作者Dawes Duraisingh, Elizabeth
ProQuest Information and Learning Co
Harvard University. Educational Policy, Leadership and Instructional Practice
書名Interpreting the past, interpreting themselves? : How young people use history to talk about their lives, identities, and values
出版項2012
說明1 online resource (211 pages)
文字text
無媒介computer
成冊online resource
附註Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 74-04(E), Section: A
Adviser: Howard Gardner
Thesis (Ed.D.) Harvard University 2012
Includes bibliographical references
This item is not available from ProQuest Dissertations & Theses
History education experts are increasingly interested in the concept of historical consciousness---that is, how as individuals we orient ourselves in time and create for ourselves "historical identity". But is encouraging students to feel personally connected to the past potentially in tension with promoting their historical understanding in a "disciplinary" sense?
I conducted an exploratory, ground-up investigation into how 16-18 year olds think about themselves in relation to the past (n=179). In particular, I explored the relationship between young people's epistemological understandings of history and the ways in which they use history to talk about their own lives, identities, and values
I administered a three-part questionnaire to students in four Boston-area public schools. Some tasks invited students to make connections between themselves and the past; another probed their epistemological thinking. I interviewed 28 students about their responses. In my analysis I paid particular attention to how students were constructing narratives and what they were doing when they made connections between themselves and the past. I also assessed whether students exhibited constructivist or objectivist assumptions about the nature of historical knowledge
My principal findings were: (1) Differences in students' epistemological understandings of history were related to important differences in how they talked about themselves in relation to the past. (2) An awareness of the constructed nature of historical knowledge did not preclude students from demonstrating considerable sensitivity toward the influence of the past on their lives, or from conveying a "strong" historical identity. Sophisticated epistemological understanding potentially enhanced students' historical consciousness. (3) Students were accomplishing a variety of things when they made connections between themselves and the past, including positioning themselves relative to different groups and individuals. (4) Students' developmental need to form a coherent identity and ideology influenced how they interacted with the past. For example, without prompting on my part, many students used the past to discuss their values. (5) My focus on various processes by which young people connect their own lives to the past yielded valuable insights which could inform both theory and practice in history education, as well as literatures concerned with individual identity construction
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Mich. : ProQuest, 2018
Mode of access: World Wide Web
主題Social sciences education
Cognitive psychology
Social psychology
Electronic books.
0534
0633
0451
ISBN/ISSN9781267845498
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