by katnoodle » Sat Oct 03, 2009 10:49 pm
This is such a valid debate, and one I hope the education policy-makers will be listening to (don't get me started on them).
I'll be starting a PGCE in secondary history next year, and I'm both excited and worried about my future career. I absolutely agree that to be an effective history teacher you have to engage and enthuse your students about the past. I'm lucky to have a resilient passion for history, but I've had my share of poor teachers who managed to make the Russian Revolution dull. Obviously the first thing a good history teacher needs is an infectious love of the subject, but I believe a good sense of humour about the past, not treating it too heavily. It should also be made relevant to the pupils - if it doesn't have an obvious link to the present day, encouraging a keen sense of empathy is both useful and important. I really hope I turn out to be one of those inspirational and memorable teachers.
But as others have said here, even dedication to the best teaching of your subject is little use if the education system doesn't see the value of learning history. It will always take second place to the core subjects, but it seems to be increasingly seem as a luxury subject - one that would be nice to study if only there was room on the timetable. I hope it will enjoy a kind of renaissance, recognised as being essential for providing young people with a solid understanding of what shaped the world around them. An encouraging number of students continue to choose history at GCSE and A Level - if this is to continue and improve, the onus is on the exam boards to provide a stimulating syllabus. I opted not to take GCSE at GCSE purely because the programme looked so dull.
I agreed with the arguments of both Andrew Marr and Terry Deary - while hardly diametrically opposed, they both made very valid points. It may not be the most fun aspect of the subject, but a sense of chronology is absolutely vital. Quite rightly, students today are being taught how to form a good argument, how to evaluate sources, how to recognise bias, etc. But history is essentially a long, intricate story - if it's taught in a disjointed manner it will never make sense.