Why Learn History (When It's Already on Your Phone)
HISTORY EDUCATION IS IN DECLINE because it fails to provide knowledge useful in the future as other school subjects do. This book calls on history teachers to take charge of history education and restore the power of historical learning.
Education exists to impart knowledge useful in the future. School subjects other than history provide knowledge useful in the future by identifying general principles derived from their subject matter that describe how the world works, principles such as addition in mathematics, grammar in language, and gravity in science. These disciplines pass on their general principles to teachers who pass on this knowledge to students.
Historians, however, concentrate on describing events of the past rather than identifying principles useful in the future. Without general principles to impart, history teachers are left to recount one-time events of the past, most of which have little or no relevance to the lives students will live in the present and future.
Without principles useful in the future, history is unable to fulfill the purpose of education the way other school subjects do; society has no practical means to learn from the past; and the cycle of historical ignorance can perpetuate indefinitely.
Educators commonly try to compensate for history's lack of subject-matter knowledge useful in the future by emphasizing skills knowledge instead: critical thinking skills or the job skills of professional historians. Other school subjects also have their critical thinking skills and professional practices, but in these other disciplines general principles constitute the foundation of learning because knowledge of how the world works is a necessary prerequisite to critical thinking. In history education that necessary prerequisite is missing.
The truth is, history has been supplying humans with useful principles of knowledge for at least 2,400 years, since the time of Thucydides in Greece and Sun Tzu in China. In earlier times, history could involve more than the act of describing past events; it could involve the ambition to derive from events principles useful in the future, an ambition that the history profession has largely abandoned. This loss deprives historical learning of the power possessed by other intellectual disciplines.
If historians wish to concentrate on the role of describing events of the past, that's their business. Then the task of providing knowledge useful in the future falls to history educators, because that's their business.
Former journalist and history teacher Mike Maxwell undertook a seven-year investigation to discover how history education could be made more useful to students and society. The result is future-focused history, the commonsense idea that knowledge from the past can inform judgment in the future.Country | USA |
Brand | Maxwell Learning LLC |
Manufacturer | Maxwell Learning |
Binding | Paperback |
ItemPartNumber | 16 Illustrations |
UnitCount | 1 |
EANs | 9781732120105 |
ReleaseDate | 0000-00-00 |