This book describes and exemplifies strategies for teaching history across the 11-19 age range in rigorous and enjoyable ways. It illustrates active learning approaches embedded in pupil-led enquiries, through detailed case studies which involve students in planning and carrying out historical enquiries, creating accounts and presenting them to audiences, in ways that develop increasingly sophisticated historical thinking.
The case studies took place in a number of different localities and show how practising teachers worked with pupils during each year from Y6/7 to Y 13 to initiate, plan and implement enquiries and to present their findings in a variety of ways.
Each case study is a practical example which teachers can use as a model and modify for their own contexts, showing how independent learning linked to group collaboration and peer assessment can enhance learning. Social constructivist theories of learning applied to historical thinking underpin the book, with particular emphasis on links between personalised and collaborative learning and e-learning.
Inhoudsopgave
Introduction: Constructing History 11-19 – Arthur Chapman
Year 5/6 and Year 7 Historians Visit Brougham Castle – Hilary Cooper and Liz West
Bringing the History Curriculum to Life for Year 8/9 – Jon Nichol
Towards Independent Learning in History: Year 10 – Joanne Philpott, Johannes Ahrenfelt and Terry Haydn
Documentaries, Causal Linking and Hyper-linking for AS Students – Arthur Chapman and Jane Facey
Advancing History post-16: E-learning, Collaboration and Assessment – Arthur Chapman and Barbara Hibbert
Afterword – Hilary Cooper
Over de auteur
Hilary Cooper is Professor Emeritus of History and Pedagogy at the University of Cumbria. After many years teaching in London primary schools and undertaking her doctoral research on child development using data collected as a class teacher, she lectured in education at Goldsmiths’ College, London University. In 1993 she became Director of Professional Studies in the Department of Education at Lancaster University, then Reader, and later Professor of Education at St Martin’s College, now the University of Cumbria. She has published widely, in numerous languages; the underlying theme of all her books is ‘teaching creatively’. She has been a keynote speaker at, and continues to organise international conferences.