2002) suggests
otherwise: pupils responded with insight and intelligence when consulted mean-
ingfully. The evidence also suggested that being consulted directly about the class-
room issues that most affect them actively generated greater pupil ‘motivation’ towards
learning (McIntyre et al. 2005: 150). Drawing on pupil perspectives, the Consulting
Pupils project team identified four dominant themes which pupils saw as key
elements for effective teaching to generate learning (Box 4.1). In many ways these
findings may appear self-evident but it is worth noting that they draw on the unprompt-
ed voices of pupils themselves, and help to frame directly thinking about teacher
practices. It is also interesting that many of these correspond with other research
findings from history classrooms coming from pupil surveys. Our own visits and
discussions with pupils also elicited similar responses on which we draw throughout
this chapter.
W H AT D O P U P I L S W A N T F R O M L E A R N I N G H I S T O R Y ? 39
Box 4.1 Key elements of effective teaching for learning: dominant themes from the
Consulting Pupils about Teaching and Learning project
Interactive teaching for understanding – teachers need to actively engage with what
pupils bring to their own learning.
The need for teachers to contextualize the learning so that new ideas are connected
with something pupils are already familiar with.
Learning tasks that foster a stronger sense of ownership and that recognize pupils’
growing sense of independence and maturity.
Collaborative learning that promoted greater discussion and working together on
shared tasks.
http://www.consultingpupils.co.uk/
and debate’. The types of activities that were popular were cited as ‘interactive’ activi-
ties, such as role-play, drama, presentations, discussion, debate, making things, and
other creative activities. So much is clear, and our own work with schools has gener-
ated countless examples of individual activities which involve alternative forms of
communication which do not depend on extended writing. Underlying this is a
profound tension for pupils and for teachers: as we saw in Chapter 3, learning history
depends fundamentally on the acquisition of the language and argumentation of
history. Thus, while it is possible to devise classroom activities which enthuse, the
challenge is to develop these and to connect them together in ways which allow pupils
to engage with complex historical ideas.
Many of the negative comments that pupils made about history classrooms cen-
tred around ‘written work’ and most particularly related to writing tasks that did not
offer a sense of ‘ownership’ – such as copying from the board – or tasks requiring
higher level literacy skills such as extended writing, or argumentative writing in a par-
ticular style. However, the same pupils often said that they enjoyed tasks using creative
writing, drama and historical texts that require the development of empathetic under-
standing. Empathy is often perceived, by history teachers, as either too difficult or too
problematic not only because pupils are required to assume (often adult) roles from
the past but also because, as one teacher remarked, ‘the history can get lost and the
English takes over’. Harris and Haydn note that while interactive teaching approaches
were mostly popular, this was not always the case, especially if only used sporadically
or if the teacher was not skilled in their use. The authors conclude that in history ‘the
teacher matters – a lot’, not only in how skilled they are in their teaching approach but
also in how they talk to pupils and relate to them. Again the finding that the relation-
ship between pupils and their teacher is a key factor in pupil enjoyment of a subject
resonates with findings from the ‘pupil voice’ project. In our own visits to schools we
also found evidence of the importance of the relationship between history teachers
and their pupils. Teachers and pupils in one successful history department appeared to
be constantly developing, challenging and debating with each other to create their own
learning community. In one outer London comprehensive school, the history depart-
ment had established a history working group involving pupils to explore ways of
teaching and learning with which pupils felt they could engage. The pupils suggested
new units of work, such as examining the history of crime locally.
Harris and Haydn were also interested in pupils’ perceptions of history as a
subject and therefore probed their understandings of its ‘usefulness’ alongside their
‘enjoyment’ of it. An earlier survey of Year 9 pupils’ perceptions of history and geog-
raphy carried out by Adey and Biddulph (2001) revealed a large discrepancy between
the numbers of pupils who enjoy geography and/or history at Key Stage 3 and the
number who opt to study each subject at GCSE, arguing that ‘for a large number of
pupils, “enjoyment” of history or geography is not an adequate reason for opting to
study it further’ (2001: 449). Adey and Biddulph suggested that perceptions of ‘use-
fulness’ in relation to future careers were more important than ‘liking’ the subject in
shaping option decisions and that most pupils saw ‘usefulness’ in terms of direct appli-
cation to employment (2001: 449). Although Harris and Haydn found that a much
higher proportion of pupils in their survey did think that history as a school subject
was useful, on the whole, their pupils could also not say why it was useful. Again the
authors comment that the results were also highly dependent on the school surveyed
W H AT D O P U P I L S W A N T F R O M L E A R N I N G H I S T O R Y ? 41
(c) History ‘to avoid making the same mistakes’ type responses
School 10 (13- to 14-year-olds) 28.5% of comments
School 12 (13- to 14-year-olds) 2% of comments
(Box 4.2), suggesting that some schools made the aims and therefore possible pur-
poses of history much more explicit than others.
Baccalaureat’. The ‘E-bacc’ was to be awarded to pupils who secured GCSE grades at
C or better in English, mathematics, science, a language and either history or geogra-
phy. For history teachers the development of the E-bacc appeared to secure a position
in the post-14 curriculum, defining the subject as a part of an academic core. For
pupils the impact is more difficult to predict. It appears that one motivation underlying
the E-bacc was to redefine expectations around the central academic purposes of the
post-14 curriculum, but it is equally likely that the E-bacc will be used to distinguish
between those pupils deemed able to cope with an intensively academic curriculum
and those less able to do so.
In discussions with pupils in schools we detected a certain pragmatism among
many pupils in discussing their future choices – particularly from those placed in
lower attaining sets. Different forces are at play in their responses (see Box 4.3): there
is an understandable, if in some cases naive and under-informed sense, that GCSE
choices are connected to the demands of the employment market, coupled with a
sense that the pupils should choose subjects they are good at for largely instrumental
reasons – they are less likely to do badly – and, underpinning both, a reminder that they
might also be influenced by their enjoyment of a particular subject. There is a complex
relationship between liking and being good at a subject: in general most pupils are
uncomfortable with subjects they find difficult but being good at something does not
necessarily mean that the pupil likes it. It is difficult to generalize from the evidence
Box 4.3 12-year-old pupils discuss the subject choices they face in school
Interviewer: Next year in Year 9 you’ve got to make options. Do you know what you
want to do?
Girl 2: …maybe.
Interviewer: When it comes to the two options you’ve got to choose will you choose
things you like or things you’re good at or things that are useful for a job?
Interviewer: So none of you are saying that you would choose things you enjoy?
Or are the things that you are good at the things that you enjoy?
All: Yes.
W H AT D O P U P I L S W A N T F R O M L E A R N I N G H I S T O R Y ? 43
we have available, but there is some concern that the position of history in the post-14
curriculum is increasingly fragile as options choices, and pupils’ own expectations, are
geared to ‘sorting’ pupils into academic and non-academic choice routes.
History at Key Stage 3 may frequently be highly enjoyable, but for some pupils,
the demands of GCSE are forbidding. In a school that used group work extensively
and successfully in Year 9, a pupil’s reaction to history in Year 10 was ‘It’s not like last
year – we do more writing and less discussion’. Another girl said that she was ‘not
enjoying it as much as I thought’ and others felt the same even though they recognized
that the teacher had to adopt a more strategic approach because of the examination
demands of the course. In this school, the head of history felt that there were con-
straints on the way he could teach the subject at GCSE, but the tension between the
pressures he experienced and the perceptions of pupils was clear. Of course, there is
ample counter-evidence; the evidence of Ofsted inspections and GCSE results is that
history post-14 is successfully taught to those who opt for it, particularly to those who
experience examination success. The point here is different: the gap between teachers’
experiences of teaching the subject and pupils’ experiences of learning it is critical, and
can only be closed by listening hard to pupils about their experiences.
In this chapter we explore challenges that learning history presents for pupils in some way or
another. In doing so, we remain faithful to our belief that any child can learn ‘good’ history,
based in part on our experiences of observing and meeting teachers who make history an
engaging, challenging but also accessible and attainable subject in school, and on our own
classroom experience. There is a perception that pupils find history difficult. To some extent,
this is to be celebrated: without challenge, history would lack engagement and meaning and
its role in the school curriculum would be less valuable, though we acknowledge that for some
pupils history can seem prohibitively difficult. Clearly, the more teachers understand about
what makes history difficult, the more they can plan to address this in the classroom.We sug-
gest that pupils bring with them their own knowledge and interests that need to be explicitly
recognized and built upon.
Mary: I find it quite difficult. It’s not just looking back over the facts, you have
to interpret them and always provide evidence for your opinion – like why something
happened or what the most important consequence of something was. So it’s not
just the pure history – you have to put your own spin on it. It can be quite difficult
to look at sources and use them to come to a conclusion. It’s quite a difficult skill
I think.
Joanne: I think it’s hard because history is ongoing. One of the topics we did was
the Arab–Israeli conflict and our teacher would say ‘Did you see this in the news?’
We looked at the bombings in America and she covered the bit after that and you
can see how that links on to where we are today. I think that was quite mind-blowing:
we looked at the origins and you can see how it has developed and it is still going on
W H AT D O W E K N O W A B O U T P U P I L S ’ U N D E R S TA N D I N G O F H I S T O R Y ? 45
today. And I think that what’s hard to grasp about history is that it is so much bigger
than you and it has formed how we are today and even looking back at, say, how
parliament used to be, it is difficult to get your head round.
We are often told that ‘kids don’t know history’ (Wineburg 2000: 307) and that
many young people are leaving school not only with very little historical knowledge but
with little understanding of how to apply what they do know to the world around
them: in short, that they have very little ‘substantive’ or content knowledge of history.
For example, a Conservative Party conference delegate complained that there is no
specific reference to Winston Churchill in the history national curriculum (Gove 2009)
and the American history education academic Sam Wineburg found that more than
a third of Texan teenagers could not identify the year of the US Declaration of
Independence (Wineburg 2000). What is less clear is what ‘knowing history’ means
for learners – or, indeed, for adults. Although, as Chapter 1 explores, knowing and
understanding history is about more than knowing the ‘facts’ or the ‘story’, for some
commentators it means this alone, because this is their conception of what history is,
because it suits their purpose to see history as a relatively unproblematic narrative or
because they believe pupils in schools are too young to handle anything else. Mary,
quoted above, believes in the existence of ‘pure history’, which is denied her in the
classroom. Substantive knowledge is important, though the extent to which it can ever
be ‘pure’ is highly doubtful for reasons explored in Section 1. Nevertheless, knowledge
of the past is a central part of what it means to ‘know history’. Here, we use the term
substantive knowledge to refer to the ‘substance’ or content of history and to differenti-
ate it from knowledge about the process or discipline of history. Some subjects – math-
ematics, physics – have a clearly hierarchic structure, in which more complex material
depends on the acquisition of simpler concepts. It may be that some historical topics are
intrinsically more challenging than others, though the underlying challenges of ‘good
history’ remain the same. Nevertheless, it is likely that 13-year-olds will understand the
complexities of the wars of the Spanish Succession less well than the causes and conse-
quences of the Great Fire of London because of the differences of scale and complexity
in the two. In addition to the intrinsic cognitive challenge of some topics, there are ques-
tions of emotional engagement: studying the Holocaust is challenging at any age, but
the possibilities of developing understanding of the enormity of the issues must surely
decrease the younger the pupils are. Joanne, above, puts this very well when she said
that ‘history is so much bigger than you’ and that it is ‘mind-blowing’. She understands
that a crucial skill of the historian is to see temporal and spatial connections in the past,
including links between the past and the present.To do this well, extraordinary breadth of
knowledge of both the past and of current affairs is required, and at 18 this must seem
beyond reach. Shemilt believes that this should not restrict our ambition, however:
What has not been attempted in Britain is to teach pupils how to handle the past
as a whole. In consequence, few 15-year-olds are able to map the past; even fewer
can offer a coherent narrative; and virtually none can conceive of anything more
subtle than a single ‘best’ narrative.
(Shemilt 2000: 86)
46 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
Shemilt likens pupils in history classrooms to children who have never watched a
cinematic film but are expected to understand a particular film from brief and discon-
nected trailer clips – that they can understand each clip but not the film’s narrative
and its purpose, or ‘the bigger picture’. He goes on to argue that the problem is not so
much failure to understand bits of content in isolation as failure to conceive of ‘event
space’ in ways that allow them to ‘construe each part in relation to the whole and the
whole as more than the sum of the parts’ (Shemilt 2000: 86).
There is evidence that some pupils do have a big picture understanding of the
past. The Usable Historical Pasts project asked 15-year-old pupils to write an account
of British history over the last 2000 years. The results suggested that
One tentative finding of the project was that the more pupils were able to stand
back and consider the longer term changes and developments of British history,
the more they were able to draw on this knowledge to inform current and future issues –
for example when speculating on whether or not the USA would always be the
most powerful country in the world (Foster et al. 2008). Shemilt insists that this is
a teaching issue: pupils are unable to see the bigger picture if they are not helped to
do so by the way the curriculum is structured and taught (Shemilt 2009). It is also a
learning issue: the full scale of history is ‘mind-blowing’. While it is desirable for pupils
to gain some kind of overview or big picture of the past, this may pose enormous
challenges to pupils struggling with fairly basic notions about what history is or failing
to be engaged by it.
Wineburg argues that assessment of what pupils know often focuses on what we
want them to know rather than what they actually do know and that, consequently,
insufficient account is taken of what they bring into the classroom with them. There
is a growing body of research to suggest that preconceptions are extremely powerful
in determining what the pupils will take with them from a lesson (see, for example,
Donovan and Bransford 2005). These preconceptions range from children’s under-
standing of the ‘way the world works and how people are likely to behave’ (Lee 2005:
31) to substantive knowledge that pupils have amassed at home or elsewhere. We know
that pupils are ‘consumers’ of the past; they come into school with historical knowl-
edge gained from a range of sources such as previous learning in primary school, TV,
the media, books, films, museums, and from encounters with those in their families or
in their local communities (Phillips 1998). By failing to connect with the history they
learn outside the classroom, history taught in school may be rejected and alternative
narratives constructed (Barton and McCully 2005; Traille 2007; Epstein 2009). We
return to many of these issues in Chapter 10.
W H AT D O W E K N O W A B O U T P U P I L S ’ U N D E R S TA N D I N G O F H I S T O R Y ? 47
All: No.
Boy 1: But I only like a little bit of it – I only like it when you colour and watch films.
Interviewer: Someone said they liked doing pictures but not writing – is history hard
because of the writing?
All: Yes.
Boy 2: …what to write and everything… And it gets a bit hard – I can’t really do it.
Interviewer: Does that mean you don’t have to do that much for yourselves in other
lessons?
Boy 1: But it’s harder [in history] because we don’t know much about it.
Boy 1: Because in maths you’ve got more stuff to work it out. In history it’s harder
because you’ve got nothing to work it out with.
Girl 1: History can be right hard because you don’t know about the past. They
don’t really tell us a lot about it so we’re sometimes stuck.
According to these pupils, history is hard because it requires ‘figuring it out for
themselves’ without formulae that can provide ‘the answer’. The lack of certainty frus-
trates pupils and they struggle with notions of what is ‘true’ and what is not, particu-
larly when different pieces of evidence are contradictory. This may be because most
school subjects are based around certainty. In science, for example, when the science
experiment does not produce the expected result, pupils are often asked to record
what should have happened rather than what did happen because the latter requires
W H AT D O W E K N O W A B O U T P U P I L S ’ U N D E R S TA N D I N G O F H I S T O R Y ? 49
a more difficult explanation about why the results were as they were. History does
not offer pupils such certainties. Chapter 6 offers further reflections about a series of
‘myths’ or misconceptions that pupils hold about evidence and some possible strate-
gies with which to address them.
Michaela: Yes, I think especially with us being so young. In history, when it gets to
A level you have to put yourself in the mindset of the group that you’re studying, like
the economy and religion and stuff – their point of view on it is completely different
to how we’re experiencing it in the modern day. And being so young, I personally find
it hard to see how other people would see it; you have to consider everything even
if it doesn’t seem relevant. You have to take it all into account and I find that hard
because I’m not used to doing it.
a common problem and in part is perhaps the inevitable result again of simply not
knowing enough. A particular aspect of time that poses challenges for pupils regards
change over time. Pupils often equate change with events, assuming that what changed
is the same as what happened, rather than understanding that there are different kinds
of changes (slow, rapid, political, economic, concurrent, enduring and so forth) and
that change has to be seen in a broad context in order to be understood (e.g. see Lee
2005). Pupils can also be reluctant to give continuity the same degree of attention as
change: if nothing changed, why bother finding out why? Other research suggests that
pupils often equate change with progress, which results from their general view that
life is getting better (Barton 2008).
Progression in history
The well-versed debate about the relationship between historical content and histori-
cal skills, conducted mainly in the media and never taken seriously by teachers, is
now largely dead and gone. It is commonly accepted that one is entirely dependent
on the other. Knowledge about the past underpins any attempts to build concep-
tual understanding and to engage in the processes of constructing and analysing that
past. Similarly, knowledge by itself holds little meaning unless it is situated within
some kind of analytic framework and the nature and origin of that knowledge remains
a mystery without some conceptual understanding of where it comes from and
how it is constructed. Although assessment rarely addresses knowledge directly, it
is clear that progression in history is determined by an understanding of history’s
key concepts and processes supported by sufficient contextual knowledge (Counsell
and the Historical Association 1997). The reverse may also be true – that an
W H AT D O W E K N O W A B O U T P U P I L S ’ U N D E R S TA N D I N G O F H I S T O R Y ? 51
understanding of second-order concepts can help pupils make sense of the topics they
study (Lee 2005).
There are a number of progression models available to teachers in history.The most
common is that set out in the national curriculum Attainment Target which deploys
generalized statements to describe the overall level of achievement of a pupil at the end
of a key stage. Due to internal assessment requirements in schools, many departments
are forced to use the Attainment Target to ‘level’ individual pieces of work and to inform
targets which will boost pupil progress. This is highly problematic for several reasons
and we will discuss this further in Chapter 8. Awarding bodies write examination mark-
schemes which assume models of progression on a question by question basis, but any
insight into more general issues of progression must be inferred and is not explicitly
explained. Finally, there are research-based, concept-specific models of progression
which provide insights into the kinds of more and less sophisticated understandings
pupils display when asked particular types of questions or given particular types of
tasks to complete. None of the models available is perfect: the Attainment Target is a
blunt instrument, providing statements at a level of generality which, while indicat-
ing the sorts of things pupils should be able to do as they make progress, give us little
insight into how pupils’ actual thinking develops. The research-based models, on the
other hand, provide valuable insights into pupils’ thinking about history and helpfully
suggest the kinds of ideas that actively prevent them from making progress, but make
no claim to indicate a sequence of learning that pupils will work through in order to
make progress: they can only help us to understand where a pupil is within his or her
model at any one time or, strictly speaking, in any one task.
The absence of a definitive and authoritative guide to how pupils make progress in
history is no surprise and it is probably impossible to achieve due to the sheer number
of variables. It is likely, for example, that the historical context itself will make a dif-
ference: how well pupils know and understand a topic will have a profound impact on
how well they cope with tasks about causation or change or evidence. The task itself
and the way understanding is assessed is also likely to be key, as psychologists have
argued for many years (e.g. Donaldson 1978). How well a topic or a concept is taught
is likely to have a considerable impact on pupil understanding. All these variables make
it difficult to have confidence in any single model of pupil progression. All that can
be realistically claimed is that pupils are likely to hold certain levels of understanding
about history at a given point, supported by some general notion about the kinds of
knowledge and understanding that need to be developed over time. Exactly how the
pupils move from a less to a more sophisticated understanding of history is less well
understood.
One thing that does seem clearer is that the awarding bodies have not got this quite
right. Many of the teachers we met were frustrated by the limited opportunities within
GCSE specifications to build in sufficient progress. One teacher openly stated that
the best way he could prepare his pupils was by teaching them the ‘formula’, some-
thing he found deeply unsatisfying. The ‘gobbets of information’ on the examination
paper were especially unpopular. Such is the seemingly dire state of GCSE that several
teachers now believe that there is too great a disjunction between GCSE and A level –
possibly more pronounced than in most other subjects. A discussion with a group of
sixth formers at the end of their AS year indicated that history, in particular, was very
52 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
different to what they expected coming out of GCSE. They felt at A level there was
much more emphasis on independent study and reading whereas those studying sci-
ence subjects felt that these carried on much the same as the year before. One student
described the jump in history ‘…it feels like I’ve done two completely different courses
because it is completely different at GCSE and now at A level because at A level they
want you to analyse whereas at GCSE they want you to tell the story which at A level
is just...NO!’
It is interesting to note in this context that it is generally not necessary to have
studied history at GCSE in order to study it at A level, unlike in mathematics and sci-
ence subjects where content was described by the pupils as more ‘linear’ and the need
for prior knowledge and skills is more explicit. But if this is the case, it suggests that
progression between Key Stage 3 and A level is primarily one of substantive rather
than disciplinary knowledge which most teachers (and examiners) would reject. If
progression from Key Stage 3 to 4 to 5 was more securely managed, it might be
possible to argue that a GCSE in history was necessary in order to progress onto
A level; however, it is difficult to see the current progression map for 14–19 in history
as sensible for learners.
Conclusion
This chapter has explored reasons why history can be difficult for pupils and has
also raised questions about how the progress of pupils’ understanding can be meas-
ured and understood. The challenges of history are part of its appeal: without them, it
would be less interesting, less compelling and less important. Nevertheless, history can
and must be made accessible to all and this is explored in greater detail in Chapter 10.
Understanding the barriers to learning about the past and taking a proactive approach
to exploring pupils’ preconceptions – coupled with a conviction that all pupils can
and should learn about the past – are vital components of successful history teaching.
Part 3
Teaching history in schools
In this section we use the insights of the first two sections to examine the building
blocks of classroom practice in history. Of course, effective practice emerges from
these building blocks used together, but we introduce them separately. We begin by
exploring the essence of historical enquiry and its relationship to the evidential base
of the discipline, arguing – following Herodotus – that all historical understanding
emerges from a process of active enquiry. In Chapter 7, we explore the other essential
second-order concepts of the discipline and the way they intertwine with substan-
tive historical knowledge to shape learners’ historical understanding. In Chapter 8 we
consider the way history is communicated in the classroom, exploring the way differ-
ent communicative modes operate and the idea of multimodality, before moving on
to assessment. In Chapter 9 we take the ideas from the three preceding chapters and
explore how they can be drawn together in long-term plans. Finally, we consider the
concept of inclusive practices, drawing on Part 2 and previous chapters in Part 3 to
consider how the subject can be made accessible to all.
6
Evidence and enquiry in history teaching
History is enquiry: an attempt to answer specific questions about the past. Historians do this
by drawing on sources of evidence, which is the foundation of all historical knowledge; it is
through the relics of past societies that we have access to the past. Pupils in history classrooms
also use sources, not because this enables them to behave just as historians do, but because
without them, the way that history is created remains a mystery and the status and worth
of the knowledge generated by historians (and others) cannot be evaluated.Throughout this
chapter we argue that evidence and enquiry must go hand in hand and that without the
overarching focus of an enquiry, sources of evidence are without purpose and pupils become
bored and disillusioned.
end itself that is important: the ability to provide a credible answer to a credible ques-
tion. Credible questions – and indeed answers – can mean different things to different
people, but one might also say a significant question, a meaningful question, a useful
or important question.
Enquiry revolves around questions. Just as Herodotus set out to answer a specific
question about the Persian Empire, so pupils set out to answer questions, normally
that their teacher has posed, about an aspect of the past, drawing on various sources of
evidence to construct some form of answer which is substantiated. Enquiry therefore
puts the pupil at the centre: this is not about the teacher imparting knowledge but about
pupils finding answers for themselves under the teacher’s direction and, in this sense, it
fits with current notions of effective teaching and learning based largely on constructiv-
ist theories of learning. Other subjects have adopted similar enquiry models and there
are particular parallels with geography where there is a move towards conceptualizing
‘enquiries’ as sequences of, say, four to five lessons based around a single enquiry
question, which build up to a substantial outcome. A geographical enquiry has been
described as a journey towards solving a puzzle or constructing an answer. A good
enquiry question should have both ‘pith and rigour’ and ‘should set up issues or chal-
lenges which can be unpacked in the enquiry sequence’ (Taylor 2009). This approach
is already well established among history teachers in the UK (Husbands et al. 2003) and
the term ‘an enquiry’ often refers to a sequence of lessons based around a single enquiry
question (Riley 2000). Box 6.1 suggests criteria for effective enquiry questions.
What is evidence?
Pupils find it difficult to engage with the evidential base of history. Some pupils
believe that the past itself never existed: the evidence for it lives in the present
and cannot, therefore, possibly have been created in the past (Dickinson and
Lee 1978). As we began to explore in Chapter 5, pupils commonly hold a series
of misconceptions about historical evidence which are likely to prevent them from
developing a clear understanding of the relationship between the evidence which
survives and the historical past which generated it. First, however, it is helpful to
be clear about terms such as source, evidence and information because confusion
about the similarities and differences between them can muddy the waters for both
pupils and teachers.
Imagine a lesson about children’s lives in the nineteenth century. There are many
potential sources of information that a teacher might draw on: him or herself, the
textbook, Dickens’s novel Oliver Twist, the film and musical Oliver! based on Dickens’s
book, testimony from children who worked in factories at the time, drawings from the
time, a recent TV documentary about Victorian life and parish records. All are sources
of information on which the pupil in a history classroom might legitimately draw as
part of an enquiry. Some of the sources are secondary, created not by participants at
the time, but by people in subsequent times who offer interpretations of the past. Some
are primary, created at the time, mainly with no view to posterity but for many different
purposes. At the beginning of the enquiry, pupils will need some kind of starting point,
some basis from which to move forward, achieved through the exploration or pres-
entation of factual information – information about which there is general common
agreement. This may include information about dates, social class and the existence of
factories and child labour, all vital contextual information that is the precursor to more
sophisticated thinking. At this stage, the emphasis is on established ‘fact’ rather than
on the nature and status of the information used. Everyone has to start somewhere:
experienced historians, embarking on the study of particular archival material for the
first time, need to establish what is already ‘known’ and accepted about the subject
matter. Once this groundwork has been laid, however, it is necessary to move on from
established ‘fact’ and towards claims that can be made about the topic. So, to return
to our example, once pupils have some knowledge about time, place and context, they
can start to investigate questions about the past that go beyond ‘fact’. A possible ques-
tion might be, for example, ‘Did children have no fun in Victorian Britain?’ As soon as
this question becomes the driving force of the lesson, and pupils turn their attention
to answering it, the sources of information at their disposal take on a new significance.
Then comes a critical point: will the pupils continue to use the sources of informa-
tion uncritically – in the way they used the ‘facts’ or background already provided – as
purveyors of ‘correct’ or ‘incorrect’ answers, or will they start to use them as histori-
ans do, and explore issues of utility and reliability? Sometimes, the former happens:
in order to break up the monotony of a textbook or perhaps to appear to be ‘doing’
sourcework with pupils, teachers might present pupils with a variety of sources, either
primary or secondary, from which pupils will extract ‘information’ without paying
attention to its nature and status. From the pupils’ perspectives they are simply being
asked to deal with ‘text’ and it matters little whether the text is a textbook, an extract
58 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
Box 6.2 Common myths held by pupils about sources of evidence in history
Myth 3: Primary sources are biased and this makes them useless as evidence
This myth is based on the mistaken view that all primary sources are a form of witting
testimony. In fact, there are many different kinds of primary sources, and many were not
created in order to advance any kind of view or argument – for example, census records,
wills, physical artefacts.
EVIDENCE AND ENQUIRY IN HISTORY TEACHING 59
Myth 4: Historians spend much of their time evaluating the reliability of sources
(mainly in order to fish out the unreliable source and discard it)
This myth is perhaps the most significant. Are we asking pupils to evaluate sources in
the belief that this turns them into historians? In fact, historians spend relatively little
time evaluating sources for bias. There are a number of reasons for this:
• Many sources are not biased in the sense of a deliberate attempt to put forward a
particular viewpoint (see Myth 3, above).
• Even where bias may exist, it may be irrelevant to the historian who is perhaps
more interested in the very existence of the source in the first place.
• Historians may be interested in a source precisely because of its bias.
Myth 6: It is pointless trying to answer questions about the past because only
people who were there know for sure (Lee 2005)
The biggest flaw here is the assumption that it might be possible for people in the past
to agree on what happened. Not only are different people likely to disagree even about
fairly basic matters, such as what they saw happen, but historians are generally interested
in the sorts of things that a single person at the time would have difficulty answering,
such as the long-term changes to religion or the complex causes of a revolution.
These are important points because it is only when pupils begin to use sources
to find evidence for something specific that the sources really begin to matter and the
task in hand becomes worthwhile and challenging. Pupils who routinely use sources
outside the scope of a challenging historical question are destined never fully to under-
stand what evidence is, for it is only when sources are mined for evidence to answer a
particular question that ‘proper’ use of ‘disciplinary’ history is made (Wineburg 2007).
Denis Shemilt found, early in the School History Project’s life, that pupils found it
difficult to ‘distinguish between information provided in the main text of a book and
sources included within the book: both were seen as identical quarries of undisputed
facts about the past’ (Shemilt 1980, quoted in McAleavy 1998: 12). This may, in part,
be a by-product of the layout of modern history textbooks, where sources intersperse
the text, often in a double page format. It is fairly easy to spot lessons in which source
material is being used uncritically as more (unproblematic) ‘information’: either the
provenance of the source is not provided or it is irrelevant, usually because the sources
are not being used in the context of an enquiry.
From the pupils’ perspective, what helps them to evaluate sources effectively?
Pickles (2010) has explored the relationship between the way pupils handle sources,
60 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
the strength of their contextual knowledge, their understanding of the nature of evi-
dence and their ability to think empathically about the context in which the source
was produced. She concludes that the expertise with which pupils handle sources
exceeds their application of routine ‘source skills’ – where pupils ask questions about
provenance, reliability and usefulness – and includes, for example, prior knowledge
and a conceptual understanding of the nature of evidence in history. In a similar
vein, Wineburg has provided useful insights into the ways historians ‘read’ historical
sources and how this is dominated by the deployment of their contextual knowledge
(Wineburg 2007). Without this contextual knowledge pupils may struggle to go much
beyond an uncritical consumption of historical sources as information.
The extent to which evidence is used in unique ways is an interesting question, how-
ever. Wineburg’s claims about historical thinking may well be applicable elsewhere
in the curriculum. Certainly, evidence is used in subjects such as science, geography
and English frequently and insufficient work has been done on the similarities and
differences in the way pupils are expected to work with it in these different contexts.
EVIDENCE AND ENQUIRY IN HISTORY TEACHING 61
In science, for example, a key difference (compared to history) is that pupils create
their own evidence (or ‘data’) and this is tightly controlled by the teacher; in practice,
explicit considerations of reliability rarely appear much before A level. Thus in science,
evidence is something that can be created and that brings with it a level of certainty
– at least at Key Stage 3 – that history could not. In English and history classrooms,
the same poem, novel, play or film might be used – but potentially quite differently.
Clearly, then, concepts of evidence exist across the curriculum and there will be some
critical examination of it in subjects other than history. The precise way that pupils
think about evidence in history, however, is likely to be quite particular, as is the sheer
range of different types of evidence potentially found in history classrooms.
Box 6.3 Enquiry questions that focus firmly on the nature of evidence in history
• What can...tell us about...? e.g. What can a town’s buildings tell us about Victorian
minds?
• Can we be sure that...? e.g. Can we be sure that Guy Fawkes was guilty?
• Why is it difficult to tell...? e.g. Why is it difficult to tell if there was a ‘Blitz spirit’?
(Counsell 2000b)
• How much can...tell us about...? e.g. How much can the Bayeux Tapestry tell us
about the Battle of Hastings?
The second dilemma is that, by providing too much contextual knowledge, the
teacher may not only be limiting the use that pupils might make of a source, but may
also be unwittingly exacerbating a misunderstanding that the truth is out there and the
sources are just a distraction from all those right answers that the teacher/textbook/TV
documentary can provide.
written by the same people). While it is understandable – and indeed desirable – that
written sources be used extensively in classrooms, it is regrettable that a richer variety
of sources is not always used more fully. The pages of Teaching History are replete with
accounts of the use of a wide range of source material, including music (e.g. Sweerts
and Grice 2002, Mastin 2002 and Butler 2003), pictures (e.g. Card 2004), oral his-
tory (e.g. Edwards 2006, Johansen and Spafford 2009) and the local environment (e.g.
McFahn et al. 2009). Interestingly (and somewhat disappointingly), there is relatively
little written about the use of objects in secondary history teaching, as it is more com-
mon at the primary stage.
Conclusion
A process of enquiry lies at the heart of what it means to ‘do history’ and evidence, if
it is to be used effectively in classrooms, must be related very directly to enquiry ques-
tions. To understand the nature of evidence in history is to understand the nature of
history itself and pupils need careful support to achieve this. Some of the most vibrant,
engaging work in history classrooms in recent years can be found in Key Stage 3 class-
rooms where, free from the constraints of public examinations, teachers have devised
challenging, intriguing enquiry questions which focus on particular historical con-
cepts and which involve pupil investigation to answer. One of the biggest challenges
facing history education currently is how to build these approaches more successfully
beyond Key Stage 3 in ways that also support rigorous and consistent assessment.
7
The key concepts of history teaching
Ten years after the surrender of George III’s army to General Washington at Yorktown,
British Freedom was hanging on in North America. Along with a few hundred other souls
– Scipio Yearman, Phoebe Barrett, Jeremiah Piggie and Smart Feller among them – he
was scratching a living from the stingy soil around Preston, a few miles northeast of
Halifax, Nova Scotia. Like most of the Preston people, British Freedom was black and
had come from a warmer place. Now he was a hardscrabbler stuck in a wind-whipped
corner of the world between the blue spruce forest and the sea. But he was luckier than
most…What were they doing there? Not just surviving. British Freedom and the rest of
the villagers were clinging to more than a scrap of Nova Scotia; they were clinging to a
promise.
The extract in Box 7.1, from Rough Crossings (Schama 2005), reads like a story
and, indeed, the historian Simon Schama deploys lyrical language to create atmos-
phere. But this is not a story in the conventional sense; it is disciplinary history. The
first clue comes at the end of the second sentence, where a footnote leads us to infor-
mation about Schama’s evidential base, in this case a manuscript copy of Clarkson’s
journal. The link to evidence is made clear, but Schama does not expound the reliabil-
ity or otherwise of this source; we take it on trust that he has deployed critical tools in
the analysis of his documents and that he has taken note of anything within the sources
that need especially careful treatment. The extract also provides a clue about the focus
of the book: this is not just the story of a man, it is an account of how he came to be
in North America. We infer, at this stage, that the book is going to be about slavery,
about those who achieved freedom and the reasons that lay behind their journeys: it
is going to deal in some way or other with causation. We also know that this account is
going to trace a period of time, possibly quite a lengthy one, and that Schama is more
than likely going to deal with change and probably continuity too. Finally, we can see
Schama’s efforts to understand the people about whom he writes: his awareness of
contrasting climates, for example, and the evocative description of the location suggest
a willingness to enter a different world which, we suspect, will lie at the heart of this
powerful book.
At no point in the extract does Schama explicitly mention causation, change, the
limitations of evidence nor his attempts to empathize because he has no need to: they
are implicit throughout his account. In school, however, teachers need to make these
things explicit in order for pupils to understand what history is and the ways in which
they can try to construct it for themselves. It is also by making these things explicit that
pupils are more likely to understand how to get better at history, for without them, get-
ting better becomes a question merely of knowing more ‘facts’ and that, while crucially
important, is not enough by itself.
We have dealt with evidence in a separate chapter partly for convenience and
partly to emphasize its relationship with enquiry. In this chapter we focus on the other
key concepts which underpin historical thinking. We start with the understanding that
the past and the present are not the same and that people in the past were therefore
different in their attitudes and beliefs in ways that were determined by the contexts in
which they lived. An ability, therefore, to understand context and the impact this had
on beliefs and attitudes, while rejecting simplified labels and recognizing the levels of
diversity among people in the past, is crucial. We have called this, by way of shorthand,
an understanding of people in the past, a designation which includes concepts
such as chronological understanding, empathy and diversity. But even when histo-
rians feel that they are coming closer to understanding people in the past, they pose
further questions: why did things come to be that way and how did things change or
remain stable over time? We call this category of concepts describing and explain-
ing the past and it includes the concepts of cause, consequence, change and continu-
ity. Finally, there is a set of concepts concerned with how history is constructed in the
present which we have called interpreting the past, which includes the concepts
of significance and interpretations. These categories are simply heuristic; in practice
understanding people in the past is, for example, a prerequisite for successful work
on causation.
THE KEY CONCEPTS OF HISTORY TEACHING 67
In schools, the importance of the key concepts is twofold. First, they introduce
a level of engagement and challenge which goes beyond ‘knowing facts’, and pro-
vide opportunities for teachers to analyse and assess progression in more sophisti-
cated ways. Second, they provide insights into what disciplinary history – the history
of historians – really is, particularly when accompanied by the underpinning concept
of evidence. In practice, all the concepts are linked but it is increasingly common
practice for history teachers to focus primarily on one second-order concept in any
given enquiry.
We have so far neglected to say very much about a different kind of concept
in history which relates more directly to content. Substantive concepts are used to
refer to the way ‘people and societies work’ (Lee 2005) and include, for example,
political concepts such as state, government and power and economic concepts
such as trade, wealth and tax. These concepts can cause difficulty for pupils because
they are abstract in nature and their meaning can shift over time. The similarities and
differences, for example, between the Industrial Revolution and the French Revolution
or between the Roman Empire and the British Empire make such terms hard to
pin down. ‘The Church’ can refer to both an entire institution and a tall building made
of stone.
In 1930s Germany there were those who defended the Jews (at great personal cost),
those who aided the Nazis and those (the majority) who were bystanders. What would
you have done?
This all makes historical sense. Pupils can struggle with the strangeness of the
past and it can be challenging for them to empathize with adults today, let alone in
past times (Husbands and Pendry 2000). Cunningham, in her work with four British
teachers, concluded that framing empathetic tasks in personal rather than historical
terms – ‘how would you have felt?’ rather than ‘how would the German woman in 1936
have felt?’ – ‘more frequently led to presentist responses’ (Cunningham 2004: 27). So
there is much to be said for viewing empathy as a purely cognitive achievement: it is
about piecing together, on the basis of fragmentary evidence, some understanding of
the perspectives of people living in a very different time and place from our own. Such
a view would reduce the kinds of ahistorical tasks such as the one in Box 7.2. It would
be a shame, however, if such an approach ruled out the possibility for some kind of
emotional and personal connection to the past and if pupils were not encouraged to
care about the past as fellow humans, albeit humans who acted in peculiar ways. How
can this be achieved alongside appropriate cognitive challenge?
trench…write a letter home.’ Exercises like this may well produce unhistorical fiction
characterized by anachronisms in which the experiences of every soldier in the war
are deemed to have been the same and in which the starting point is the pupil’s own
life. Such exercises may, however, have value en route to something more challenging
and rigorous. The task as described here is primarily about a description of what it was
like in the trenches. This is an acceptable question to ask about the trenches as long as
it is not the only question being asked. Cunningham’s work suggests that by putting
the question into the first person, responses are more likely to be anachronistic, but
a teacher might skilfully use whole-class discussion to move pupils on from thoughts
about how they would have felt about trench warfare to how soldiers at the time might
have done. More challenging questions about experiences in the trenches towards
which pupils might be working over a period of a few lessons are exemplified in an
outstanding enquiry about the experiences of a single private, Reg Wilkes, which still
requires understanding of people in the past but which also requires a more sophisti-
cated understanding of the role of evidence (Evans et al. 2004). Overall, then, writing a
letter home from the trenches is problematic if seen as the only outcome from a series
of lessons on trench warfare, not only because it is likely to produce dubious history
but also because it is not very challenging. However, there may be a role for this type
of task or discussion as a way of helping pupils to care about the past. Teaching through
real individuals from the past is also a powerful way to do this and avoids the first per-
son problem altogether. If pupils are to achieve some emotional engagement with the
past, this might be achieved by emphasizing the closeness in age between the pupils
and the soldiers and by using the story of Private Reg Wilkes. Emotional connection
with the past, carefully handled, can be powerful and helpful as demonstrated by the
pupil who, having learnt about trench foot, asked ‘did their feet ever get better after
they got home?’ (Cunningham 2004:28).
Many of the teachers we visited talked about the importance of empathy. In one
school, the teacher said it was what ‘made me interested in history’. We observed
examples of when pupils were encouraged to write or think about what it was like at
the time and two Year 7 pupils told us independently that history made them aware of
how different life was years ago and how difficult compared to now. That seemed to
us to be a worthwhile conclusion to have drawn. One of the tasks the pupils engage in
is to produce a play based on the lives of women factory workers in the Lawrence and
Scott’s munitions factory in Norwich during World War II. In doing this, they have to
empathize with the lives of women workers and make links to local history.
Box 7.3 includes some tasks which are more or less tightly focused around empa-
thetic understanding and which may be helpful to you in thinking about this issue.
It is worth noting, however, that empathy is more often a necessary component of
other achievements in history than an end in itself: it underpins our use of evidence,
it radically influences our assessment of motivation and its role in causation and it
enables us to be more nuanced and authentic in the way we talk about the past. There
is some evidence to suggest that group discussion is a powerful way to develop empa-
thetic understanding and that a teacher’s restraint in allowing pupils to get it wrong in
the first instance can be helpful. Indeed, as Ashby and Lee write, ‘it does not matter
if all the partners in a discussion are equally wrong, provided that they are wrong
in different ways’ (Ashby and Lee 1987: 86). What such discussions can illuminate
70 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
are the preconceptions that pupils bring with them to the classroom. This seems
especially important when attempting to understand people in the past. If pupils
assume that people behaved differently in the past because they were stupid (what
Ashby and Lee term the ‘divi’ stage), the teacher will need to deploy particular strate-
gies or take a particular tack in discussions in order to move the pupils on (Ashby and
Lee 1987: 68).
Diversity
Diversity is profoundly linked to a ‘sense of period’ and to empathetic understanding.
If empathy is about understanding people in the past, diversity is a way of making that
understanding more nuanced and complex: it gives empathy some edge. Although
variations of it have been present since the Schools Council History Project talked
about ‘similarity and difference’ in the 1970s, it has never had quite the status of a ‘key
concept’ before. The 2007 national curriculum defined the key concept of diversity as
‘understanding the diverse experiences and ideas, beliefs and attitudes of men, women
and children in past societies and how these have shaped the world’. This definition
is helpful in so far as the parameters set are very broad: it is hard to conceive of many
topics that would not provide opportunities to explore diversity thus defined. It does
not, however, provide much clue about what understanding diversity – as opposed to
knowing it existed – actually means. The addition of ‘how these have shaped the world’
is also unhelpful in its apparent segue into change and continuity or significance: it
shifts the focus onto the outcome of diversity rather than the nature of the diversity
itself. The explanatory notes are a similarly mixed bag for those seeking guidance.
They state that ‘Pupils should explore cultural, ethnic and religious diversity and racial
equality’ which seems to imply that this is a content issue, rather than a conceptual
one, and one that is limited in scope. A scheme of work, including units on, say, Islamic
history, the slave trade and SS Windrush, might be felt to cover sufficient territory,
though its episodic nature is unlikely to introduce pupils to the complexity of and
reasons for human ideas, attitudes, experiences and actions that lie at the heart of
diversity as a concept.
While teachers may be comfortable developing enquiry questions that foreground
causation or evidence or change and continuity, it is less clear what an enquiry question
focusing on diversity might be, and what an increasingly sophisticated understanding
of diversity among pupils might look like. Part of the solution lies in exploring the
dimensions of diversity in terms of complexity, difference and typicality. ‘Difference’,
THE KEY CONCEPTS OF HISTORY TEACHING 71
for example, together with ‘similarity’, provide helpful intellectual tools for ‘think-
ing about better and worse ways of identifying or characterizing groups of people’
(Counsell 2009:2). Certainly, this is the nub of diversity. It is of little interest simply
to show that diversity existed; the historical challenge lies in characterizing what that
diversity was – how people were different in their thoughts, words and deeds and how
far they were different. Perhaps above all, diversity is about understanding the past as
inhabited by real people, an understanding that emerges only from a secure knowl-
edge and understanding of the particular context in which the people under scrutiny
lived. In that sense, diversity forces teachers and pupils to examine the complexities of
the past.
History is, of course, about studying people in the past. It seeks to understand
what motivated people, how they responded to particular experiences and what
might account for the actions they took. In this way, learning history provides insights
into human nature and behaviour in ways that are revealing of us, sometimes unpalat-
able and often complex. People’s attitudes and actions in the past cannot be limited
by notions of race, ethnicity and religion, important though these are, not least
because these ideas are themselves historically conditioned, so that there are always
both general and local factors, quirks of personality, and influences of gender and class
at work.
The complexity – and therefore diversity – of human behaviour cannot be
explained by a checklist of factors and it is precisely this that makes history so
interesting. In practice, groups which behave differently from the way one might
expect given their religious/ethnic/cultural make-up are more interesting to historians
and learners than those which behave more predictably. Similarly, fractious groups
are often of more interest than cohesive groups: not all German Christians in the
Third Reich behaved in the same way towards Jews, for example. Notions of multiple
identities are common today and there is a widely held assumption that one cannot
be defined by a single ‘group’. In Britain, the layers of identity that influence beliefs,
attitudes and actions include gender, colour, faith, locality, region, family, language,
class, ethnicity and so forth. On top of these layers come those shaped by experi-
ences as a child, in school and as an adult; individual responses can never be identi-
cal to anyone else’s. Matthew Bradshaw recently wrote of an exchange he had with
his university tutor while a student. On being puzzled about the existence of two appar-
ently contradictory views on Oliver Cromwell, the tutor replied ‘Oliver Cromwell was
human’. Perhaps we should not be asking our pupils to choose between Cromwell
as ‘hero’ and ‘villain’: perhaps we should allow them to consider the possibility that he
was both (Bradshaw 2009).
The challenge for the historian – and for the history teacher and student – is to
understand how all this complexity might speak to bigger issues. It is not generally
possible nor, on the whole, desirable, for historians to operate at an individual or even
a group level. Biographers do, of course, as do those historians who focus on a single
town, village or family. But generally speaking, historians are more interested in mak-
ing bigger claims about the past, generating the challenge of how to reconcile the ten-
sion between diversity and the need for generalizations. Box 7.4 provides one way of
exploring this tension with Key Stage 3 pupils.
72 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
understand that the world can be thought about in many different ways
and that there is nothing necessary or ‘natural’ about the way ‘we’ see things
now. Past actors lived in mental worlds that were differently structured from
ours.
(2008)
The sorts of misunderstandings that pupils are likely to have about causation are sum-
marized in Box 7.5. Any of these misunderstandings could restrict pupils’ progression
in the way they think about causation. Underpinning several of these misunderstand-
ings is the notion that a cause is a particular ‘thing’, whereas in fact, causes are relation-
ships between ‘things’. For example, the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand
was not, by itself, a cause of World War I; in isolation, it would certainly have triggered
some kind of response but that may have been restricted to the imprisonment or exe-
cution of Gavrillo Princip. That it led to war was the result of the causal relationship
between it and other factors, including Serbian nationalism and Austrian’s relation-
ship with Germany. Thus, causes are not causes in isolation: they only become causes
when they interact with other causes, whether intentional or contextual. Exploring
causes in this way takes us back to those early ideas about causation in the first national
curriculum because pupils will be forced to consider multiple causes and the connec-
tions between them, which in turn open up the possibility of the relative importance
of causes.
74 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
(what if?) questions can be helpful when discussing the relative importance of causes
and causal relationships. A simple way to do this is for teachers to provide a list of
causes (perhaps on cards) and ask pupils which one(s) might be removed in order to
prevent the event happening (for example: ‘What if Harold’s troops had not been tired
when they arrived at Hastings?’).
All of these strategies help pupils to see that causal relationships are not linear and
that events happen because of a tangled web of causes all interacting with each other.
Many of the strategies outlined above would be helpful for exploring complex causal
relationships and a good old-fashioned spider diagram is not a bad place to start,
either. Woodcock (2005) also uses visual aids to demonstrate that causes neither occur
sequentially, each bumping into the other until the event happens, nor that all causes
are of equal importance (see Box 7.6).
to pupils and argues that understanding of this language in itself helps pupils to
think about causation in particular ways, i.e. that the ‘linguistic’ really does release the
‘conceptual’ (Box 7.7).
Our department now believes that the consequences of a chain of events generally
need to be shown first. This helps to focus the mind on what they are explaining
the causes of. Without understanding the importance of the Nazi war machine
78 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
and the Holocaust, for example, the relevance of understanding Hitler’s rise to
power seems vague. Again, pupils need to feel the need to build an argument if
they are to attempt true historical explanation.
(Clark 2001: 27)
graph, wrote ‘I expected progress to be a straight line but it isn’t, it goes up and down’
(Barnes 2002:12).
Finally, the language of change is itself challenging. Changes may take place in
many aspects of the historical past – political, cultural, social, technological – and the
relationship between them is often difficult and intellectually challenging to unpick
(Lee and Shemilt 2004). Rachel Foster (Foster 2008) set out a six-lesson enquiry on
the American civil rights movement which sought to problematize change and con-
tinuity for a Year 9 group. Foster worried that the conventional approach to teaching
saw black Americans as victims of Reconstruction and the era of the Jim Crow laws
who ‘passively waited for a “Great Leader” to deliver them’. Foster recognized that
historians themselves use the idea of change as a metaphor for describing historical
processes, and she spent some time trying to find a metaphor which her pupils could
use, before finally coming up with the idea of a car journey. Pupils were asked to sug-
gest factors which could speed up or slow down a journey and these ideas were used
to shape an investigation of things which could affect the ‘speed, rate, nature and
direction of change’. This done, pupils began to design and produce their own maps
of the car journey between the end of the Civil War and the 1960s, with pupils puzzling
about how to depict white violence on their road maps. Pupils became increasingly
inventive in their use of metaphors on the road map. Although ‘many pupils were not
able to translate their visual and oral ideas into writing’, the activity enabled pupils to
understand the complexity of change and the extent to which the way it is described is
one of the challenges for historians (Foster 2008:7).
can still be, often handled as a verb rather than a noun. Thus, teachers believed they
were ‘doing interpretations’ when, in fact, pupils were interpreting evidence for them-
selves and engaged in enquiry and using evidence – separate strands of historical con-
cepts and processes in any version of the national curriculum since its inception. The
popular enquiry question ‘Was Oliver Cromwell a hero or a villain?’ is a case in point.
Often billed as an ‘interpretation’ question by teachers, it is more likely to take pupils
back to contemporary evidence (Mastin and Wallace 2006) and would need rephras-
ing as ‘Why has Oliver Cromwell been seen as both a hero and a villain by historians?’
in order to give it a tighter ‘interpretations’ focus. The confusion is understandable
given the close relationship between interpretations and evidence, not least because
in order to evaluate an interpretation it would be prudent to consider the evidence
used to inform it. To engage properly in ‘interpretations’, however, the focus should
be on analysing interpretations produced some time after the event, rather than on the
production of an interpretation by pupils. An interpretation might include historians’
accounts but it could (and should) also embrace other, more popular forms of history
including historical fiction, films, songs and documentaries as well as pictures and
historic sites such as museums and palaces.
It is important for pupils to understand how historical interpretations arise
because to understand the nature of interpretations is to understand the nature of
history: history is interpretation. That is not to say that any one interpretation of the
past is as good as another, however, and there are grounds on which to judge the rela-
tive value of another interpretation of the past, including the way in which evidence
is handled, the way in which it accords or conflicts with other accounts, the relation-
ship with established fact and the internal consistency of the argument. A study of
historical interpretations should aim to move pupils ‘beyond a view that “anything
goes” and towards an understanding of how the validity of claims about the past can
be assessed’ (Chapman 2010:99). Nevertheless, history is constructed: it exists only
because someone saw fit to marshal and analyse evidence in order to answer particular
questions about the past and therefore understanding the process of this construction
is central to understanding what history is. In addition, there are further reasons to
study interpretations beyond the subject itself: it could be argued that understanding
both that the past itself is open to particular uses and that any claims that people make,
whether about history or something else, can and should be evaluated in terms of
their evidential base and their underlying purposes, are extremely helpful skills or
dispositions for the ‘critical citizen’ (Wrenn 1999).
Given what is known about pupils’ understanding in this area, teachers’ aims can
and should be defined with some precision: pupils need to consider how interpreta-
tions differ, why they differ and whether one interpretation is better than another. How
interpretations differ is the most straightforward, though a vital step along the way.
Why they differ requires a substantial step up. Comparing and evaluating competing
interpretations might be illuminated by asking questions about, first, their evidential
base and second, about the ‘baggage’ of the historian (Howells 2005) or what Carr
called ‘the bees he has in his bonnet’ (Carr 1961: 23). It should be clear at this stage
that even the point of addressing why interpretations differ and whether one is better
than the other will elude pupils if they persist in seeing the past as fixed and capable
of yielding only one true ‘story’. In the light of both the theoretical basis for studying
82 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
over time given that ‘no one interpretation…dominates any one era’ and that ‘histo-
rians are not Pavlovian dogs responding to world conditions in predictable ways’.
Nevertheless, one of the factors shaping any interpretation is, to a lesser or greater
extent, the time in which she or he is writing and Howells (2005) helpfully provides
some questions which tackle interpretations in the long term in ways that might do
justice to the complexity of the issue (see Box 7.8).
Chapman’s work on assumptions is also illuminating here: once pupils are trained
to spot the underlying assumptions of an account, they are better equipped to critique
it (Chapman 2006). Put simply, the approach involves pupils identifying a claim made
by the historian (e.g. Gellately’s claim that there were very few secret police in Nazi
Germany), the assumption underlying it (this was known at the time) and the conclu-
sion that the historian therefore draws (that people were not afraid of secret police
surveillance). By analysing – and evaluating – the underlying assumption, it might be
more possible for the pupils to evaluate the conclusion. In Gellately’s case, for exam-
ple, pupils might challenge the assumption that people did know this at the time (after
all, there’s a reason they were called secret police) and therefore challenge the basis for
one of Gellately’s claims (Chapman 2006). This approach helps to overcome another
kind of ‘dead end’ in pupils’ thinking, what Chapman refers to as the ‘ “schools of
history” approach…[which] usually results, as many examiners know, in garbled
versions of the same summaries coming back to haunt us in pupil answers’ (2006: 12).
Pupils need to know enough about a topic to engage seriously in analysis of it, and
this is as true for historical interpretations as for any other concept. Unless knowledge
about the topic is reasonably secure, it is unfair to expect pupils to engage seriously
in understanding the different ways it has been interpreted. However, as we began
to explore above, the time in which the interpretation was created may well also be
of importance, creating additional challenge for pupils. Jane Card calls this ‘double
vision’ (Card 2004) and her example of a Victorian painting of Lady Jane Grey’s
execution is apposite: pupils need to know both about the sixteenth and nineteenth
centuries in order to make proper sense of the painting. Work on King John has also
explored the impact of the context of the interpreter (Banham 2000). In many cases,
however, the interpretation is likely to be relatively modern and it may be knowledge
of a genre which is just as important, for example knowledge of how and why films or
computer games are made.
84 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
Several of the schools we visited use film as a way of tackling historical interpreta-
tions and there are a number of reasons why it is important to explore a range of popu-
lar interpretations as well as more traditional historians’ accounts, the most important
of which is that pupils are more likely to encounter these popular forms outside school
than they are to pick up a history book. Using film can also be highly engaging, provid-
ing pupils with the kinds of alternative forms of communication they enjoy. Banham
and Hall’s work on J.F. Kennedy provides a good example of how an enquiry can
focus on a single film very profitably (2003; see also Klein 2008) and Brown and
Wrenn’s work notes that with proper planning and effective teaching, pupils in Year 6
can compare and evaluate the different treatment of Alexander the Great by a modern
historian and the filmmaker Oliver Stone (Brown and Wrenn 2005).
Assessment of pupils’ understanding of interpretations often generates formulaic
answers which either summarize the views of different ‘schools’ of history or make
spurious claims about the value of one interpretation over another based on miscon-
strued or at best undeveloped ideas about the bias of historians. More valid assessment
will enable pupils to explore the ways in which the past has been interpreted differ-
ently, the reasons for these differences and, if appropriate, some evaluation of the
interpretations themselves. That is not to say that activities focused on spotting ‘prob-
lems’ in an interpretation are always well conceived. Commercial films are unlikely
to demonstrate historical integrity and a focus on ‘what they got wrong’ as an end in
itself is fairly pointless. More interesting are the ways that the film-maker has cherry
picked from the past, the reasons for doing do and the success of the result in terms of
constructing a convincing narrative. Therefore, the particular outcomes of any activity
may depend on the nature of the interpretations themselves as well as the progression
that a department has built into its long-term planning.
Significance
History teaching has always been concerned with significance – with teaching young
people about significant events and people from the past. However, it is only in recent
years that the concept of ‘historical significance’ has received explicit attention in
research and professional practice. This recent prominence might be explained by
a growing need to ‘sell’ history to pupils as important or relevant (Hunt 2000) or
by a concern with helping pupils to broaden their perspective on the past, though it
may also have grown out of work on historical interpretation which seeks to challenge
and extend pupils’ thinking about the nature of historical judgements. The position of
significance in this chapter, alongside interpretations, underlines its status as a ‘meta-
concept’ (Counsell 2004): because one task for history teachers is to explore the sig-
nificance of causes or changes or diversity, the idea of significance sits above these
concepts and draws on any of them. Crucially, significance, rather like diversity, is not
about content choice: a teacher cannot claim to have ‘done’ significance by choosing
to teach about aspects of the past they believe to have been significant. Instead, the
emphasis is on significance as a judgement made at the time, in subsequent periods
or, most commonly, today, with the recognition that significance is not fixed and is
not a property of a person, event or development itself. The Great Fire of London
cannot be characterized as ‘significant’ per se: it is significant within a study of urban
THE KEY CONCEPTS OF HISTORY TEACHING 85
development but less so in the context of political organization (Lee and Shemilt
2004). Judgements about significance are also often highly personal: significance to
one person is not significance to another and this depends on many factors, from our
own preoccupations and knowledge to the questions being asked and context in which
judgements are made. Hence, significance is interpretation and is relative, contingent
and shifting (Lomas 1990).
The way progression in pupils’ understanding of significance is currently under-
stood reflects these assumptions, but significance is also frequently embedded in cur-
riculum guidance and syllabi. In such documents, significance is a taken for granted
assumption underpinning the selection of content. One purpose of successful his-
tory teaching is to subject these assumptions to scrutiny. A starting point might be
for pupils to use explicit criteria to make their own judgements about what is sig-
nificant or the extent of its significance; later, pupils might devise and use their own
criteria. At a more sophisticated level still, activities might help pupils to recognize
that historians’ judgements about significance change according to the question being
asked, the criteria being used and the circumstances in which that judgement itself
was made. Despite this admittedly complex understanding, teachers should not lose
sight of the power of the concept to illuminate why it is that studying the past matters,
even if in different ways to different people. As Brown and Woodcock write (2009:
6), ‘significance is about making meaning of the past and it’s also about why people
care, or have cared, about the past’ [emphasis added]. While the ambition to explore
the different and changing ways that significance has been attributed to particular
people, events and developments in the past is a worthy one, this should not distract
too much from a more immediately pressing and useful ambition: that pupils con-
sider the value of what they are learning. Consequently, in what follows, emphasis is
placed on earlier stages of thinking about significance which involve pupils making
their own judgements about significance as a powerful way to demonstrate history’s
importance.
Dawson’s criteria that Year 7 might use (from a Year 7 textbook – Dawson 2003: 31)
A person might be deemed significant if she/he:
Changed events at the time they lived
Improved lots of lives or made them worse
Changed people’s ideas
Had a long-lasting impact on their country or on the world
Had been a really good/bad example to people of how to live
Box 7.9 summarizes some of the different schemes of criteria that have been sug-
gested as ways of supporting pupils’ thinking about significance. Some are relatively
context-specific – Phillips, for example, devised his set of criteria for the Great War
– and none claim to be definitive. Counsell’s five ‘Rs’ were devised with specific refer-
ence to the term ‘historical’ which accompanies significance in the national curriculum
and she uses her criterion of ‘revealing’, for example, to illuminate one of the reasons
that Josephine Butler might be deemed historically significant. All of the schemes in
Box 7.9 are, in some way or another, questionable: it could be argued that the criterion
of ‘revealing’ provides little basis from which to judge relative significance, because
much in the past can be revealing of attitudes and values in the past and Dawson’s
inclusion of a criterion that to provide a model of how to live one’s life is a possible rea-
son to be deemed significant might be queried by some. But to quibble with the partic-
ular criteria is to miss the point: none of them was intended to be deployed whole and
each provides a starting point rather than a definitive list. What these criteria can do
is demonstrate that significance can be about more than the impact of something on
today which, though critically important, is not the only way to assess significance. As
Counsell argues (2004a), the Tolpuddle Martyrs did little to affect us directly today,
but that does not mean that they should be consigned to the scrapheap of history.
It is possible to use the discussion above to offer some specific guidance about the
ways in which teachers might develop pupils’ understandings of significance. Four
strategies seem particularly promising. In the first, teachers ask pupils to decide why
something or someone is deemed to be significant. The challenge is not to decide
whether a particular aspect of the past is significant, but rather to explore why it is
commonly agreed to be so. This might include trying to discern the kinds of criteria
that have been used by others to ascribe significance to an aspect of the past, and the
examples in Box 7.10 draw widely on different attributions of significance – by come-
dians, governments, popular memory and historians. In a second strategy, pupils might
be asked to decide whether an event or person is significant, or to judge the extent of the
significance. Pupils might be asked whether and why Darwin is worth knowing about,
how significant the Thirty Years War was, or how far Henry VIII’s ‘break with Rome’
THE KEY CONCEPTS OF HISTORY TEACHING 87
actually changed lives. A third strategy might be to ask pupils to compare the signifi-
cance of historical events, either events which are close in time or context, or events
which require considerable breadth of knowledge. For example, pupils might be asked
whether the siege of Lucknow or the massacre at Amritsar was more significant, or
whether the Battle of the Somme or the Battle of Waterloo was more significant. A
variant might be to ask pupils what three things pupils should learn about the seven-
teenth century or the westward expansion of American settlers. Finally, pupils might
study how judgements about significance have changed over time, being asked to think
about why no one appeared to bother much about a given event until recently, or why
some historical events once considered important are now rarely studied.
Box 7.10 Possible enquiry questions and activities which help pupils to develop an
understanding of significance
Of course, a single topic might lend itself to several of these approaches. Allsop’s
work on the song ‘We didn’t start the fire’ by Billy Joel (Allsop 2010) addresses – or
potentially addresses – all four. He asked pupils to discern the criteria used by Joel to
identify 118 events, people and inventions referred to in the song and then to apply
these criteria to the last twenty years in order to select events, people and inventions
which would bring the song up to date. There is plenty of scope here for pupils to
modify and change Joel’s criteria themselves and to challenge his judgements for the
earlier period by considering, for example, how a British perspective would have gen-
erated different choices, or by exploring how his rock star status or the nature of the
song itself influenced the choices made. At this point, work on significance starts to
relate to historical interpretation, which is inevitable when reaching higher levels of
thinking in which the relative nature of significance is explored.
Our final example brings us back to our core message, which is to use significance
as a way to consider the value of studying the past. In a six-lesson enquiry about
Darwin, already described briefly in Chapter 1 (Box 1.1), a decision to focus on sig-
nificance generated a number of possible enquiry questions. Three of them covered
similar ground to those contained in Counsell’s five ‘R’s: did Darwin’s dangerous idea
change the world, was Charles Darwin a remarkable man, and what can a study of
Charles Darwin tell us about the nineteenth century? Two of them required pupils to
consider why Darwin is regarded as significant: what’s so special about Charles Darwin,
and what should everyone know about Charles Darwin? The final two addressed the
88 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
Conclusion
This chapter explores the ways in which pupils understand, describe, explain
and interpret the past through the lens of key, or second-order, concepts. These
concepts – change, continuity, cause and consequence, diversity, empathy, interpre-
tation and significance – transform history from a body of knowledge to a form of
knowledge, providing prisms through which to view the past. To these we must add
evidence: understanding the nature of historical evidence is a conceptual issue, not
a skill, and is arguably the most fundamental of all the concepts in helping pupils
understand what history is. History is one of the only subjects with concepts that are
‘content-free’ and in this sense they have an integrity and purity that is part of what
makes history so distinctive, engaging and challenging. These key concepts are not
fixed – they will continue to evolve, as will our understanding of the way pupils make
sense of them – but they must continue to sit side by side with the content knowledge
of history in all history curricula if we are to take forward the considerable progress
made since the 1970s in transforming history into a dynamic, engaging and suitably
challenging subject.
8
Communicating and assessing history
The past is out of reach. Our understandings of it are always partial and restricted: restricted
by what evidence we have and what perspectives we adopt. Historians have accepted as a
commonplace that while some things are incontrovertible – no account of the past can accept-
ably declare the Saxons the winners of the Battle of Hastings, nor the French the victors of
Waterloo – the meanings of the past are subject to endless interpretation and reinterpretation:
what it meant, for example, for the Saxons to lose at Hastings in terms of the politics of the
post-Conquest elite, or the longer term development of language, culture, social institutions
and trading routes, are questions for historians to debate endlessly.These debates are coloured
by the evidence available, the weight given to different sorts of evidence, the nature of the
questions historians pose of that evidence and the assumptions which are made about the
social practices and belief systems of the people being studied. This is true both of academic
history and of history in schools: in both, there is a need for accuracy in the deployment of
acknowledged fact, but both are also about processes of meaning-making and communica-
tion. For all these reasons, knowledge and ideas about the past must be tested and com-
pared, brought into the open – communicated – so that they can be evaluated and assessed.
Communicating and assessing history are integral to developing knowledge about the past
in schools.
understanding, but in practice they are closely intertwined. In this chapter we explore
these modes both separately and together to think about the ways in which they can
shape teaching and learning.
History classrooms are both linguistically rich and linguistically dense. Teacher
talk, questioning, pupil responses, textbooks, evidence, written texts all provide modes
through which the past is communicated to pupils and through which they present
their understandings of the past. In classrooms we find registers – registers of the
present, through which teachers establish some points of contact with pupils and
pupils communicate with each other, registers of the past which – to some extent –
pupils need to master in order to make sense of the past, and the registers of History
as a discipline – the language of time, change and causation which historians use fre-
quently. Individual words and expressions crop up and are deployed differently in
these different registers: language changes and shifts its meaning. Words like ‘revolu-
tion’ meant something very different in the sixteenth century from their later meaning
in the eighteenth, nineteenth and twentieth centuries; words like ‘monarchy’, ‘empire’
and ‘parliament’ shift their meaning in different historical periods; the word ‘period’
has an abstract and difficult meaning, but also – for pupils – an everyday meaning
which might refer to a ‘lesson’. Some words move rapidly between concrete and
abstract: the word ‘free’ had a specific, often technical meaning to a Roman citizen and
a quite different meaning to a contemporary teenager; the word ‘crown’ is an object
worn by a ‘monarch’ in some ‘periods’, an abstract term referring to the powers of the
‘monarch’ and a dental treatment. Words in all these cases signify meanings which
lie beyond the words themselves. What all this means is that the four communicative
modes – talking, listening, reading and writing – are deployed in different ways both
to develop pupil understandings of the past (lower case ‘history’) and their facility in
communicating their grasp of historical thinking and reasoning (upper case ‘History’).
Given the complexity of this, images, whether still or moving, diagrams and charts
have been supports to the main purpose of generating linguistically mediated under-
standings of the past. The range is huge, from contemporary visual sources to heuristic
diagrams which ‘represent’ an abstract historical idea: the pyramid of authority and
obligation in feudal England, or the simplified map of the ‘triangular trade’ in slaves
and sugar in the eighteenth century, for example. The availability of digital resources
via the internet opens up the possibility of accessing a much broader range of primary
and secondary resources than was previously possible, and web 2.0 technologies cre-
ate the possibility for thinking in more creative ways about the communication of his-
tory in school. However, in many respects extending the communicative range to the
visual and symbolic, although intended to simplify the processes of communication,
can add a further layer of complexity. The relationships between the different ways
teachers and pupils communicate in history classrooms need some careful thought.
Talk is perhaps the principal way in which teachers mediate the past for their
pupils: teachers narrate, explain, and ask questions, offer conclusions and summaries.
Talk is also one of the principal ways in which pupils articulate their own responses
to the past: pupils talk to teachers and to each other, answering questions and advanc-
ing ideas. Whole-class question and answer, in which teachers ask questions and
individual pupils answer, remains a staple of history teaching as much as of other sub-
jects. For all its dominance, this classroom technique has its sharp critics as a tool for
C O M M U N I C AT I N G A N D A S S E S S I N G H I S T O R Y 91
class debates which are structured to ensure maximum participation and historical
rigour (e.g. see Luff 2001; Hammond 2002), enact role-plays and teach each other.
Underpinning all such activities is a belief that pupils learn through exploratory talk
and that through the sharing of ideas, understandings are made, shaped and refined.
History is frequently regarded as one of the two or three subjects which make the
most extensive reading demands on pupils. Principally, there are three reading activi-
ties which are found regularly in lessons: pupils read questions which are set by their
teachers and to which they must respond, drawing on teacher exposition or texts; they
read secondary textbook accounts of the problem or situation, either alone or through
some form of reading aloud; and they read versions of primary historical sources as a
basis for making some form of (normally) written response. The extent to which read-
ing is used creatively to promote historical thinking – and, vice versa, to which history
is used to support and extend literacy – is more problematic. Most reading in his-
tory lessons is ‘transactional’, focused on the extraction of information for subsequent
evaluation from relatively short texts. This is despite the many potential reasons for
reading in history that exist. Consider these A level reading tasks, for example (based
on Kitson 2003):
• Read pages 24–27 and make a timeline of the key events of Hitler’s rise to power.
• Read Chapter 3 and make notes on Nazi policies towards women.
• Read Gellately’s article and summarize his argument about the German people
and the Gestapo.
• Read the extracts from Kershaw and Fest and note the similarities and differences
in their views about Hitler’s long-term ambitions.
• Select a relevant book in the library to supplement your existing knowledge about
the Police State.
In these examples, there is reading for basic factual information, reading for a sense
of chronology, reading for interpretation/argument, reading for comparison and read-
ing to expand existing knowledge. We would argue that reading tasks become much
more purposeful when the reasons behind them are made clear and the nature of any
scaffolding or activity is related to that purpose. In terms of the tasks above, it is likely
that pupils would want detailed notes for the first two, summaries for the next two and
much briefer notes for the last (or even annotations of existing notes). Implicit in all
this is the notion of progression. The type of reading that is appropriate at any given
time is determined by the types of reading already completed. It would be unwise to
set a piece of complex ‘academic’ writing before the student has gained a firm grasp of
the topic through more accessible reading and class discussion.
Often, source material is extensively rewritten and simplified in order to make it
accessible to readers, which, though at times a necessity, can remove the drama from
a text and make it less inviting to read (see Box 10.3, Chapter 10). We argue that pupil
motivation is a critical factor in opening up texts and we agree with Counsell (2003a)
when she challenges a misconception that to read a text means to understand every
word in it (and thereby spending much time with a dictionary or a glossary). Instead,
Counsell wants pupils to see texts more holistically: ‘By focusing on the text [rather
C O M M U N I C AT I N G A N D A S S E S S I N G H I S T O R Y 93
than on the individual words], and on the text as window into the word, we can get a
deeper return’ (Counsell 2003a: 3) and, not surprisingly, has encouraged the reading of
lengthier texts and questioned the likelihood of anyone being motivated to read gobbets.
Counsell exemplified this in a series of examples for Year 7 in 2004 where she draws on
a range of techniques to encourage pupils to read lengthy extracts by the Roman poet
Horace, by the modern writer of children’s books, Kevin Crossley-Holland or by the
historian Eileen Power. In each example, an entire sequence of lessons is built around
a text and Counsell uses powerful ways to motivate pupils to read, and to read for
much more than information. So Eileen Power provides pupils with a model of shaping
and styling an argument, Crossley-Holland provides an insight into writing historical
fiction (as well as an insight into the impact of change in the sixteenth century) and
Horace provides an opportunity to question an historical source and extract anything
of historical value from it. Similarly, Woolley explores ways to use a Thomas Hardy
short story as a foundation to a study of the nineteenth century. By using a range of
DARTs activities (Directed Activities Related to Text) – many examples of which
remain highly popular and effective – she made a lengthy text, used in a lower achieving
Year 8 class, accessible and engaging. For example, she arranged pupils into groups to
hunt through the text for examples about particular themes such as crime and punish-
ment; pupils used a layers of inference chart to capture information, inferences and
questions about the text and she used the text as a starting point for pupils’ hypotheses
(Woolley 2003). Indeed, not only did the use of The Withered Arm engage pupils but it
made the rest of the topic engaging too, because pupils were testing out the hypotheses
made from Hardy in future lessons. Much of this boils down to a basic but vital mes-
sage: make sure that the reason to read is made explicit, the text itself is engaging and
the activities designed to motivate and support the reading are effective.
Oscar Wilde once said, ‘Any fool can make history. It takes a genius to write it.’ A
substantial proportion of time in history lessons is spent writing and there is evidence
to suggest it is one of the aspects pupils find most difficult and least enjoyable (Haydn
2005). The nature of the writing carried out in history lessons differs to some extent
across key stages, but the range is likely to include what Coffin (2006) describes as
‘recording genres’ and the more challenging ‘explaining and arguing genres’. Pupils
might complete charts, answer comprehension-type questions, write essays or news-
paper reports, put together a TV documentary or create a piece of historical fic-
tion: the potential range of writing tasks is extremely wide. Despite this, Peter John’s
research suggested that much pupil writing required short answers and Coffin finds
that historical recount – a form of recording – predominates above the construction
of more challenging historical accounts. Although Coffin’s analysis of classroom work
suggests that pupils’ writing – and the talking on which it depends – does demonstrate
increasing abstraction and a shift from reliance on time as the main organizing factor
of text, as students move through the genres, she argues that much remains at the level
of recording rather than aspiring to develop argumentative skills. She argues that ‘if
teachers have precise labels for distinguishing genres, as well as a way of talking about
the kinds of meanings that different genres foreground and the lexical and grammati-
cal resources for expressing those meanings, then they are in a strong position to pro-
vide explicit guidance to students in their reading and writing of historical discourse’
(Coffin 2006: 92).
94 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
Coffin’s argument – that pupils would benefit from greater support in learn-
ing how to write in particular ways depending on the genre – makes a great deal of
sense. Many history teachers have embraced ways of supporting pupils in writing
analytically – usually to enable them to write a fairly traditional (and often impressive)
essay – by providing various supporting mechanisms such as charts, card sorts, writing
frames and so forth (see, for example, Counsell 1997). The writing of historical fiction
has also received much attention in recent years (see, for example, Martin and Brooke
2002 and Hillyard 2010) and again the emphasis has been on understanding the
structure and defining characteristics of this type of writing, using models and whole
sequences of strategies to enable pupils to write compelling stories which demonstrate
a degree of empathy with the past and a firm grasp of period detail. What both these
types of writing – analytical pieces of extended writing and historical fiction – have in
common is a requirement to devote time to developing pupils’ understanding of what
the genre requires and developing their skill and confidence to write in these particular
ways. In our experience, especially at Key Stages 3 and 4, but also at A level, writing is
often something that is taken for granted, something that just ‘happens’ when pupils
have learnt what they are to write about. At Key Stage 3, this is partly because of a
shortage of time: with only a lesson a week in most schools, and a lot of history to teach,
it can be hard to prioritize teaching pupils how to write in particular ways. Teaching
history through substantial enquiries lasting several lessons (possibly a half term), as
outlined in Chapter 6, can help teachers find a way through here because time (per-
haps a lesson or even two) can be built into the enquiry to produce a good quality
outcome whether written, visual or oral. This tends to happen more naturally at A level
and to some extent at GCSE too: written outcomes are set as a way of pulling together
sequences of lessons. Of course, writing is not only about final outcomes – pupils will
write in order to record information or to practise particular skills in most lessons –
and nor is it only about writing at length, but in order for pupils to shine at writing in
Coffin’s ‘explaining and arguing genres’, they need to be taught how to do so.
chosen to carry a meaning. A sign is a form (a signifier) which is fused with a meaning
(that which is signified). A white cloth may be a sheet, or a flag of surrender; a white
cloth with a red cross a St George flag, a Crusader banner or a Red Cross flag. For
semioticians, understanding – or expressing meaning – is a process of sign-making,
and ‘the sign-maker uses existing materials to make a sign’ (Kress et al. 2001: 7); in
the same way, pupils in history lessons use existing materials – from teacher talk, from
textbooks, from documentary or other sources – to produce their own sign, the prod-
uct of their learning. In a history lesson taught to Year 9 (13-year-olds) examining the
challenging question of what was the ‘key turning point’ of World War II, the teacher
handed out a worksheet with some short extracts from history textbooks. He projected
onto a whiteboard screen a single slide which incorporated a series of signs – a Spitfire,
a searchlight scanning the sky, a landing craft, a Russian tank and so on: the images
were ‘signs’ which signified events in World War II. These signs were signifiers for
events – the Battle of Britain, the Blitz, the siege of Stalingrad, D-Day – which carried
meaning in the context of the lesson. Over the images he played mp3 extracts from two
Churchill speeches – ‘We shall fight them on the beaches’ (May 1940) and the ‘End of
the beginning’ speech (November 1942). In the lesson, pupils were asked to translate
these signifiers into patterns of meaning to communicate their understanding of the
topic. This sort of engagement is not atypical: pupils are required to master a set of
signifiers – whether presented visually or orally (‘the monarchy’, ‘revolution’) – into
communicative forms which convey their understanding of the past.
Understanding and communicating about the past pose obvious semiotic as well
as cognitive challenges: resources act as signifiers for complex constellations of histori-
cal ideas. Historical sources provide fertile grounds for sign-making. Frequently this
is obvious. The so-called Ditchley portrait of Elizabeth I was painted in about 1592
by Marcus Gheeraerts, and is widely used in classrooms. It is not merely a representa-
tion of the queen. It was commissioned by Sir Henry Lee of Ditchley in Oxfordshire,
and the queen stands on a map of England with one foot at rest near Lee’s estate.
The portrait is a lavish collection of signs: it celebrates Elizabeth’s divine powers. A
jewelled heavenly sphere hangs from the queen’s left ear, signifying her command
over earth and sky. The sphere had been Lee’s emblem when he fought as Elizabeth’s
champion in the annual Accession Day tilts. The background of the portrait appears
odd – it is split between blue, clear sky on the left, and a threatening stormy sky on the
right, indicating the message of royal authority over the forces of nature themselves. A
widely reproduced print from 1650 purports to show the execution of King Charles
I in January 1649. A large crowd is assembled before the Banqueting House. On the
scaffold, the executioner holds aloft the head of the king. In the foreground, some of
the crowd are shown having fainted. The print is often used in textbooks and class-
rooms as a (quasi-photographic) representation of this iconic event in English history.
At the top of the picture, the king’s torso – his head still attached – appears in a small
panel, around which clouds swirl and the heavens open, welcoming Charles, king and
martyr: the picture is a sign which carries assumptions about the event and its signifi-
cance for royalists. Some of the significance of both these images is inaccessible to us
because we do not understand the signifier in the context of the signification system
of the period. In some lessons, such images might be used as an illustration, which
robs them of their potential to open up wider understandings about the world view
96 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
of artists and audience. History classrooms become richer when looked at through
multimodal lenses and when it is accepted that learners are routinely asked to place
their own understandings of signs and signification alongside signification systems
from the past. Fifteenth- and sixteenth-century paintings from contexts as far apart
as Tudor London, Renaissance Florence and Mughal India were dense with significa-
tion and iconography. In the classroom, work can be done to use understandings of
this iconography to access value systems of the past. For young people used to read-
ing similarly complex images of celebrities who have carefully positioned their image
through choice of pose, clothing, accessories and settings this can be very powerful, as
two semiotic systems meet.
There are a number of practical consequences of adopting a multimodal approach
to understanding interactions in the history classroom. First, any historical topic in the
classroom involves the understanding of a series of linguistic, visual, textual and digital
signs. History teachers have become adept at deploying linguistic signs, the complex
and rich, often subtly shifting meanings of concepts, concepts deployed in different
ways in different periods and often in different ways in the same period (Husbands
1996). Less attention has been given to multimodal signs in the history classroom, to
the complexities of unpacking visual and aural signs in historical material. But doing so
enables pupils and teachers to think differently about the ways these signs operate and
to consider the relationships between them. Secondly, pupils bring to their work a sem-
iotic system which both helps, because of the facility in understanding sign systems,
and hinders, because of the cultural and temporal specificity of this sign system. One
of the creative challenges for the history teacher is the mediation between the cultural
references which underpin that being studied, and the cultural references of learners.
Multimodal approaches also open up thinking about the range of signs and sign
systems to which pupils can be exposed in the course of their historical learning, and
make us think more rigorously about the relationships between linguistic modes and
non-linguistic modes. Although it has not been unusual to show a film extract as part
of a unit of work on history, systematic thought has frequently not been given to
the ways in which young people might use the film in developing their own under-
standings. Given the range of communicative modes available at the beginning of the
twenty-first century, it would be appropriate to consider the ways in which young
people are asked to represent their understandings of history in particular commu-
nicative contexts, and to think systematically about the relationship between writing,
which has a central place in understanding and representing complex ideas, and its
functions in a variety of settings.
lessons; they make assessments of pupils’ progress over a period of time and they make
assessments of pupils’ level of attainment, which are reported to other audiences. And
this teacher assessment activity is framed by a wider infrastructure of assessment: the
frameworks of assessment provided by the national curriculum, and the patterns of
assessment devised by external awarding and examining bodies. All of these activities
involve the exercise of judgement about the qualities of contributions and all involve
communication about these judgements to pupils and others. In recent years, aca-
demics and policy-makers have worried about the relationships between the different
functions which assessment serves in these different activities. There have been exten-
sive pressures to contextualize assessment. For example, the English Qualifications and
Curriculum Authority urged in relation to primary teaching that judgements should
take into account ‘strengths and weaknesses in performance across a range of con-
texts and over a period of time, rather than focusing on a single piece of work’ (QCA
2007c). There has been interest in the transparency of assessment to aid comparisons
across schools and to enable parents to ‘benchmark’ their child’s performance, by
providing apparently clear statements of expectation in, for example, the national cur-
riculum ‘level descriptors’ within the Attainment Target, or the exceptionally detailed
mark schemes published by examining bodies (Box 8.1). Perhaps most radically there
has been emphasis placed on the role of formative assessment carried out in every-
day classroom practices so that teachers can base moment-to-moment decisions they
make about the lesson and future lessons on evidence about pupil learning (Black and
Wiliam 1998). All of these principles are sound: assessment should be contextualized,
transparent and grounded in classroom practice, but it is equally important to note
that assessment activities do inevitably involve the exercise and communication of
judgement.
The best assessment practices are embedded in realistic contexts: the best way to
assess whether someone can ride a bicycle is to ask them to ride one. In some subjects,
authentic assessment contexts are easier to establish than in others. Authentic assess-
ment contexts pose some obvious challenges for history teachers: pupils are asked to
demonstrate their understanding of the past at one remove, through oral or written
assessment which is – by definition – inauthentic in context. The ‘authentic’ past is
unrecoverable; understandings of the past are always partial. This challenge of authen-
ticity is a profound one for history teaching: it is relatively easy to ask pupils to provide
the date of the Battle of Waterloo, or to sequence later nineteenth-century American
presidents, but these very simple questions in themselves generate little valid evidence
of a pupil’s historical understanding. Such knowledge may be necessary but it is far
from sufficient. For this reason, assessment in history has sought to become more
authentic through the posing of more challenging questions. Some of these may be
relatively conventional in focus – for example, asking pupils to explain the causes or
consequences of a particular event, or asking them to account for the significance of
a specific action or piece of evidence. Others may be more challenging: for example
asking pupils to consider what alternative courses of action were open to a particular
historical figure or to explore competing interpretations of an event. These tasks derive
their authenticity from the ways in which they require pupils to identify, select, organ-
ize and present relevant knowledge to shape interpretations of an historical event or
episode. However, classrooms also impose inauthenticity on pupil responses because
98 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
of pressures of time or an insistence that some communicative modes are more ‘useful’
for assessment purposes than others. This frequently means that assessment opportu-
nities in history lessons are either trivialized to factual recall questions or formalized to
written work produced under time pressures.
In history teaching, contextualized and authentic assessment is that which asks
pupils to think about their work in context. This can be achieved in a number of ways.
Pupils might be asked to jot down – perhaps on a small whiteboard – their initial think-
ing about a problem before sharing it, so that time to reflect on a causal relationship
or a challenging moral choice facing a historical figure is built in; they might be asked
to think through and propose a hypothesis or generate ideas on the basis of having
read some source material or seen a video. As Barzun and Graff point out, ‘a note is
a first thought’ (Barzun and Graff 1970); in classrooms, this can be modelled. Most
important of all, however, contextualized and authentic assessment needs to be located
in the context of historical enquiries which span sequences of lessons, and the enquiry
itself needs to sustain the assessment focus. The enquiry ‘Why did the Romans come
to Britain?’ generates a series of investigations which are relevant to the explanation
of an action, such as the Roman invasion of 43 CE, but equally rules out of authentic
contextualization a series of different investigations, such as ‘What was Roman Britain
like?’, which may divert the enquiry. Assessment of pupils’ learning in this enquiry is
likely to be developed over a number of tasks, a number of lessons as pupils develop
ideas and present conclusions which help to conclude the enquiry.
It is almost a truism that it is difficult to establish whether a task has been com-
pleted successfully without clear and transparent performance criteria: such criteria
help teachers and learners to understand what success and progress towards it look
like. Assessment practices have increasingly reflected this, but in doing so they con-
front a challenge. In order to set out clear performance criteria, learning targets need
to be atomized with precision. However, in practice, very little learning, or evidence
for learning, presents itself in these atomized ways. This makes transparency in assess-
ment a ferocious technical challenge. The English national curriculum has sought to
resolve this in a number of ways over the twenty years of its existence, with the number
of Attainment Targets varying between different versions of the curriculum. In its cur-
rent form, the national curriculum sets out a single Attainment Target for history. At
Level 5, the level expected of the majority of pupils at the age of 14, the Attainment
Target requires that:
The most powerful motivation for development in assessment in the past decade
has come from ‘assessment for learning’ research (Black and Wiliam 1998). Black
and Wiliam drew on extensive international research to demonstrate that external,
summative assessment was ineffective in promoting improvements in teaching and
the quality of learning. The widespread use of high-stakes testing approaches
appeared to distort learning, to encourage pupil and teacher gaming and to demoralize
learners. In particular, over-emphasis on marks and grades, far from motivating
learners, encouraged them to cultivate tactics and behaviours which produced the
best marks rather than to develop their own learning; as a result, in these circum-
stances learners tended to play safe and to avoid putting themselves into situations
where they might fail – avoiding challenging questions, for example. At the same
time, high-stakes testing tended to encourage teachers to teach to the test, and to
adopt teaching styles which met the needs of testing: an emphasis on short-term
recall, and marks and grades. Finally, repeated emphasis on the importance of testing
and the key focus of assessment demoralized learners, particularly lower attaining
learners. Black and Wiliam outlined a compelling case for assessment for learning,
placing the quality of feedback at the centre of the learning experience. There are
two critical aspects of assessment for learning which history teachers need to grasp.
One is the idea of metacognition and the other that of formative assessment.
Metacognition – effectively the skills of thinking about thinking – equips learners
with the intellectual tools and habits of mind to take responsibility for understand-
ing their own learning (Black et al. 2003: 97). Formative assessment is ‘usually infor-
mal, embedded in all aspects of teaching and learning’ and involves using assessment
techniques – notably questioning – to drive pupils’ thinking, so that the assessment
activities, embedded in teaching, ‘provide information to be used as feedback by
teachers and by their pupils...to modify teaching and learning activities’ (Black et al.
2003: 2). This frequently involves finding ways to involve learners themselves in their
assessment. Box 8.2 provides an example of one approach from an upper school
in Suffolk.
102 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
Where are you now? Shade in a block in each column that best describes where you
are now
Historical Using evidence Communication Personalized
understanding learning
You can analyse You can support You organize your You show
and explain a your answers with work carefully and use independence in
range of historical relevant evidence historical words to the way you work
ideas – causes, explain your ideas
interpretations,
significance,
diversity, change
You are able to You can use You organize your You can work
reflect on a range sources together response to a question independently with
of different ideas to help reach a into clear and well- no extra help
and come to your conclusion or structured paragraphs
own decisions and judgement
conclusions about You can use the You can draw clear and You show that you
the historical idea sources to support balanced conclusions can formulate your
being studied your key arguments own questions and
investigations
You can give You use a range of You collaborate with
reasons why a complex ideas and others and help to
source is useful words accurately direct their learning
and reliable
You can describe You can comment You organize parts You are able to work
the historical idea on how a source fits of your writing clearly independently but
being studied into the period you using historical with occasional
are studying words to explain key guidance
ideas
You carefully select You structure your You can answer key
information from a answers in class questions with your
range of sources discussion linking key own ideas and you
to support your points together and are starting to think
argument using historical words about your own
and ideas questions
You start to think You can reach a You can work well as
about sources as conclusion part of a team
more than just
information – they
may be incomplete
or biased
C O M M U N I C AT I N G A N D A S S E S S I N G H I S T O R Y 103
You use some You can write answers You can work with
relevant examples to questions with short other pupils but
to support your and clear points using you prefer to be
answers historical words directed to particular
tasks
You use some You can answer You can answer
relevant examples questions in questions if you
to support your discussion using have been given
answers historical words and clear guidance
ideas
In history, that is more problematic. A lesson about the nature and extent of change
in nineteenth-century Britain is difficult to assess with a flashcard or post-it note on
the board: to agree that life changed a lot or to assert that it hardly changed at all is
to miss the point entirely when the key learning of the lesson is about the complexity
of change, and its differential impact. Assessment for learning techniques need to be
adapted in ways which advance, rather than divert, subject understanding.
9
Long-term planning: making history
more than the sum of its parts
Arnold Toynbee is now best remembered for his twelve volume analysis of the rise and fall
of civilizations, his comprehensive rebuttal of ‘the dogma that life is just one damned thing
after another’. For Toynbee ‘human affairs do not become intelligible until they are seen as
a whole’. If pupils are to understand that learning history is rather more than accumulat-
ing knowledge about a series of unconnected periods in the historical past, the subject needs
to become more than a sum of its parts: it needs both structure and rationale. Pupils need
organizing ideas and patterns which help to frame understanding and may offer an endur-
ing framework for thinking. In this chapter we explore what these might be in three connected
ways. First, in terms of the overall rationale which might underpin long-term planning; sec-
ond, in terms of the ways pupils might develop a ‘big picture’ of the past and third, in terms
of the ways pupils might make progress in their historical knowledge and understanding.
He was restored on 29 May 1660. When I read this in my encyclopaedia aged – what – 8,
9, I decided this was a good thing as it happened on my birthday and I identified with the
event (how thoughtful of him, I thought). In fact I remember defacing my encyclopaedia
to add 29 May to the regnal year ‘1660’ on the chart of kings and queens. In some way
this got me into history. I remember a novel – again, I would have been about 10 – which
began with the Battle of Worcester and the escape of Prince Charles. I forgot about the
so-and-so, and when we did A level I immediately associated with the bolshy side – the
parliamentarians, then (even better) the Levellers and then (better still) the Diggers. I
realized that this was at odds with my childish sense of May 29 and I decided that the
defeat of the republic was a Bad Thing. It was only at university that I realized what a
duplicitous swindler Charles II was, but it really took Iain Pears’s novel An Instance at
the Fingerpost to finish him off for me – the power of childish misconception.
of any historical period or event. The task of the history teacher is not simply to teach
what happened – one damned thing after another – but to bring pupils to some more
rounded sense of the past which carries meaning.
awarding bodies to make courses profitable. Choice at A level opens up again, though
it is still usually limited to tried and tested historical content. It is therefore only at Key
Stage 3 that secondary history teachers tend to have genuine choice about what they
teach, albeit within some kind of overarching framework.
Evidence suggests that teachers draw on different kinds of rationales when choos-
ing what to teach, which range from the practical, such as the availability of resources
or established habits, to the contextual, based on a set of assumptions about what
particular learners might enjoy and need, to the more ambitious, which take seriously
the idea that what and how teachers teach has the power to convey powerful messages
about both the past and the present (Husbands et al. 2003; Kitson 2005). Some his-
tory teachers do have very clear overarching goals that inform their long-term plan-
ning. A teacher in Northern Ireland, for example, believes firmly that her classroom
is where sectarian views about the past, and therefore also to some extent about the
present, are challenged and where pupils are required to engage with alternative per-
spectives about past events for reasons that are very much rooted in present-day divi-
sions (Kitson 2005). Similarly, a teacher in a school in England believes strongly in
the links between history and citizenship. She says: ‘I’ve got a mission to get kids to see
politics not as party politics but…that they should feel empowered, that they’re not an
individual on their own, that it matters, they have a say’, and both her choice of topics
and the way she teaches them reflect this goal. When teaching about Northern Ireland,
for example, she hopes that ‘kids [will] extrapolate from that and...think more widely
and hopefully get…an interest in the world they live in’(Husbands et al. 2003: 128).
It is unlikely (and undesirable) that a single aim would dominate what and how his-
tory is taught, but some sense of overarching goals is likely to lend greater coherence
to long-term planning, even if they are often undermined by shorter term objectives
such as assessment.
However, teachers are not always able to articulate a rationale for including
one part of history while excluding another, not least because the national curricu-
lum appears to have set in motion a powerful definition of the ‘canon’ twenty years
ago which stubbornly persists today. Even unit headings that have long disap-
peared from official curricula remain in many schools: ‘medieval realms’, ‘making of
the United Kingdom’ and ‘expansion, trade and industry.’ The Battle of Hastings
does not always have to be the starting point for planning a Key Stage 3 scheme
of work: ‘the key to coherence and progression is planning backwards’ (Dawson 2008:
16). In other words, teachers must know what they want pupils to ‘take away’ from
a study of history before starting to put together a long-term plan. The extent to
which teachers ought to be determining these ‘take aways’ will be explored later in
the chapter.
Box 9.2 summarizes the initial thinking of one history department in east London
as it tried to grapple with the 2007 national curriculum and its emphasis on themes.
Several overarching goals are discernible here. One addresses the development of a
sense of ‘big picture’ history. The department clearly saw in the 2007 curriculum an
opportunity to build up a series of narratives which by the end of Key Stage 3 might
be fused into a sense of how different elements of the past fit together and are mutu-
ally dependent on each other within a broad chronological framework. This is the
aim which underpins the themes of each year. Beyond that, the choice of themes and
topics within each overarching theme is interesting. There are attempts to make direct
108 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
connections to the pupils’ lives and the role of the individual – especially in the first two
themes – is emphasized. There is a desire for pupils to engage critically with the past
and relate it to the present – the third theme, for example, is clearly designed to evalu-
ate the extent of progress and the ways this can be measured. The range of specific
topics extends from local to national to global, with an attempt to be genuinely wide-
ranging in scope, both temporally (for example, by including the Egyptians, more
commonly found on primary school curricula) and spatially (for example, linking
London to the United States, India and the Middle East).
A significant aim is to respond to the need for ‘the bigger pictures’ in history and to try
to help children ‘orientate’ themselves in time. Key Stage 3 schemes of work are being
rewritten around the themes of :
These themes will encompass social, cultural, economic and political ideas and will be
mapped against the key concepts. Areas covered will include:
• A local study, London’s identity, national identity, popular culture and teenagers
• The growth of democracy, suffragettes, slavery e.g. Egyptians, Romans, Indians as
well as transatlantic, liberty in the USA including civil rights movement
• Science and superstition, medicine – Medieval and Islamic, scientific revolution,
industrial revolution, World War Two, Cold War, last fifty years – Holocaust, genocide,
Middle East, the environment
being the knowledge that lingers when the detail starts to fade. Similarly, Byrom writes
of an occasion when he happened upon an old history essay written years before: not
only did he have no recollection of writing it, but neither did he remember anything
at all about the subject matter, in this case, Phillip II’s Angevin rivals. Does this mean
that his knowledge doesn’t matter? He goes on to explain that what does matter are
the ‘landmarks’ – and that ‘the more landmarks I have in my knowledge of the past the
deeper my understanding is likely to be’ (Byrom 2003: 13). Not only is the discipline
and skill involved in thinking historically enduring; so are the patterns and shapes
about the past that emerge from a study of that past.
In the first revision of the history national curriculum in 1995, explicit encour-
agement was given to incorporate ‘depth’ and ‘overview’ into long-term planning,
made possible by a reduction in content specification. An overview can mean dif-
ferent things. It might be restricted by time, by place, by theme, or it might be an
overview of something altogether bigger such as in Gombrich’s A Little History of the
World (2005). The exact nature of ‘overviews’ in the 1995 national curriculum was
left open, though such overviews were by no means intended to be solely chronologi-
cal and geographical. Primarily, overviews were intended to allow pupils to develop
a broader understanding of the past, which could include setting events and changes
in a broader spatial or temporal framework or broadening out the social and cultural
context. In the wake of the 1995 curriculum, extensive work was done on the interplay
of such overviews and depth studies. Dale Banham, for example, illustrated how an
overview – in this case of kingship in the Middle Ages – might be revealed through a
depth study of King John, deploying that memorable phrase ‘the overview lurking in
the depth’ (Banham 2000: 23). Michael Riley’s work on how to position overview
and depth studies was also important, for example his suggestions that two overviews
might book-end a series of depth studies or that an overview might be the product of
a sequence of depth studies (Riley 1997).
Alongside the notion of overviews were thematic studies and the two have often
gone hand in hand.The GCSE course devised by the Schools History Project included
‘studies in development over time’ which traced, for example, the history of medicine
or energy from prehistoric to modern times. Covering such a broad time span inevita-
bly involved overview blended with depth studies of, for example, key individuals such
as Galen, Vesalius and Pasteur. Within the overall theme of medicine, further themes
were (and still are) explored, such as the development of surgery, natural versus spir-
itual cures and the impact of war. This was – and still is – a highly sophisticated and
complex unit to teach, combining chronological and thematic overviews and depth
studies, though its role in developing ‘big picture’ understanding of the past has since
been questioned by one of its architects (Shemilt 2000). At A level a requirement was
introduced in 2000 to teach a unit spanning at least one hundred years, usually part of
the ‘synoptic assessment’ of the syllabus, creating topics such as the economic devel-
opment of Germany, 1870–1990. A more thematic approach to teaching history was
encouraged in the 2007 national curriculum, though in this case the themes were con-
siderably broader than the GCSE studies in development or the A level synoptic units.
That is not to say that teachers were not attempting to discern themes in their teaching
at Key Stage 3 before this, but it happened ad hoc. The pamphlet published by the
Historical Association in 1997 to support teachers planning the Twentieth Century
110 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
World Key Stage Unit 4 assumed that teachers would not only wish to approach the
teaching of Key Stage 3 chronologically, but to bring out particular themes in their
teaching such as popular protest, overseas expansion and the treatment of poverty.
It was not expected that these would be taught as discrete themes but that teachers
would draw attention to the themes as they emerged to enable and support pupils to
‘articulate analogies and anomalies’ (Counsell et al. 1997:7).
Since then, greater emphasis has been placed on teaching thematically at Key
Stage 3 and Ian Dawson’s work has been particularly influential. Dawson uses the term
‘thematic stories’ to describe his practical approaches to long-term planning which
support pupils in identifying, tracking and understanding ‘stories’ in the past. Dawson
makes a powerful case for linking together the sum of what is taught at Key Stage 3
into a number of ‘thematic stories’ (Dawson 2004). These might focus on warfare and
unity, religion and human rights, and social life and empires, for example, and should
be ‘tell-able in one lesson: a summary which enables pupils to see the whole story at
once’ (Dawson 2008: 15). These ‘stories’ will be revisited throughout the key stage and
pulled together with some strong end of year or end of key stage concluding activities.
By doing this, Dawson believes that pupils may develop a more sophisticated under-
standing of chronology and be better equipped to ‘trace patterns of change and con-
tinuity across long periods of time’ (Dawson 2004: 17). It may also, he argues, enable
pupils to challenge hopelessly anachronistic comparisons between past and present.
More broadly, it can give new meaning to individual enquiries by ensuring that bigger
stories do not ‘lurk, unseen’ and enable pupils to develop ‘a coherent big picture of the
past’ (Dawson 2008: 14) while making history more accessible by allowing pupils to
capitalize on their emerging understanding of, say, political structures, by providing
clear opportunities to revisit and revise this understanding (Counsell et al,. 1997).
A helpful illustration of Dawson’s thinking involves Thomas Becket. The story
of Becket is taught in many secondary schools, not least because it is such a power-
ful narrative. It could be possible to claim some link between Becket and the shifting
balance of power between monarchy and church, but the role of the Becket murder is
rarely linked to this kind of ‘bigger picture’. Dawson argues that, in order for Becket
to have some meaning beyond the event itself, the question ought not to be ‘Why was
Becket murdered?’ but rather, ‘Why was Henry whipped four years after Becket’s
murder?’ The answer, of course, is that Henry had to secure church support against
the rebellious barons, which suggests a rather less powerful monarch than the story
of the murder itself might suggest. Dawson’s choice of the word ‘story’ to describe
this approach is significant in two ways: first, it denotes the power of narrative in our
teaching and second, it emphasizes that each narrative is but one possible ‘story’; not
fixed, but open to interpretation and modification (Dawson 2008). There are some
limitations as well as advantages to this approach. First, the stories are pre-selected;
it is not the pupils themselves who decide what the stories are or should be and their
responses to an enquiry will be shaped by the theme it is intended to illuminate (for
example, see Brooker 2009; Jones 2009). In other words, if the theme is power and
democracy, then this is the lens through which certain events, changes and develop-
ments will be viewed. Second, although a thematic story explores particular ideas or
concepts over time, their meaning does not necessarily remain fixed: democracy in
ancient Athens was different from democracy in the UK today (Jones 2009). Third,
L O N G - T E R M P L A N N I N G : M A K I N G H I S T O RY M O R E T H A N T H E S U M O F I T S PA R T S 111
organizing history into stories could imply a level of determinism: what happened led
inexorably to particular outcomes and the ‘end’ of the story. This is not, however, what
Dawson intends: he uses the term story to emphasize that this is but one possible nar-
rative and indeed writes that the story, told in outline at the start of the term, can be
‘exploded’ through pupil enquiry (Dawson 2008).
Box 9.3 sets out a summary of possible Key Stage 3 planning approaches in
response to the 2007 national curriculum. All three have organized the substantive
history into themes, based on those suggested in the 2007 national curriculum, but
they are markedly different in the way they handle chronology and the way they have
arranged the themes. In Model A, pupils study one theme each year, covering aspects
of medieval to modern history. In Model C, pupils move chronologically from the first
millennium to the present across the key stage, encountering one of five themes in
each term. It is too soon to say what impact these different approaches have on pupils’
understanding of the past and the evidence about how pupils best develop a coherent
big picture of the past in general is inconclusive. Intuitively, it may make sense to teach
chronologically but it should not necessarily be assumed that teaching chronologi-
cally is the best way to help pupils understand about one period in relation to another
(Barton 2009). On the other hand, it should be possible to pull out themes and pat-
terns in the past through a broadly chronological framework as long as the teacher is
able to move nimbly between themes and relate each topic to them appropriately.
Peter Lee and Denis Shemilt has been most influential. Lee and Howson, for example,
reject any notion of a single ‘big story’ (Lee and Howson 2009). Consider the story
of Britain since 1066 – a story often told in secondary schools. Is it to be taught as the
story of progress, of tolerance, of exploitation, or of political liberty – or none of these?
The answer, of course, is that it could be some or all these things and it may not the job
of the teacher to decide but rather the pupils.
In fact, the example above may not be big enough: Shemilt, for example, wants
the history of human activity in the frame (Shemilt 2009). Shemilt stresses that this
is a teaching issue: ‘Left to their own devices few adolescents articulate synoptic over-
views of the past from masses of data taught over weeks, month and years’ (Shemilt
2009:141). He argues that the content of history lessons is more likely to build into
usable ‘pictures of the past’ when framework overviews of the past are taught over
single lesson time spans rather like Dawson’s thematic stories and revisited at regular
intervals, when pupils are taught how to organize historical data into ‘big’ pictures by
being taught how to form generalizations, and when teachers themselves pose prob-
lems about the relationship between the present and the past. Sitting alongside these
frameworks could be, say, thematic studies, but by relating these to a bigger picture it
might be possible to ‘delineate the deep currents that shape the lives of millions upon
millions rather than the frothy antics of the few’ (Shemilt 2000: 94). To support this
big picture of the past, a particular conception of a framework has been developed. A
framework could, in theory, consist of a timeline of kings and queens, a thematic story
or a period study but the kind of synoptic framework proposed is bigger – dealing at
the level of humanity rather than at the level of particular periods, more open to con-
tinual revision and providing an overview which is regularly revisited (Howson 2009).
This is likely to be thematic – Shemilt suggests ‘Modes of Production’, ‘Political and
Social Organization’, ‘Growth and Movement of Peoples’ and ‘Culture and Praxis’
(Shemilt 2009) – and able to support generalizations which go beyond specific events
and deal with broad patterns of change and development.
There are both potential problems and exciting opportunities arising from this
work. There are as yet few examples of teachers working through these ideas in the
classroom and the ambition that lies behind them could alarm teachers who have never
thought about history in this way and who, without further practical examples of how
this might work, might wonder if this approach could be remotely feasible with a chal-
lenging teaching group. It may also be the case that there are particular stories teachers
want pupils to be familiar with which create a common historical consciousness that
serves valuable social functions (this is explored further in Chapter 12). Furthermore,
there is an inevitable limitation to how much pupils can know: Dawson claims that ‘an
all embracing framework of knowledge by the end of Key Stage 3 is simply too ambi-
tious’ (Dawson 2008: 14). Finally, the goal of a big picture created out of a number
of large-scale thematic frameworks that pupils respond to reflexively and in which
they identify patterns and narratives for themselves is to some extent unattainable. By
providing frameworks at all, some restriction has already been posed on the kind of
big picture of the past that is available and the role of the teacher as mediator is likely
to restrict this further. While it is highly desirable for pupils to discern large-scale pat-
terns of behaviours and states of affairs themselves, the extent to which they can do so
independently must surely be limited.
114 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
And yet, for all the potential limitations, there is something alluring about the
vision painted by Shemilt, Lee, Howson and others, and it relates to its highly practi-
cal, usable dimension. If a ‘big picture’ of the past is possible to achieve – and even
this is open to question currently – and if it enables pupils to make greater sense of the
present and the future by drawing some highly generalized conclusions about the past,
then there may be something here of importance. Certainly, at a time when school his-
tory sometimes struggles to expound its use both to society and to pupils, providing a
way of making history more ‘usable’ could be vital. It certainly alleviates the problem
of teaching ‘one damned thing after another’. If it is ever to work, however, it must be
highly inclusive and accessible to all pupils.
Perhaps thinking about long-term planning and thinking about historical
enquiry are at similar junctures: in both cases there are things teachers can do – frame
good enquiry questions, identify helpful thematic stories – to secure engagement
and learning, but both may be enhanced if the pupils are themselves in control. By
framing their own enquiry questions, pupils are likely to gain considerable insight
into what makes a good question in history and are likely to be more motivated
to answer it. The same may be true for pupils’ big pictures: the more they are con-
sciously constructing, revisiting and revising their own big picture of the past, the
more they may understand its significance and be motivated to extend it. Of course,
the role of the teacher, as ever, is critical in both cases and the idea of independent
enquiry can be taken too far: the teacher sets the parameters and will need to provide
both good models of enquiry questions and effective frameworks within which pupils
can build up big pictures.
The concept of a synoptic timeline, taught rapidly in the first instance and regu-
larly revisited, is a compelling one. Within this broadest of overviews, any number of
frameworks – including a chronological one or those suggested by Shemilt – might
work. Dawson’s thematic stories, though not perfect, remain an accessible route into
thinking beyond individual topics and their effectiveness might be enhanced if teach-
ers involve pupils in discussions about what to call this ‘story’ and whether the nature
and name of the story changes over time.
Whatever route teachers take in developing thematic stories, overviews or
other kinds of big pictures, it is crucial that the smaller stories of history are not lost.
Some of the existing work on blending overview and depth has already been men-
tioned. The challenge for history teachers is to move their teaching and pupils’ think-
ing between the large arcs of historical time and the personal stories which often
engage and interest learners. History is a subject concerned with people in the past
in their infinite variety and is replete with small stories that hook pupils’ interest and
help us to understand what was really going on at a human level. A big picture ought
therefore to be about helping pupils make more meaning out of the particular people
and particular episodes they are studying (Rogers 2009). It should not be about
turning all history lessons into overview-type surveys which remove all that is most
compelling and engaging about history, but ought to be a way of helping learners
to develop those ‘landmarks’ that Byrom described when he happened upon his
old history essay on Philip II. There are many examples beyond school history of
how small stories can feed into bigger pictures. The BBC’s collaboration with the
British Museum to tell ‘A history of the world in 100 objects’ (http://www.bbc.co.uk/
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ahistoryoftheworld) was described in Chapter 3. The premise of the series means that
the people who made the objects, used them, saw them, left them behind, are centre
stage. The story of The Ordeal of Elizabeth Marsh in Box 9.4 provides a further and
rather wonderful example.
In The Ordeal of Elizabeth Marsh, Linda Colley (2007: 261) uses one obscure but
remarkable woman to explore some of the biggest questions of all. Elizabeth Marsh
was born in 1735 to a British shipwright father and a Jamaican mother. Conceived in
Jamaica and born in Portsmouth, Marsh was, as Colley puts it, ‘in motion for most
of her life’. She spent significant amounts of time in a half-dozen cities and towns,
from London to Madras, following her parents, her husband and, at times, her own
schemes. She spent three months as a hostage in Morocco in 1769 and produced a
memoir of the experience. Colley tracked Marsh’s family connections to Spain, Italy,
Central America, coastal China, New South Wales, Java and the Philippines; through
this virtuoso historical detective work and outstanding narrative skill, Colley shows us
how one woman’s life in the eighteenth century illuminates the large themes of identity,
cultural exchange, and emergence of a world economy.
Evidence
Year 7: What is history?
Year 8: ‘William didn’t conquer Britain – he created it!’ Do you agree?
Year 9: What do stories about Attelborough boys tell us about WWI?
Causation
Year 7: Why did Norfolk farming change after 1750?
Year 8: Why do we have a Church of England?
Year 9: Is there any rhyme or reason to Islamic terrorism?
Change and continuity
Year 7: If stones could speak, what could they say in Attelborough church?
Year 8: Which protestors have changed British society the most?
Year 9: A revolution in ideas: how big a step forward was the Renaissance?
Interpretations
Year 7: Is Norwich castle a fake?
Year 8: Was the Magna Carta the only ‘good thing’ from King John?
Year 9: From hymns to hip hop: can songs truly represent black people’s fight for
freedom?
Significance
Year 7: Why bother with Queen Boudicca?
Year 8: Who had the more explosive impact on our country – Guy Fawkes or Oliver
Cromwell?
Year 9: What history will your children be learning?
Diversity
Year 7: How can we hear the different voices of nineteenth-century Attelborough?
Year 8: Did Britain change the world or did the world change Britain?
Year 9: Who suffered the most in WWII?
Conclusion
This chapter has explored difficult and challenging issues. Often, when teachers think
about planning, they think about the need to plan stimulating and engaging lessons.
That remains a central professional responsibility, but individual lessons also sit within
a longer experience of learning, and it is this which we have set out to explore here.
Research evidence suggests that for most pupils the experience of school history does
not provide them with ‘big picture’ understandings of the past which enable them
to see the present in the context of long waves of historical change. These long pat-
terns of historical change have been crucial in shaping both the world today and the
historical past more generally: the experience of child labourers in Manchester at the
beginning of the nineteenth century was part of a long wave of industrialization which
can be traced back to the sixteenth century and forward to the collapse of large-scale
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manufacturing industry in western Europe in the later twentieth century; the experi-
ence of the Indian Mutiny is part of a widespread colonial encounter between Europe
and the wider world which has shaped assumptions and societies in the post-colonial
era. History teaching on this grand scale is demanding of teachers, but the accumulat-
ing evidence suggests that a reluctance to plan and think on this grand scale is limit-
ing children’s ability to make sense of their past. The approaches we have discussed
here – the need to think about the relationships between personal stories and wider
scale historical change, the need to plan for progression in ideas and understanding as
well as in the acquisition of knowledge, the need to reflect on the nature and focus of
historical consciousness – provide a set of tools to stimulate thinking, and a frame of
reference for long-term planning.
10
History teaching for all
Schools strive to be inclusive learning environments in which all learners have the oppor-
tunity to succeed, whether they find learning easy or difficult, whether they need additional
support or extended challenges to enable them to realize their learning potential. Schools
deploy a variety of tools and devices in order to help them achieve this goal, including the way
the curriculum is structured, the way pupils are grouped and the way classrooms are man-
aged. History teaching operates within the constraints and opportunities afforded by such
whole-school decisions. In practice, much of the focus of schools’ provision relates to pupils
who need, and deserve, additional provision, whether these are pupils with special needs
which require additional support to enable them to access the curriculum, or those who are
gifted and require additional challenge. However, it is perhaps too easy to forget that inclusive
practices have a much wider focus. In principle, all learners have individual needs, and they
all experience learning in different ways that might be affected, for example, by their gender,
ethnicity, social class. In this chapter, we explore some of the ways in which history teachers
can address individual needs and differences, and the ways in which inclusive practices relate
to the learning of all pupils.
motivations. As schools have accumulated more data on pupils and have codified it in
a variety of ways – through special needs registers, gifted and talented registers or
logs of pupils with English as an Additional Language – they have also tended to
create labels for pupils which are hard to shift. Such data is obviously extremely
valuable, but it can only go so far in helping teachers to meet learners’ needs. Take
Sonja, for example. Having arrived in England when she was 9, her low test scores
at Key Stage 2 might have been largely the result of language difficulties. However,
her failure to make much progress in history lessons in Year 8 may be less to do with
her language development and more to do with a lack of motivation because Sonja
does not consider the past that she is learning about to be anything to do with her. In
Michael’s case, it is the symptom of a problem – his poor behaviour – rather than its
cause that has been highlighted: in fact, Michael is bored by his work and losing faith
in his own ability to do better. The pupil sitting near him, Kemal, is on the school’s
Gifted and Talented register and is provided with extended tasks as a result of which
he attracts teacher attention and praise. Unfortunately, Michael is not on the same
register and, perhaps as a result, is not challenged and acknowledged in a way that
might motivate him further. Jaya was passionately interested in history at primary
school, but the bottom set she is in is unruly and she no longer has the opportunities
for the quiet, independent work at which she flourished in Year 6. As a potential grade
E/F student, Jaya is unlikely to be allowed to take history beyond Year 9 even if she
wants to because it is school policy to exclude pupils from subjects in which they are
likely to achieve below a grade C.
Sonja
Special Educational Needs (SEN) status: Not on register
English as an Additional Language (EAL): Yes
Gifted and Talented: No
Home language: Albanian/Shqip
English Test Level KS2: 3
Maths Test Level KS2: 4
End of key stage Target (history): 4B
Michael
SEN status: School Action (Behaviour, Emotional and Social)
EAL: No
Gifted and Talented: No
Home language: English
English Test Level KS2: 4
Maths Test Level KS2: 5
End of key stage Target (history): 5A
Jaya
SEN status: School Action Plus (Specific Learning Difficulty)
EAL: Yes
120 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
Three pupils and three different sets of data which only partially explain their
needs and the ways in which these needs might be met. Successful teaching involves
going beyond the data to understand the pupils themselves. Sonja needs to be per-
suaded that the history she is studying carries some meaning for her personally;
Michael needs to be challenged and rewarded to gain a sense of pride and Jaya needs
to be allowed to work independently in order to achieve further.
challenge, they argue, is to provide a framework for making ‘critical sense out of both
legitimating stories and alternative, vernacular histories’ and to enable pupils to ‘decide
for themselves’ which version is best (Levstik and Barton 2008: 261). Although some
of the features of history classrooms in the US which Levstik and Barton describe –
where exposure to the ‘complexity and diversity of perspectives’ is not always appar-
ent – are not necessarily present in the UK, the authors’ claim that ‘history matters
politically’ because it informs people’s political and social values is certainly true inter-
nationally. Pupils will draw on whatever version of the past they have to hand to justify
or inform particular views and positions. If the version available in school seems too
remote, too disconnected from the versions at home and from the TV, it may become
less ‘usable’ and, in turn, may be cast aside in favour of less critical and less informed
versions. The point here, in relation to inclusion, is that we are more likely to be effec-
tive as history teachers if we take account of the many different starting points that
children bring with them into the classroom which arise out of their diverse cultural
and social contexts. Pupils may learn about the past through rich oral family his-
tory traditions, or from computer games and wall murals. To dismiss these as myth,
‘popular’ (and therefore unworthy) history or propaganda is to dismiss the ways in
which children learn: by making meaning of new knowledge by aligning it with exist-
ing knowledge. If such an alignment – whether this involves challenging or reinforcing
existing knowledge – does not occur, then there is a risk that this new knowledge will
be discarded or, at best, transient.
It seems likely that issues of social class, gender and race have profound and
particular influences on pupils’ starting points in history classrooms and on the
version of the past – the one constructed in school or the one learnt at home – which
pupils find most usable in explaining and understanding the present. Kay Traille’s
work in the UK, for example, suggests that Afro-Caribbean pupils’ experience of his-
tory is not always what is intended by teachers and expected by the Afro-Caribbean
community: they can in fact feel excluded and marginalized from studying the past
(Traille 2007). This includes occasions when topics often thought to have a ‘multi-
cultural’ appeal are taught, including slavery, which can all too often portray slaves –
and, by default, black Africans – as victims. Terry Epstein’s work in the US presents
similar findings: when African-American pupils fail to connect with the dominant
narrative in the classroom, they do two things: switch off in class and construct
their own, alternative narratives that have little to do with the history they learn in
school (Epstein 2009). There is relatively little work on the impact of either gender
or class in relation to pupil learning in history classrooms – although the under-
representation of women and minority groups in books and schemes of work has
been explored (Smart 2010), and both are well documented in more general terms.
Certainly, pupils’ cultural reference points, general knowledge and vocabulary
play a huge role in their ability to access the curriculum. In one school we visited,
the teacher argued that history was an elite subject ‘in the way it is examined’ and
used the example of a GCSE paper in which the word ‘portrayal’ was used; she felt
this excluded a majority of pupils. Research on children’s vocabulary in the US found
that what matters in determining the number and quality of words that a child under-
stands is relative economic advantage and not gender, race or birth order. Hart and
Risley’s study suggested that in the course of a typical hour, children of parents
HISTORY TEACHING FOR ALL 123
on welfare heard 616 words, while children of professional parents heard 2153
words in the same period of time (Hart and Risley 1995). It is hard to overstate the
impact of this on a child’s ability to access the school curriculum, including history –
a subject drenched in literacy – with confidence and skill. It is also surely the case
that to label children whose vocabulary is severely limited in this way as ‘low ability’
does not quite capture the complexities or the potential for pupils to develop given the
right support.
Taken as a whole, such research raises complex implications about what
being ‘inclusive’ means. Faced with large, mixed gender, multi-ethnic, mixed ability
classes, the concept might seem daunting or overwhelming. Any response to these
challenges has to focus on finding a point of connection with the past – a ‘way into’
a topic that is accessible and which has resonance for pupils. It is, of course, not
realistic to tailor the history curriculum to every child’s needs. However, there are
ways to make history matter because of the many enduring and common human
experiences that transcend borders: the experience of the persecutors and the perse-
cuted, the rich and the poor, the victors and the vanquished: all are there for us to see.
By drawing on pupils’ prior knowledge and by focusing on human experience, we
can find many points of entry. We return to the idea of finding resonance with the
past in Chapter 12.
There are other powerful reasons to choose content carefully. History plays an
integrative as well as a multicultural role: it is important for learners to learn the history
of the country in which they live; equally, any history of Britain must be inclusive, and
should acknowledge the complexity of the history of a polyglot nation of migration
and transhumance over two thousand years. By studying a wide range of historical
experience, learners come closer to understanding the range of human experience
and are more able to put UK history into a broader perspective. In practice, the chal-
lenges of such diverse content are considerable. While it is important, for example, for
learners to explore the history of slavery, its abolition and its continuing impact on the
modern world, to study black Africans only as slaves, rather than in the broader con-
text of African and Caribbean history before and after slavery is one-dimensional and
likely to perpetuate stereotypes. Equally, for pupils to encounter European Jews only
in concentration and death camps rather than as members of vibrant, diverse com-
munities before 1933 is to create stereotypes and simplifications. Such simplifications
are not only unhelpful, but also restrict an understanding of the significance of either
slavery or the Holocaust.
An inclusive history classroom is one that takes account of a diverse society,
both in terms of what is taught and to whom; content matters as much as pedagogy.
Establishing what pupils already know is of paramount importance in order to
identify preconceptions, misconceptions and the extent of prior knowledge. It is
also critical to establish some point of connection with the pupils, whatever is being
taught, with some attempt to address the ‘so what?’ question. Box 10.2 includes
examples of how one London comprehensive school attempts to connect history to
the pupils’ own lives. An inclusive classroom is also one in which high-quality out-
comes for learners are possible by making learning accessible: inclusion is entirely
compatible with high standards of achievement, and it is to levels of achievement that
we now turn.
124 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
Box 10.2 Finding the point of connection in one London comprehensive school
This history department uses the following strategies to engage its socially and
ethnically diverse intake:
1 The pupils’ own history
2 Use of story
3 Local history
4 Allowing pupils to choose aspects of a topic they wish to study.
In Key Stage 3, the department runs a ‘My own history’ project. The stories written
by the pupils are autobiographical and involve them placing their lives into a wider
context. There are opportunities for pupils to present their stories and share them with
one another. Writing stories is a thread running through history at Key Stage 3 and the
department plans to extend links with the English department to develop this further.
Currently, they also ask pupils to write their own Roman story. Links with the locality are
also important: in Year 8, pupils spend about 12 weeks exploring the history of London
through the evidence of, for example, local buildings. The outcome is to produce a
tour of their local area. This local history links with many other aspects of the history
curriculum, for example the Industrial Revolution. The department is also planning to
make links with the London Olympics. In Year 9, pupils are asked to identify an initial
hypothesis in response to the question ‘The twentieth century was an age of what?’ The
subsequent direction is partly steered by teacher expertise and partly by pupil interest.
A common focus is on genocide – using the UN definition as a starting point – about
which the pupils at this particular school are very knowledgeable. The topic requires
some sensitive handling, but the pupils find it a highly engaging topic.
‘Ability’ labelling
We have tried to avoid talking about ‘ability’ in this book because its usage implies that
ability is somehow ‘fixed’, a proposition that we – and many others – reject. To describe
a pupil as being of ‘low ability’ or ‘high ability’ is to imply that this is a property of the
pupil him or herself. It would be more accurate to say that the pupil was low or high
attaining or achieving at a particular point, recognizing that it is the outcome that is
being judged, not the pupil. The practice of grouping pupils by ‘ability’ – normally on
the basis of literacy or language skills – is increasing, not least because of the policy
expectation from politicians of all persuasions that the use of setting – and streaming –
will be encouraged. The evidence that setting and streaming do raise standards is slight
and, indeed, there is stronger evidence that ability grouping may depress the scores of
the majority (Kutnick et al. 2005).
In some of the schools we visited, pupils in history were streamed for English and
humanities according to their English subject scores, although in one school it was
on the basis of modern foreign language skills. Pupils – rather than their teachers –
were vocal about the mismatches that could ensue: ‘We’ve got people in our set who
shouldn’t be there. Sometimes you have people who are good at history but not at
English.’ In none of the schools we visited did the history department determine its
own teaching groups except where these were based on mixed-ability tutor groups,
HISTORY TEACHING FOR ALL 125
probably because history is not given enough teaching time to block across a year
group. The history teachers we spoke to generally did not express any view on the par-
ticular issues of setting in their subject, except around the difficulties with the behav-
iour of ‘lower ability’ classes. In most of the schools we visited, teaching approaches
were determined by the individual class teacher, although broad content was deter-
mined at department level. This means that in history classes that were grouped by
attainment, we observed the use of very different pedagogical styles and different tasks
with these different classes. Those teachers in schools with mixed teaching groups
were often more explicit about the rationale for this grouping policy, although the
reasons were more often linked to social, behavioural and timetabling goals rather than
goals associated with learning.
An important side effect of streaming and setting is its impact on pupil attitude
and motivation. Research into the classroom experiences of lower attaining sets indi-
cates that teachers adopt more restricted teaching approaches that allow pupils fewer
opportunities for innovation, creativity or even discussion (Boaler 2002; Kutnick et al.
2006). Often pupils are placed in these sets because of their low literacy levels, which
means that there can be a tendency to over-practise and over-emphasize literacy skills
at a low level through copying, cloze exercises and similar activities to the exclusion of
other forms of task outcome. Repeatedly practising skills that do not come easily can
reinforce pupils’ sense of failure and further alienate them from a subject. During our
visits to schools we also observed and were told by pupils in higher attaining sets that
they were more likely to work in groups, to create plays, have debates and so forth: it
appeared that these pupils enjoyed more freedom of thought and opportunities for
innovation and originality and, as a result, they appeared to enjoy history as a school
subject more than their peers in lower attaining sets. Once in Year 10, however, pupils
are more likely to find themselves learning history in mixed ability classes (assum-
ing that the full range of pupils have been allowed to study history at GCSE), largely
because of the nature of options blocks and timetabling. Here, pupils might expect to
find a greater variety of tasks and teaching approaches – in one school for example,
a teacher talked about GCSE groups which had ‘Gifted and Talented’ pupils ‘mixed
with SEN’ and described one pupil with SEN who enjoyed the debate and the generat-
ing of ideas in a different environment.
While ‘ability’ grouping appears to have little effect on raising pupil attainment
and therefore is of little benefit in terms of academic outcomes, the evidence suggests
that it is damaging for lower attaining pupils in terms of their self-esteem and moti-
vation to school and learning. Pupils in lower sets are often much more challenging
to teach not only because there is a concentration of pupils who may have particular
learning needs but also because of those who could be described as ‘overtly disaf-
fected’, or who have severe emotional and behavioural needs. Furthermore, this lack of
concentration might be exacerbated where the work set is unchallenging. One history
teacher, Julie – a case study in the wonderfully titled book Learning without Limits – is
worth quoting at some length about why she opposes the practice of setting:
Very often the type of pupils who end up in the bottom set, you look at their back-
grounds, they are the ones who haven’t had the help and support in the formative
years, they haven’t got resources at home, haven’t got many books…and on top of
126 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
all that, they are placed in bottom sets, or they are told ‘You can only do this.’ And
some pupils just accept that and they slip into this feeling of being worthless. Some
fight against it and keep trying but it is very hard, isn’t it, to keep trying when you
are told ‘Well, you are being entered for an exam where you can only get a D.’
(Hart et al. 2004: 137)
Since Julie’s arrival at the school as a head of department, she has moved the
department towards mixed ability grouping with backing from senior leadership,
not least because examination results have compared favourably with those of other
departments. Julie’s conviction was that accessibility comes from teachers’ ‘judicious
choices and actions’ rather than an ‘objective quality inherent in the relationship
between particular task objectives and the characteristics of particular pupils’. In other
words, she believes that teachers should not simply match particular tasks to particular
learners, but rather should respond creatively to any obstacles which prevent pupils
from accessing common tasks and ideas. We can generalize by saying that Julie sup-
ports a social rather than a medical model of disability broadly defined: in a ‘medical’
model it is assumed to be the learners’ problems which prevent them from accessing
learning opportunities, whereas in a ‘social’ model it is argued that learners could
access learning provided the environment is appropriately modified. For example, a
physically disabled child is no longer a ‘problem’ if sufficient ramps are provided; in
the same way, a visually impaired child is no longer a ‘problem’ if provided with text of
the correct size of font or suitable IT equipment. Recent legislative change has placed
on schools and other bodies the responsibility to remove barriers to access. However, it
may also follow that a lower achieving child is not a ‘problem’ if teachers make adjust-
ments to teaching – changing the pace, simplifying instructions, allowing pupils some
control over tasks and accompanying resources, making effective use of other adults –
until they succeed in making their subject accessible and esteem-building.
Teacher perceptions of pupil ‘ability’ can have a profound impact on their practice
in history as in any other subject. In one study of teachers in Northern Ireland, where
the majority of pupils are educated in a selective system, there was evidence that his-
tory teachers’ goals were considerably more ambitious in selective grammar schools
than in non-selective high schools, particularly around sensitive and even controversial
history. By contrast, teachers working in comprehensive integrated schools were more
ambitious for all their pupils and made less distinction between higher and lower sets,
perhaps suggesting that teachers choosing to teach in the small number of integrated
schools in Northern Ireland have a particular educational philosophy (Kitson 2005).
None of this is to argue that the challenges associated with inclusive practices are at all
easy. In many ways, they challenge profound assumptions about the nature of teach-
ing and its relationship to pupil learning, as well as assumptions about what successful
practices look like. However, there is sufficient evidence that transforming practices
impacts positively on outcomes for all.
concepts and, perhaps most of all, the levels of literacy often required. This section
picks up those challenges and offers six principles for successful inclusive practice
(Box 10.3).
Like the pupils, we have our own starting points based on some fundamental
premises, the first of which is underpinned by a principle that informs the book as
a whole: entitlement. We believe strongly that all pupils have an entitlement to learn
about the past in ways that provide useful knowledge and develop an ability to think
historically, regardless of the kind of school or teaching group they find themselves in.
‘Thinking historically’ includes not only a sense of the evidence from which history
is crafted but also an awareness of and empathy towards the difference of others in
the past. Achieving this means making history accessible to all without making it mean-
ingless: reduce history to a series of cloze exercises, word searches or short response
comprehension questions, and it becomes an unchallenging literacy exercise that fails
to have meaning for the pupils. History must be simultaneously accessible and appro-
priately challenging, though this balance can be difficult to strike. Ben Walsh (1998:
47, quoted in Counsell 2003b: 25) captured this well:
There is a belief in some quarters that history is too complicated. The problem
with this argument is that if history is to stop becoming complicated then it must
become simple. Then we are in real trouble, as in the minds of our pupils all
Catholics hate all Protestants…for all time. All Jews live in Germany and are per-
secuted. All Indians work on tea plantations or emigrate to Britain. Similarly, all
black people in the eighteenth and nineteenth century sit around bemoaning their
lot as slaves until that Wilberforce bloke comes along and sets them free.
Ofsted has similarly encouraged teachers to make history ‘satisfyingly difficult’ (Ofsted
2007). If teachers make history too simple, it no longer serves a useful purpose, so they
need to find ways to make it both complicated and accessible – what Counsell calls
‘acceptable simplification’ (2003b). ‘Acceptable simplification’ is, perhaps, easier to
articulate than to implement. For Counsell, ‘acceptable simplification’ depends on
working with the structure of history as a discipline: ‘Instead of seeing subject rigour
as the opposite of accessible work for the struggling pupil, we should see it as the
solution’ (2003b: 25). In practice, teachers frequently make tasks more difficult for
learners by ostensibly making them easier: this might happen by not providing enough
128 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
contextual knowledge for a task so that learners struggle with the gap between what
they have been told and what they need to understand. For example, it is not unusual
to see lower history sets asked to deal with the consequences of Henry VIII’s divorce
from Catherine of Aragon without reference to the religious divisions of the 1530s, so
the history becomes, effectively, soap opera. Sometimes, tasks which are ‘simplified’
are presented with an insufficiently clear or well articulated conceptual focus, so that
the learning focuses on a narrative sequencing rather than on a historical explanation;
in other cases, pupils are given anachronistic explanations. In each of these cases the
intention is worthy – to allow lower attaining pupils to grasp something of the history –
but the consequences are counterproductive.
There are a number of possible routes to ‘acceptable simplification’. One is to
ensure that pupils know enough. To limit the amount of knowledge a pupil has is to
create a number of obstacles to historical thinking (Harris 2005). This is particularly,
though by no means exclusively, a problem when using source material in classrooms.
Attempting to evaluate the usefulness of a source on the basis of very limited knowl-
edge is highly problematic and, thus, longer sources can be considerably easier to
handle provided they are made accessible (see Principle 6). Another approach is to
start with the familiar: using a ten pound note as an introduction to Charles Darwin or
a picture of a local building as a way into the Industrial Revolution or asking the pupils
what they already know about a topic could all provide a point of reference for pupils
before moving them into less familiar territory. Analogies can also be helpful (think of
the report of a football match analogy to demonstrate the impact perspective has on
how something is viewed), though they can also be misleading and need to be handled
with care. Role play and practical demonstrations can be an enormously powerful way
of illuminating a key point. The work of Ian Luff has been influential here (e.g. see
Harris and Luff 2004; Luff 2000, 2001, 2003) and his imaginative and often simple
techniques are very effective in a way that words on a page are not. The point of these,
and other, techniques is not that they make history ‘easy’ but that they make the core
ideas (the ‘golden nuggets’ – Principle 5) – and the knowledge and understanding that
underpins them – accessible.
Our second principle is rooted in the conception that ability is not a fixed property
of the pupil and that all pupils are capable of success if appropriately supported. One
of the more unfortunate consequences of regular ‘levelling’ of pupils at Key Stage 3 is
another label: that pupil A is a Level 3b while pupil C is a Level 5a. In other words, the
pupil, rather than the piece of work that was assessed, is defined as a level. However,
as we know all too well from the work of Donaldson (1986), assessment is highly
problematic. A pupil may achieve a Level 4 on an essay about slavery, but could have
achieved more if the instructions had been clearer, the task had been structured differ-
ently, the topic had been taught in a different way or the markscheme had been made
more task-specific.
Many schools now favour a ‘must’, ‘should’, ‘could’ approach to learning objec-
tives, but we are wary about applying these to lessons. Given that it is impossible,
halfway into a lesson, to restrict further teaching and learning to a particular group
of pupils, the ‘must’, ‘should’, ‘could’ model therefore assumes that some pupils will
not access the whole lesson. This seems to us unacceptable; it would be preferable
to design a lesson which all pupils in the lesson could access at different levels. For
HISTORY TEACHING FOR ALL 129
example, a lesson objective which states that ‘pupils will explore the different experi-
ences of slaves in America’ can be accessed at a number of levels: an appreciation that
experiences differed, an exploration of the way in which experiences differed and an
explanation about the extent of these differences. We are fortunate that history – no
matter what the topic or the concept being studied – can be accessed at multiple levels
and it therefore seems to us unnecessary to set artificial ceilings to pupil achievement.
Our third principle is about placing the pupils in charge of their own learning and
letting them decide when they need additional support. Pupil needs, like ability, are not
fixed: they may require more support with one task, less with another. Allowing them
to choose can create an atmosphere of mutual support and also of empowerment. For
example, pupils might be able to choose which side of a worksheet to use, assuming
that one side provides more accessible or scaffolded text, or select which colour infor-
mation sheet they will read. Similarly, pupils might sometimes be given a choice about
how to communicate their work so they have opportunities to be assessed orally or
through creative, visual forms.
Individuals in history provide an accessible yet potentially complex entry point
into the past that can work effectively with all pupils but especially those who struggle
to connect with the past (Principle 4). There are many examples, but three in par-
ticular are worth mentioning because of the way they illuminate different approaches.
The first is Mike Murray’s use of Ethel and Ernest, Raymond Briggs’s lengthy cartoon
about an ordinary couple who live through many of the changes of the twentieth cen-
tury. Briggs provides a deeply personal overview of a century from which any number
of themes and events can be pursued. In this sense, the cartoon is a tool from which to
blend overview and depth, but it is the role of personal perspectives that makes it most
attractive. Despite the fact that the people are in this case fictional, their story makes
the century more ‘real’ and comprehensible to pupils, leading one to ask ‘Which was
more important, Sir, ordinary people getting electricity or the rise of Hitler?’ (Murray
2002). The second example is the enquiry about Private Reg Wilkes (Evans et al.
2004), already mentioned in Chapter 7, which leads pupils through his experiences in
World War I using his letters and diaries. The ‘cliffhanger’ lesson is perfect: at the end
of one lesson, the pupils see Reg’s diary end abruptly around the time of the Battle of
the Somme. It is only at the beginning of the next lesson that they learn that, although
injured in battle, Reg survived, managing to fashion a diary from a notebook and writ-
ing shakily with his left hand. It is a compelling story and one that is made historically
rigorous and engaging through an enquiry question that focuses on evidence and
typicality: ‘How much can Reg Wilkes tell us about the Great War?’ The third example
focuses on interpretation, in this case of two specific individuals, Ken and Pat, each
a composite of real people living in Northern Ireland today from the Catholic and
Protestant communities respectively (McCully and Pilgrim 2004). Pupils first get to
know Ken and Pat before examining Irish history through their eyes and analysing
why each might interpret the past differently. It is a brilliant technique for exploring
the ways in which issues in the present colour our interpretations of the past.
Our fifth principle proposes that all lessons should have a golden nugget – the key
idea that pupils understand and take with them when they leave the lesson. The golden
nugget must be attainable by all the pupils and is greatly enhanced by learning strateg-
ies which communicate the key idea or concept of the lesson. If the golden nugget is
130 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
that World War I was caused by a gradual build-up of tensions and the assassination
was only the trigger, teachers might use the game Buckaroo to demonstrate how the
mule only bucks when the ‘causes’ loaded on its back build up. Place only one item
on its back – a stand-in for the assassination – and nothing happens. If the golden
nugget is that Hippocrates was the first ‘modern’ doctor, teachers might start the
lesson by handing out symptoms of various ailments to six pupils. Assuming the role
of Hippocrates, the teacher invites each pupil to come to the front and visit the great
doctor, making a big deal of examining them systematically and asking questions
about their symptoms before prescribing cures based on the Theory of the Four
Humours. If the golden nugget is about why the United States felt so threatened by
the presence of Russian missiles in Cuba, teachers might use Ian Luff’s simple but
effective activity involving pupils throwing paper missiles (Luff 2003).
Principle 6 responds to the finding that one of the aspects of history that pupils
most struggle with relates to literacy skills (Harris and Haydn 2008, 2009). Essentially,
there are two challenges here: accessing information and communicating ideas.
Chapter 8 has explored communication in more detail, but it is worth making some
brief points here about ways to overcome literacy ‘hurdles’.
First, problems with literacy skills should not prevent pupils accessing the key
ideas of history. The previous principle focused on making the golden nugget acces-
sible through active, creative strategies. Second, whether for reasons of motivation or
access, ‘warming pupils up’ can be vital if they are to persist with some complex read-
ing, speaking or writing. This generally involves ‘hooking’ their interest early on, per-
haps through an engaging story or a puzzle which needs to be solved. Bringing pupils
to the point where they want to find out more is vital, whether in Year 7 or Year 13.
Providing pupils with challenging text ‘cold’ is likely to be met with some resistance.
Third, a degree of scaffolding is helpful and often necessary, for example through the
provision of useful phrases, sentence starts or writing frames, but they can also hold
pupils back (Evans and Pate 2007): ultimately, pupils should aspire beyond such scaf-
folding. Fourth, immediacy and simplicity are often most effective. For example, a
strategy which appears not always to work is the provision of glossaries at the bottom
of sheets or in the back of books which pupils appear to consult rarely as they struggle
to read and make sense of some text. A better technique might be to provide an expla-
nation or alternative word in brackets immediately after the word in question so that
the flow of pupils’ reading is not interrupted. Fifth, making text ‘easier’ is not always
a way to make it more accessible because pupils either have insufficient information
from which to draw conclusions or the absence of colour and detail in the text fails
to bring it to life and engage the reader. Box 10.3, from Harris 2005, exemplifies this.
Break text into manageable chunks through the use of sub-headings, timelines etc.
Use DARTs (Directed Activities Related to Text) where reading is clearly for a purpose
such as card sorts, tables and charts, continuums, living graphs, questions to
answer, preparation for a role play, a team game and so forth
Simplify the text if necessary but without removing too much colour
Ensure that pupils have sufficient contextual knowledge to make sense of what they
are reading
Teacher (or pupil) reads out dramatically
Pupils freeze frame what they read
132 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
our preferences will depend on the context: to be talked at by a very dull lecturer is
unlikely to help someone to learn whereas a more engaging speaker may suggest that
the listener is an ‘auditory’ learner after all. In essence, even if there is some credibility
to the theories, it simply lends weight to what we have known for many years: that good
teaching is also varied. To add to the many labels assigned to the pupils is, in our view,
a mistake, of little use and possibly even harmful.
Conclusion
Inclusion describes an aspiration that no child will be excluded from the ethos, culture,
practices and curriculum of a school. Traditionally focused on pupils with special edu-
cation needs and disabilities (SEND), it is generally accepted that inclusion extends
to all pupils and touches on issues including ethnicity, gender, class, language, religion
and disability. The policy of inclusion has particular resonance for history where the
selection of what we teach, as well as how we teach it, directly confronts our assump-
tions about ‘usable’ or ‘significant’ knowledge. In this chapter we have argued strongly
for an entitlement for all pupils to study history, based on our firm belief that history
can engage and hold meaning for pupils when it is made simultaneously accessible and
challenging, when pupils’ prior knowledge is explored and valued and when teachers
go beyond the labels assigned to pupils and expect more of them.
Part 4
Making history matter in schools
In this final section, we draw all the threads of the book together, seeking to develop
a coherent, classroom-focused and compelling case for the successful teaching and
learning of history. We try to link the underlying themes of the book – curriculum
pedagogy and inclusion – through two analyses of the play of history in the contem-
porary curriculum. Chapter 11 is focused on pedagogy. We ask whether the success of
pupils’ learning about the past depends on a specific historical pedagogy and build up
a case for the ‘deep pedagogy’ of the subject, exploring its implications for teachers.
Finally, in Chapter 12 we explore the relationship between school history and some
of the major themes of the contemporary curriculum: relevance, diversity, democratic
values and identity, posing questions about the way history relates to the world young
people must negotiate.
11
Is there a history pedagogy?
Throughout Part 3 of this book, we have explored the ‘building blocks’ of history pedagogy:
evidence and enquiry, the second order concepts of change, continuity, causation, empathy
and significance as well as strategies for communicating history. In Part 1 of the book we
explored the processes by which the historical past becomes a classroom curriculum and the
relationships between the historical past, the discipline of history, the popular representation
of the past and the work which goes on in the classroom.The question we want to explore here
is whether these building blocks make up a distinctive history pedagogy.
Understanding pedagogy
Pedagogy is a challenging term. Some thirty years ago, the educational historian Brian
Simon wrote a critique of educational practice in England under the apparently stri-
dent title ‘Why no pedagogy in England?’ Simon described pedagogy as the ‘science
of teaching’ and argued that ‘no such science exists in England’. He described ‘the
educational tradition of the Continent, [where] the term ‘pedagogy’ has an honoured
place… The concept of teaching as a science has strong roots in this tradition’ (Simon
1981, reproduced 1985: 77). In England, by contrast, Simon argued that thinking
about teaching and learning was highly ‘eclectic’, confusing aims and methods, and
with no clear philosophical or conceptual underpinning for what was done in the
classroom.
An enormous amount has changed in classroom practices since 1981, and a
great deal more attention has focused on the way teachers teach in classrooms both
in national policy and in research. In the later 1990s, the Conservative government
established the National Literacy and National Numeracy projects which set out
firm guidance on teaching primary literacy and numeracy based on research into
best practice; the projects were subsequently taken up and expanded as the National
Literacy and Numeracy Strategies by the incoming Labour government in 1997, and
formed the basis of a massive investment in in-service training for primary teach-
ers, defining a clear national approach to teaching in primary schools. In the first
years of the twenty-first century, the principles of the primary strategies formed the
basis for the Secondary National Strategy, extending the national programme of ‘best
138 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
different group of pupils sort descriptions of Nazi action against Jews in the 1930s to
understand the dimensions of anti-semitism and the background to the Holocaust.
Yet a further class of pupils use Post-It stickers on a laminated portrait of Queen
Elizabeth I to pose questions about different features of the painting as part of a les-
son which introduces them to Tudor propaganda. In a different classroom, pupils are
given a writing frame which provides the bare bones of a structure for an essay they
will develop over a series of lessons explaining the causes of the Industrial Revolution.
A further class of pupils are asked to prepare fictional estate agents’ property details
for the ‘sale’ of the Roman villa at Lullingstone in the middle of the fourth century in
order to develop their understandings of Romano-British culture. Finally, in another
lesson, pupils use the Uffizi website to answer a series of questions about Renaissance
painting as part of a lesson sequence on the nature of the classical ‘rebirth’ in the
fifteenth century.
Each of these lessons is deploying a specific pedagogic technique which plays its
part in developing pupils’ historical understanding. The activities described here are
not the principal purpose of the lesson, but a means to an end. To some extent, the
activities described above could be interchangeable: the classroom discussion used
to explore the causes of the English Civil War could have been used to explore the
nature of Romano-British culture, or the Treaty of Versailles. The writing frame used
to explore the causes of the Industrial Revolution could have been used to explore the
execution of Charles I or the Italian Renaissance. The Post-It exercise could have been
used on an archaeological reconstruction of a Roman villa or a picture of the Great Fire
of London. Change and continuity in the local community could be explored through
a series of maps, documents or photographs as well as through visits from local resi-
dents. Obviously there are limits to the interchangeability, but the point is that the activ-
ities are not defined, in many cases, by the topic. In each case, the classroom teacher
made a series of decisions about how to teach the material and planned pupil activities
in ways which enabled them to access the substantive historical content. The evidence
we have is that, in making these decisions, teachers draw on a range of reflections –
the decision-making process is relatively complex. In some cases, the decision will
be based around the availability of a particularly useful local resource – perhaps the
quality of contacts with the local community influencing the decision to bring in local
residents – and in others it will be directly related to the challenges and opportunities
presented by the class to be taught: in some cases, decisions to manage large, open-
ended class discussions are not possible because of behaviour management issues in a
particular class. In other cases, there are other factors: the time available, the demands
of the curriculum or assessment. However, in many cases these decisions are under-
pinned by a teacher’s own aims and aspirations for the lesson, the unit of work and the
subject and, beyond this, by their deeper philosophies of education. The evidence we
have (Husbands et al. 2003) is that teachers make extremely sophisticated decisions
about the ways in which they plan to teach particular topics, drawing on a host of
simultaneous considerations. There is very little evidence that teachers ‘work through
the textbook’; indeed, many are actively resistant to teaching through someone else’s
ideas. The process of pedagogic decision making is active and sensitive to context.
Furthermore, as we discussed in Chapter 9, few history teachers base their peda-
gogic decision making on a single aim (Husbands et al. 2003: 64). The lesson on
140 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
rows, learning the kings and queens of England, the great works of literature,
proper mental arithmetic… That’s the best training of the mind and that’s how
children will be able to compete.
(The Times, 6 March 2010)
Ironically, some of the activities in the lessons we described above could equally well
conform to the requirements of this sort of curriculum specification too. Divergent
though these views of the curriculum are, they share some similar starting points –
separating curriculum content, learning activities and wider educational competences
and then relating them in almost arbitrary ways.
A resolution to this issue, which clarifies some of the issues at stake, lies in dig-
ging a little deeper into the lessons described earlier in terms of Alexander’s concern
for ‘ideas, values and evidence’ (Alexander 2004). Although many of the activities in
the lessons are not always themselves distinctive, there are some important distinctive
features. In the first place, the underlying aims are specific to the teaching of history, as
aims would be for any subject, and it is these which shape the ways in which decisions
about how to teach are made. Although the activities may be in principle transportable
across the curriculum, their underlying educational logic – and ultimately their power
as pedagogic devices – derives from the purpose they serve in the history curricu-
lum. As Chapter 9 suggested, the underlying purposes of the history curriculum are
articulated through the longer term planning which teachers need to undertake. The
lesson on the Civil War, or the lesson on Elizabeth I, or the sequence of lessons on the
Industrial Revolution, for all their strengths as imaginatively conceived and expertly
implemented teaching occasions, have relatively limited power on their own. They
derive their importance from their place in a history curriculum developed to explore
some overarching ideas in a coherent and connected sequence organized around
underlying aims. Understanding the causes of the Civil War or Industrial Revolution
are staging posts in the learning journey which is geared around understanding the
past in relation to the present and the nature of what it means to think historically.
History as an academic discipline has a distinctive set of aims emerging from its dis-
tinctive characteristics as a discipline. There is a body of (substantive) knowledge, as
in any subject, but this knowledge is highly problematic. In consequence, the teacher
has to juggle many aims at once – to communicate and foster knowledge and under-
standing of substantive knowledge while also helping pupils to understand why that
knowledge is contestable and to make patterns with the knowledge which build under-
standings of the past and our own place in relation to it.
There is a further feature of the lessons we have already discussed, and one not
immediately obvious. In the vignettes which introduced this discussion, we described
pupils engaging in ‘enquiry’, using ‘evidence’ and producing written ‘texts’, and
then observed that pupils engage in ‘enquiry’, use ‘evidence’ and produce written
‘texts’ in other curricular areas too. So much is true, but what is not clear is whether
‘enquiry’ means the same thing in history as it does in science, English, art or music,
or whether ‘evidence’ is used in the same way in history as in these other subject
areas. Both competency-based and ‘traditional’ knowledge-based views of the cur-
riculum would suggest that there is an affirmative answer to this: in the case of the
former because ‘discussion’, and ‘evidence’ are simply vehicles for the development of
142 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
generic competencies, and the latter because they are simply the means through which
knowledge is generated. Closer examination, and extensive research and curriculum
development, suggests that this is not the case. Two examples will make the point. Like
history teachers, science teachers use ‘evidence’ as the raw material for their lessons.
However, ‘evidence’ is used in science lessons in quite different ways from the way it
is used in history lessons. In science lessons, evidence is used to test theories, and to
develop understandings of scientific processes (Mortimer and Scott 2003). In history,
‘evidence’ is tested and interrogated to produce usable information on which accounts
of historical events or processes can be built. ‘Enquiry’ has a central place in geography
classrooms just as in history classrooms (Roberts 2003), but the processes are differ-
ent. Geographical enquiry involves the development of skills involved in the collection,
analysis, interpretation and evaluation of information from a wide variety of sources to
make their own sense of physical and human processes. Historical enquiry is perhaps
less wide-ranging: it is disciplined by the pre-existent range of historical interpreta-
tions and limited by the range of evidence. In geographical enquiry, pupils generate
evidence through their own observation and measurement; in historical enquiry they
use already existing evidence.
These may appear somewhat fine distinctions but they translate into different
assumptions and practices in the classroom about what – in these examples – counts
as ‘evidence’ and what shapes an ‘enquiry’. What shapes history in the classroom is dif-
ferent from what shapes geography, or science, or English, or mathematics, just as they
too are distinctive. The result is, of course, demanding for teachers, if frustrating for
curriculum policy makers. Teachers need to work hard at their classroom practice not
simply because the classroom is a demanding situation in which to work but because
the cognitive and intellectual agenda is demanding. Teachers need to help pupils build
substantive knowledge, to help them develop conceptual lenses to make meaning from
this knowledge and to help them understand that the knowledge is provisional and
refracted through the evidence we have available and the assumptions and biases we
bring to this. This is a demanding, ‘deep’ pedagogy.
outlined here may be more important in preparing for work with pupils for whom
learning is a challenge. These learners are those most likely to be confused by the ways
in which teachers use apparently similar ideas differently, use language in relation to
classroom work differently. More able, and older, learners may be better attuned to
the different emphases placed on ideas like ‘enquiry’, ‘evidence’ ‘discussion’, ‘change’
or ‘continuity’. Being clearer about the relationship between activities and their pur-
poses, content and concepts may not make the most challenging pupils easy to teach,
but it may remove some of the hidden barriers to their participation and engagement.
Without an articulation of this ‘deep pedagogy’, it is unlikely that history will either
secure its place in the school curriculum, or achieve the ambitious aims and purposes
to which it aspires.
12
Making history matter:
relevance, diversity, heritage and morality
Much has been written … about the place of history in schools and the related ques-
tions concerning how it should be taught. It is unfortunate that much of the impetus for
this has come less from the consideration of history as a form of knowledge than from a
slightly desperate attempt to provide a defence for its place in the curriculum.
(Rogers 1987: 3–4)
In this chapter, we broaden our focus to consider the contribution history makes to the cur-
riculum and why this matters.We do so by exploring the four organizing themes of the book:
the place of history in the contemporary school curriculum, issues of inclusion, the nature of
pedagogy and the significance of professionalism. By way of introducing the discussion, we
consider the different ways in which history matters to different stakeholders and the impli-
cations of this for practice in classrooms and schools.We then consider dimensions of the way
history matters to pupils, examining the ‘relevance’ of history, the part history plays in issues
of identity in a diverse society, and what it means for adolescents to learn to ‘think histori-
cally’. Finally, we return to the place of history education in society, considering questions of
morality, values and democracy through the lens of the history classroom,
to confront darker corners as to celebrate triumph and heroism. What is captured here
is both a knowledge base and an attitude of mind. History in schools can, but need not
necessarily, provide understanding of the past in the light of the present, explore the
lineage of contemporary problems and demonstrate to young people that society has
not always been organized as it is today. History can, but does not necessarily, develop
skills of evaluating evidence, constructing an argument and communicating it success-
fully. As John Slater put it, history
not only helps us to understand the identity of our communities, cultures and
nations, by knowing something of our past, but also enables our loyalties to them
to be moderated by informed and responsible scepticism. But we cannot expect
too much. It cannot guarantee tolerance, though it can give it some intellectual
weapons. It cannot keep open closed minds, although it may sometimes leave a
nagging grain of doubt in them. Historical thinking is primarily mind-opening,
not socializing.
(Slater 1989: 16)
History, then, matters to society. It has been described as a form of citizenship educa-
tion which sets citizenship into context (Arthur et al. 2001).The difficulty with this line
of argument, however, lies in the difficulty societies have in articulating assumptions
about education. Societies are complex; people disagree. Political debate about the his-
tory curriculum too often presents a grotesque caricature of what the discipline might
be in schools. Politicians make themselves spokespeople for society’s needs, and in
doing so polarize and simplify. Political debate about the place of history teaching rap-
idly becomes crude, partly because of its distance from the classroom, but also because
school history becomes a cipher for more profound disagreements. Ideas which are
complementary, such as the interdependence of knowledge and understanding, the
development of concepts across a range of different contexts, the provisional nature
of evidence, are presented as competing. In political debate, ‘knowledge of the past’
becomes opposed to ‘historical skills’. Nuances in understanding, say the inheritance
of Empire, become choices about whether to celebrate or to condemn. The needs of
some learners are assumed to be in opposition to the needs of others.
To insist that successful history education matters profoundly to society is not
to argue that it serves the needs of sectional interests (Barton and Levstik 2004).
What is clear is that history matters in different ways to different stakeholder groups.
A number of examples will make this clearer. Universities have an obvious interest
in history in schools: schools provide the supply of undergraduate and, eventually,
academic historians on which universities depend and, less directly, provide a reading
public which will ‘consume’ the work historians do. Historically, universities exercised
influence over the content of school examinations through their examination boards
and, although their influence has waned very considerably, academics in universities
continue to express their views on the teaching of subjects in schools (Starkey 2005;
Matthews 2009). As we saw in Chapter 1, however, history as an academic discipline
in universities differs from history in schools, and this influences the debate. While
universities have a legitimate concern about the school curriculum – in terms of stand-
ards of entry to university, and the expectations they have of those coming to read
146 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
particular subjects – Booth and Nicholls found ‘ignorance among lecturers about what
is being done in schools and...apparently little willingness to engage with [it]’, while
suggesting that ‘greater attention needed to be paid to the progression of teaching
methods to ensure effective long-term development in learning in the subject’ (Booth
and Nicholls 2005: 8). Even so, it is important to remember that universities’ legiti-
mate concern with progression right through to undergraduate history is a restricted
one, potentially in tension with a concern for history for all learners: very few school
pupils go on to read history at university, and the orientation of a history curriculum
for all learners is potentially very different from one for those who may progress to
history degrees.
In English schools, head teachers have extensive freedom, effectively as ‘chief
executives’ of their school, over matters of finance, staffing, school organization and,
increasingly, curriculum. The pressures on them are acute. They want to secure high
levels of pupil achievement in ways which enable their pupils to become successful
members of society, but the pressure of examination ‘league tables’ focuses this aspira-
tion in acute ways. It is important not to stereotype the views of head teachers; many
lead creative and imaginative schools, and are aware of the shifting nature of education
and learning in the twenty-first century. Head teachers are frequently found referring
to tensions they experience between the need to secure excellent examination results
for each year group and the pressures to prepare young people for life beyond school,
whether for employment or for adult life more generally. History ‘matters’ to head
teachers in a number of ways: at the most instrumental of levels, history departments
often deliver excellent examination results for pupils who take the subject. What is
more challenging for head teachers is to articulate a place for history in the curriculum
entitlement for all learners given the pressures on schools. Despite the considerable
importance laid by politicians and others on history as a discipline, almost no schools
have placed history in the core curriculum for 14- to 16-year-olds. The Historical
Association survey and Ofsted surveys (Ofsted 2007; Historical Association 2010b)
find evidence that history is squeezed in the 11–14 curriculum both because of the
pressures on head teachers to gear learning around preparation for examination at 16
and because of demands on curriculum time.
Politicians and head teachers are just two, admittedly influential, groups of stake-
holders who frame debate on the history curriculum. Because history matters in dif-
ferent ways to stakeholders, debate about its place in the school curriculum will always
prove difficult to resolve. Indeed, for history teachers, debate about the nature of the
discipline in schools is perhaps akin to steering a dinghy, sometimes running before a
strong wind, sometimes tacking to make progress against the wind, only occasionally
becalmed. In all of this noisy, sometimes ill-informed, debate, school history must mat-
ter above all to pupils themselves. Their voice and their needs matter the most but, as
we saw in Chapter 4, they are often the least heard. A minority of young people may
assume that history matters to them; more generally, adolescents are unpersuaded
that the past is important. From a school viewpoint, it is often easy to see pupils as
relatively passive ‘consumers’ of the curriculum. Recent research suggests that this is
wrong. Keith Barton and Linda Levstik have explored some of the ‘alternative’ histo-
ries which pupils create about the past if they feel they are excluded from the dominant
narrative in the classroom. As we have seen, Alan McCully’s work in Northern Ireland
M A K I N G H I S T O R Y M AT T E R : R E L E V A N C E , D I V E R S I T Y, H E R I TA G E A N D M O R A L I T Y 147
has shown how pupils can pick and choose from the history they are taught in school
to support existing viewpoints (McCully and Pilgrim 2004). As noted earlier, there is
very little research on how gender and class affect pupils’ response to school history,
and some limited work on race and ethnicity; these areas are ripe for further study.
However, what we do know is that pupils are active participants in their own creation
of meaning. If teachers want history to matter – to have some impact – they need to
think hard about young people’s preconceptions and the ways in which history may or
may not connect with their lives. While we have explored in this book – and, as profes-
sionals, applaud – examples of excellent practice to be found in many schools, we also
believe that history is not always made to matter sufficiently to learners. The combina-
tion of complex subject matter, high literacy demands and unimaginative curriculum
and examination specifications often make the subject remote and inaccessible for
many learners. In the rest of this chapter, we explore some of the ways in which his-
tory can matter in pupils’ education, but ultimately it is the teacher in the classroom
who makes history ‘matter’ by finding an entry point into a largely unfamiliar world
that offers pupils some connections between their own lives and the experiences of the
past. It is to these connections that we now turn.
many of the overall [curriculum] aims are about pupils’ roles as national and glo-
bal citizens in rapidly changing cultural, political, economic, technological and
social conditions.Yet the history curriculum contains very little work on the twen-
tieth century.
(White 2004:12)
heritage. However, for all the talk of historical skills, history appears to have a relatively
weak place in any skills-led curriculum; many of the generic skills developed in history
lessons are also developed in other areas of the curriculum, and areas which may have
a stronger claim on ‘relevance’ through their content.
What is relevant to one person is not relevant to another. Personal relevance can
be transitory: no less than adults, young people change their minds about their inter-
ests and enthusiasms. “Relevance” is a slippery word dependent on the aims and val-
ues that underpin the rationale for teaching history. In some settings, it may be sensible
to articulate the basis for a history curriculum in terms of particular skills, or around
particular content emphases, but equally there are dangers. As Claire Fox warned
(Historical Association 2009), if history teachers shackle themselves to trends then
they may be vulnerable when particular trends lose their currency. There are other
approaches to the demands of ‘relevance’ which are more firmly grounded in the ‘deep
pedagogy’ outlined in Chapter 11. A starting point is that a grasp of history is vital to
understanding the world around us and our place in it. An understanding of the past
can illuminate the present because history provides us with ‘a historical frame of refer-
ence’ (Dickinson et al. 1984). This is largely because history is the study of people –
their behaviours, strengths and achievements, weaknesses and failures. Sam Wineburg
cites the much-quoted line from Cicero about human beings’ natural desire to know
what came before (Wineburg 2007: 6). In this sense, any history is potentially relevant
because it is about those who have come before and who have developed solutions to
problems, some familiar, some less so. The argument for relevance which follows from
this starting point is not geared around particular skills or content, pressing though
some of these may be, but in the part which an understanding of the past offers to all
pupils. Articluating this ‘relevance’ is demanding of teachers. It depends on connect-
ing overall aims, the selection of content, the choice of teaching approaches and the
needs of learners in the setting in which they are taught. Put differently, it is a profes-
sional obligation of history teachers to make history matter. A clear sense of why they
are teaching history, why some content has been preferred and why some teaching
methods have been selected is an important dimension of this. History can be made
‘relevant’ in different ways and not only by drawing very direct links to the present.
John Tosh comments that ‘history teaching in schools is designed to accommodate
as many different demands on content as possible, at the expense of conveying what
historical perspective means, and how it might usefully be applied to current issues’
(Tosh 2008).
amount that a pupil knows but rather how they organize, analyse and interpret what
they know, and this remains the case. Knowledge has always been central to teaching
and learning history regardless of what political and media commentators might have
argued. What the ‘new history’ did, perhaps, encourage was a view that any knowledge
was appropriate because the knowledge was important only insofar as it provided
the necessary vehicle for the development of particular ways of thinking, or to foster
pupils’ enjoyment. This view was bolstered by suspicions among some teachers that
any fixed notion of ‘what’ to teach was dangerous and open to political manipulation
(Husbands et al. 2003) and that it was healthier in a democracy for teachers to have as
much choice as possible. More recently there has been renewed interest in the selection
of content in history and more confident assertions of the importance of getting this
selection ‘right’, though definitions of this rarely coincide. What the arguments gener-
ally have in common, however, is desire for pupils to be able to see bigger pictures in
history so that their knowledge is less fragmented. This is not a new argument: in 1902
a report lamented the narrowness of pupils’ historical knowledge and a tendency for
teachers to focus too much on examination syllabuses (Keating and Sheldon 2011).
However, the extent to which school history develops an understanding of these ‘big-
ger pictures’ remains a moot point.
Howson argued in 2007 that ‘History is a major cultural achievement worth
defending’, not because it offers easy lessons to be learned but because an ordered
understanding of the past is a usable past: one that equips pupils with the knowl-
edge and understanding to place themselves in a context and to appreciate where
they have come from and where they might be going (Howson 2007: 47). In the
absence of explicit attempts to develop big picture understanding of the past,
pupils will construct their own, even if it is hopelessly ill-informed, confused and
even dangerous (Rogers 1987). The historian Kitson Clark captured this well when
he wrote about ‘a haphazard mass of misty knowledge, scraps of information, fiction
in fancy dress and hardly conscious historical memories’ from which some kind of
version of the past is constructed and in which ‘words are converted into spells,
symbols are endowed with emotional force and stereotypes emerge which pretend
to describe whole groups of people’. He went on to suggest that this could be of use
to those who ‘wish to invoke irrational loyalties’ and ‘direct the emotion of hatred’
(Kitson Clark 1967: 7). This provides a powerful argument for the importance of sub-
stantive knowledge and its careful selection. Not knowing about certain aspects of the
past is not only socially and culturally disadvantageous; it prevents people from being
able to challenge ‘dogmatic statements and sweeping generalizations’ (MacMillan
2009: 167).
Given that teachers must select what to teach, they need to be sure that the selec-
tion is useful.These decisions will always be subject to change, for what may be defined
as ‘useful’ knowledge for one generation may be very different for another: some his-
torical topics wane in importance as contemporary preoccupations and perceptions
change. Beyond individual topics, knowledge needs to be organized into some kind of
framework to help pupils to see the past in a broader perspective. To privilege one part
of the past over another – Henry VIII over Edward V, or World War I over the Boer War,
for example – teachers need some kind of underpinning rationale which commands
attention now. For some this rationale may be the role of history in communicating a
150 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
sense of Britain’s culture and heritage. For others, it may be about why the West, in
the ascendancy for the past five hundred years, may now be losing that ascendancy
(Ferguson 2004). For others, the ambition may be still greater: to create some sense of
the history of humanity (Shemilt 2009). In each case, the outcome for pupils would
be an enhanced understanding of the world or an aspect of it today and a greater
appreciation of its roots. It is easier, perhaps, to be critical of some of the frameworks
used in the past, such as the Whig interpretation of history (Butterfield 1965), the
Marxist progression from feudalism to capitalism to socialism (Cohen 1979), or our
‘island story’ (Marshall 1905), than it is to articulate a coherent ‘big picture’ for the
early twenty-first century, but this is a pressing obligation for teachers. As one teacher
put it to us, pupils ‘live in a temporary world – they have no sense of value as to what
people have done and achieved’. Teaching and learning history, it could be argued,
can change the way pupils see the world by providing a wider frame of reference
than the present. It can potentially influence attitudes, values and even behaviours,
though there is debate about the extent to which such outcomes should be deliberately
planned for, which could compromise history’s integrity, or left to emerge naturally in
the normal course of teaching and learning (Lee and Shemilt 2007).
Thinking historically
We have already explored what it means to think historically. Here, the argument
developed is how historical thinking is helpful to society and the common good and
we therefore focus on three aspects: history’s relationship with evidence, the way his-
tory illuminates complexity in human behaviour and relationships and the perspective
history brings to current issues. Thinking historically partly means thinking about the
status of what is known. Once pupils move beyond a belief that the history they read is
somehow a copy of the past and develop an appreciation that it is based on incomplete
evidence drawn from various sources, they begin to understand that historical claims
are provisional and therefore subject to change. To think historically in this way is also
to think in disciplined ways (Cooper and Chapman 2009): it is not possible to make
warranted historical claims which are not supported by sufficient weight of evidence,
or which depend on evidence which is deeply flawed, or which are countered by other
evidence. To accept this premise is to understand something important about life in
general: do not believe everything you read or hear and demand the evidence which
supports claims that are made, whether it be by politicians, your bank or the adver-
tising agency marketing the latest shampoo. Postman and Weingartner call history a
‘crap-detecting’ subject (Observer, 22 February 1998) for good reason: it is preoc-
cupied with the status of claims. Unfortunately, there is little empirical evidence that
pupils routinely transfer learning in history to their everyday lives, though we have
each observed lessons where teachers make this transference relatively explicit, and
such practices make it possible that pupils will, at a later date, be able to make these
connections.
Secondly, thinking historically is about recognizing and understanding complex-
ity, especially in human behaviour and relationships. Christine Counsell writes that a
key aspect of history [teaching] is the
diversity and complexity of past society. A good historical education will challenge
stereotypes, avoid homogenization of nations or groups and help pupils to under-
stand that not all people in the past thought and acted in the same way.
(Counsell 2004a)
This is an essential component of historical thinking and one of its most fun-
damental contributions to the common good. To understand that the term ‘Jew’
in pre-war Europe meant many things, to understand that the move from Catholicism
to Protestantism was far from uniform and smooth in England and to understand
that the statement ‘women had no rights before the twentieth century’ is an over-
simplification is also to open the possibility of understanding that not all Muslims
today are Islamic fundamentalists, that not all women have equality with men and
that claims by politicians that Britain is a tolerant society need some interrogation.
Perhaps this is an ambitious claim: again, there is little empirical evidence that such
a transfer of knowledge and attitudes take place. But if pupils have a disposition to
challenge generalizations, and awareness that the labels assigned to people, necessary
though some may be, can be misleading and even dangerous, this is at least an impor-
tant starting point.
152 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
from devolution and the strength of the European Union to the rise of the BNP and
acts of terrorism carried out by British citizens. In a conference about Britishness
convened by the Fabian Society in 2006, Gordon Brown, then Labour Chancellor,
referred to the need to wrest the Union Jack away from the BNP and to use it as a
‘symbol of unity’ emphasizing values of fairness, liberty and responsibility ‘which run
like a “golden thread” through Britain’s past’ (Brown 2006). David Cameron subse-
quently used a speech at the Greatest Briton of 2005 award ceremony to outline his
own views on the subject, claiming that Britishness is not about flags, but rather that
‘reserve is an intrinsic part of being British’. Both saw a key role for history lessons
in shaping a collective identity. Even the singer Billy Bragg, long associated with the
radical left, warned at the Fabian conference that ‘if we flinch from a discussion of
our history, we leave it to the BNP and UKIP – it’s a nettle we must grasp’. Although
this debate was not new in 2006, it was conducted with a new urgency in the wake of
the July bombings in 2005 (Kitson 2006). The issues at stake are fraught with uncer-
tainty, not least because there is no consensus around the values associated with being
British. In contrast to Brown and Cameron above, the newspaper columnist Yasmin
Alibhai-Brown regards the concept of universally good British values as ‘absurd’ and
sees the challenge as the creation of ‘a new British identity which has evolved from his-
torical meanings but is not bound by history’ (Alibhai-Brown 2006). In other words,
Britishness is an identity which reflects the realities of the present rather than being
dependent on past actions and values. The historian Linda Colley argued that the very
concept of ‘Britons’, and the emergence of a national collective identity, was a largely
political creation of the eighteenth century: ‘an invented nation, superimposed onto
much older alignments and loyalties’ (Colley 1992: 5).
Teachers are often suspicious of using history to promote any sense of British
identity, not least because of the way British history was taught in the earlier part the
twentieth century when the British Empire was only celebrated and the ‘Great’ in
Great Britain was taken literally. One teacher said that he would ‘hate to be teaching a
subject which is about Britain’s greatness…there are lots of things we should be proud
of but also things we shouldn’t’ (Kitson 2006: 89). Nevertheless, teachers have been
teaching mainly British – indeed, English – history at Key Stage 3 for much of the
twentieth century and, when pushed to identify those topics which all pupils should
learn about, cite mainly events and people drawn from Britain’s past (Husbands et al.
2003). There seems to be a consensus that pupils ought to learn about British history,
but there is room for considerable debate about how much of their history curriculum
should be made up of British history and about the way this history is presented, and
nuanced. Teachers need to be outward as well as inward looking in the ways they teach
Britain’s past. One of the defining features of Britain lies in its relationship to the rest of
the world, from its earliest origins in the waves of invasion and settlement to the expan-
sion of the Empire and its collapse. Its fortunes and relationships with other countries
today are shaped by long historical experiences including Britain’s geographical posi-
tion between mainland Europe and North America, its adoption of Protestantism in
the sixteenth century and its eighteenth- and nineteenth-century mastery of the seas.
In this sense, to learn about Britain’s past is to learn about much of the world, albeit
through a British lens. In one East Anglian school we visited, the history department
deliberately focuses primarily on British history where possible, using the locality of
154 TEACHING AND LEARNING HISTORY 11–18
the school as a backbone. Far from making the history insular, the approach enables
global connections to be made by examining the waves of immigration into Norwich
in the Middle Ages, when, for example, one-third of the city’s population spoke Dutch.
Keith Ajegbo, who led a review of citizenship and diversity for the government in
2005, argued that history is a component of citizenship education because of its role in
exploring identity and diversity in the UK. History, he argued, can bring ‘rigour to the
debate’ (Ajegbo 2007) while retaining its integrity as an academic component of the
curriculum. There is some evidence about the way pupils connect identity and history.
In Northern Ireland, where the historical roots of conflicting identities are especially
resonant, teachers have traditionally shied away from tackling issues of identity, or
indeed anything controversial, too overtly. The most recent research suggests that,
consequently, pupils take what they want from the past to justify their preconceptions,
whether that be from history classrooms or from elsewhere (McCully and Pilgrim
2004). Although there can often be understandable reasons for some teachers’ tend-
ency to ‘play safe’ in the classroom, the research, far from claiming that history can have
no role to play in helping pupils understand fraught issues, points to a potentially posi-
tive correlation. In other words history can help pupils to explore challenging issues of
conflict and identity, whereas when history teachers avoid tackling controversial issues
pupils are likely to draw on ‘street’ knowledge which reinforces stereotypes. Nowhere
is history teaching more profoundly intertwined with issues of national identity than
in the teaching of the Holocaust in German schools. There, the principal objective
of teaching about the Holocaust is not limited to the historical record, although the
Holocaust is set squarely within the context of the Nazi rise to power. Instead, the
purpose of teaching German pupils about the Holocaust is explicitly to make them
appreciate the values and institutions that protect freedom and democracy (Holocaust
Education Task Force 2009). At the same time, if history is to play a part in education
for diversity and interdependence, much of the traditional content of school history
needs careful consideration. British history may provide a window on the history of
the world, but a history curriculum which takes only a British view is unlikely to pre-
pare young people for understanding a world of global interdependence.
‘Heritage’ is a concept which is often seen as distinct from global interdependence:
while learning for global interdependence – or ‘global learning’ as it has become known –
appears to be associated with outward-looking perspectives, ‘heritage’ is often associ-
ated with introspective and ‘backward-looking concerns’ based on ‘shar[ing] what we
inherit among colleagues and communities, nations and faiths’ (Lowenthal 1998: xiii,
55). History is not heritage and both historians and history teachers have often been
critical of relating history to heritage; this has either been a relatively mild concern
about the ways in which heritage reflects an uncritical nostalgia for an imagined, soft-
focus past (Tosh 2006: 17) or deeper concerns about the ways in which heritage can
be manipulated for quasi-political ends to shape perceptions about what ‘the nation’
might be (Wright 2009). In multicultural and diverse Britain, ‘heritage’ can often be
seen as a way of celebrating an impossibly pretty past of thatched cottages, castles
and, as the Conservative Prime Minister John Major put it, ‘long shadows on cricket
grounds, warm beer, invincible green suburbs, dog lovers and pools fillers and, as
George Orwell said, “Old maids bicycling to holy communion through the morning
mist” ’ (Major 1993). On the other hand, we all have a heritage: the heritage of family,
M A K I N G H I S T O R Y M AT T E R : R E L E V A N C E , D I V E R S I T Y, H E R I TA G E A N D M O R A L I T Y 155
communities in which our families have lived, shared and contested cultural frames of
reference which go to make up the ways we think and feel. The difficulty is not with
the idea of ‘heritage’ so much as the way it may be used selectively to approach the way
we think about the past. ‘Heritage’ is the heritage of those who came to this country
as refugees and immigrants as much as the heritage of those who owned the country-
side, and of those who were disadvantaged as well as those who exercised power. As
Raphael Samuel put it, heritage can be a way of advancing ‘notions of ancestry and
posterity...without embarrassment or bad faith’ (Samuel 1995: 292). In this sense,
one of the ways in which history in school matters to society is in the space it offers in
which to explore what ‘heritages’ we share and over what heritages we differ. Heritage
sites are, in practice, a staple of the history curriculum: Tracy Borman points out that
there are some three million educational visits to such sites each year (Borman 2005).
Heritage sites provide a basis for exploring competing notions of heritage within the
context of a history curriculum – what Borman calls ‘education by stealth’. Heritage
matters to history when heritage sites are used historically, not when history lessons
are used to explore particular presentations of the past.
however small. Schools themselves do set out to influence pupils’ attitudes and beliefs
(Haydon 2007), and the argument we are advancing here is that the specific contribu-
tion of history to the school curriculum lies as much in its scope to develop certain
attitudes and to develop a disposition to certain values as in the scope to extend pupils’
knowledge and understanding. The past is not a source of moral instruction; as E.P.
Thompson insisted,
Our vote will change nothing. Yet in another sense, it may change everything. For
we are saying that these values, and not those other values, are the ones which
make this history meaningful to us, and that these are the values which we intend
to enlarge and sustain in our own present.
(Thompson 1978: 234)
Timms: You told us once…it was to do with the trenches, Sir…that one person’s
death tells you more than a thousand. When people are dying like flies, you said,
that is what they are dying like.
Posner: Except that these weren’t just dying. They were being processed. What is
different is the process.
Irwin: Good.
Hector: No, not good. Posner is not making a point. He is speaking from the heart.
(Bennett 2004: 71–2)
These three boys and three girls are all from a low-attaining set in a rural school with an
almost exclusively white intake.
Interviewer: Someone said that they like finding out about the past. Do you think there
is stuff in the past to help you work out what is going on at the moment?
Boy 1: You’d be better off just learning about what’s in the ‘fore-world’ like Afghanistan
and that...
Boy 2: But how are you going to know the future?
Boy 1: No, what’s happening now, like Afghan and that.
Girl 1: Yes, like the war…
Boy 1: ...and the Taleban and stuff.
Girl 2: But in history we do learn about wars and how they tried to make peace but
they’re still doing it now.
Interviewer: Don’t you think we can learn stuff from the past though?
Boy 1: …like the Twin Towers.
Girl 2: But we’ve never actually done anything about that.
Boy 3: I’ve watched it…
Boy 1: Cos it’s history.
Interviewer: It’s pretty recent history though isn’t it? And because it’s quite recent it’s
quite worrying because it could happen again.
Boy 1: But they’re not afraid to die are they? They would do anything for their country.
The people who went into the Twin Towers they just went into it – they didn’t care if
they died did they?
Girl 1: It’s not for a country – it’s for their religion.
Interviewer: So can history help us understand that?
Boy 2: I reckon it can but it’s also religious.
Girl 2: In some ways I think [history] can help in life.
Int: How do you find out about what’s happening in the world? Like politics and stuff?
Boy 1: People watch the news.
Int: So is it important to know what’s going on?
All: Yes
Int: When do you get to vote?
All: 18 or over.
Int: How do you think you’ll learn about how to vote? Do you think you’ll want to vote?
Girl 2: It all depends…
Boy 1: I won’t vote. Because I won’t know who to vote for. I’m not that sort of person.
Int: So is it important to vote? Because it seems you’re saying you could change…
Boy 2: …the world!
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Index
A level ambiguity
choices at, 107 language, 90
difference to GCSE, 51–52 American Civil War, 9
historical enquiry at, 56 American Revolution, 65
reading tasks, 92 American settlers
threat to inclusive history classrooms, 132 westward expansion of, 87
abbeys, 28 analogies, 152
ability analogy
labelling, 124–6 use of, 75
perception of, 126 analytic tools
abstractions, 90, 99, 121 differentiating between sources and, 63
academic history Ancient Egyptians, 14
popular history distinguished, 16 ancient history
‘acceptable simplification’, 127–8 suggestion it be taught in primary
access schools, 14
barriers to, 126 anthropological theory, 78
accessibility, 127 anthropology
Act of Conformity (1662), 105 historians borrowing from, 78
active teaching, 39 anti-Semitism, 139
affective needs, 120 apartheid, 19
African Americans appeasement
slavery, 65 public memory of, 152
African history, 123 arguing genres, 93
Afro-Caribbean community argumentation, 40
learning from experiences of, 43 art
Afro-Caribbean pupils popularity, 39
experience of history, 122 artefacts
agriculture use of, 32
early development of, 14 assessment, 96–104
Ajegbo, Keith, 154 embedded in realistic contexts, 97
Alexander the Great [BC, 356–323], 84 overuse of term, 96
Alexander, Robin J., 27, 138, 141 pupils’ progress, 97
Alibhai-Brown, Yasmin, 153 research into, 101
176 INDEX
Attainment Targets, 22, 51, 61, 80, 97–100, Boer War, 149
148 Bollywood
common framework of, 21 portrayal of British rule in India, 10
attitude, 155–57 books, 121
effects of streaming, 125 Borman, Tracy, 155
aural signs, 96 Bragg, Stephen William (Billy), 153
Australia Braudel, Fernand [1902–85], 78
national curriculum, 13, 19 Briggs, Raymond Redvers, 129
Austria British Empire, 10, 67, 153
relationship with Germany, 73 decline of, 16
authenticity British history, 21
challenge of, 97–8 British Museum
avoid making same mistakes collaboration with BBC Radio Four, 33,
purpose of history, 41 114
British National Party (BNP)
Bage, Grant, 14–15, 29 rise of, 153
Baker, Kenneth Wilfred, 21–22 Britishness
Banham, Dale, 109 what constitutes, 152–53
Barnes, Douglas, 29 Britton, James Nimmo [1908–94], 29
Barnes, Steven, 79 Brown, Gordon, 153
Barton, Keith, 146 Buckaroo, 130
Battle of Britain, 9, 95 Burnham, Sally, 26
Battle of the Somme, 129 Burrow, John Wyon [1935–2009], 15
compared with Battle of Waterloo, 87 Butler, Andrew M., 12
Battle of Waterloo Byrom, Jamie, 114, 147
compared with Battle of the Somme, 87
BBC Radio, 4 Cameron, David, 153
collaboration with British Museum, 33, 114 capitalism, 150
Beckett, Thomas [c1118–70], 110 Card, Jane, 83
causes for murder of, 74–75 card sorting activities, 74–75
behaviour Caribbean history, 123
complexity of, 71 castles, 28
behaviour problems, 119 Catherine of Aragon, Queen [1485–1536],
belief systems 128
continuity in, 78 Catholicism
benchmarking move to Protestantism from, 151
child’s performance, 97 Catholics
Benin, 62 Northern Ireland, 129
Bennett, Alan, 156 causal reasoning, 73
bias, 8 principles and strategies for teaching,
primary sources, 58 74–80
‘big picture’ causal relationships
providing, 112–4 operation of, 74–76
biographers, 71 causation, 66, 99, 116
black people misunderstandings about, 73–74
representation in history curriculum, 43 terminology of, 76–77
Blair, Anthony Charles Lynton (Tony), 152 World War I, 73
Blitz, 95 cause, 72–73
‘blockers’, 121 Centre for the Study of Historical
Bloom’s taxonomy, 91 Consciousness, 112
INDEX 177
United Nations Convention on the Rights of does not require some study of history to
the Child (1989) end of schooling, 24
little effect on education, 38 Walsh, Ben, 26, 127
United States war memorials
Cuban Missile Crisis, 14, 130 historical significance, 28
historical topics, 9 warfare, 110
inability of Texan teenagers to identify Wars of Spanish Succession, 45
year of Declaration of Independence We didn’t start the fire, 87
45 wealth
unity, 110 concept of, 67
universities Whig interpretation
interest in history in schools, 145–46 history, 150
‘upper case History’, 16, 78, 90 whiteboards
Uprising of, 1857 chalkboards replaced by, 25
alternative name for Indian Mutiny, 10 Who do you think you are?, 152
urban development whole-class question and answer, 90–91
significance of Great Fire of London on, Wilde, Oscar Fingal O’Flahertie Wills
84–85 [1854–1900], 93
Usable Historical Pasts project, 46, 112 Wilkes, Private Reg
usefulness experiences of in First World War, 69,
history, 40 129
‘uses and abuses of history’, 18 William I
utility, 8 victory of, 75–76
Windrush, SS, 70
values, 155–57 Wineburg, Sam, 45–46, 60, 67, 148
‘vernacular’ history Withered Arm, The, 93
‘official’ history compared, 121–2 women
Vesalius, Andreas [1514–64], 109 hidden from history, 15
Victorian life, 57 women’s rights, 151
video, 11, 25 Woodcock, J., 76–77
Vietnam Woolley, M., 93
justification for American policy in World War I, 69, 129–30, 138, 149
152 causation, 73
visual impairment, 126 causes of, 75
visual signs, 96 teaching about, 21
vocabulary, 122–3 World War II, 9, 69, 77–8
vocational courses, 41 basis for, 138
vocational qualifications, 20 key turning point, 95
vocational reasons writing
learning history, 41 importance of, 93–94
voice, 108 written assignments
Vygotsky, Lev [1896–1934], 27 feedback, 103
written work, 40
wage records, 78
Wales zone of relevance, 75
TEACHING & LEARNING Alison Kitson & Chris Husbands
HISTORY 11-18 with Susan Steward
www.openup.co.uk