This article draws on late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century teaching manuals, reports of Her Majesty's Inspectors, history textbooks ('readers'), other administrators' and teachers' accounts, policy documents and pupils' reminiscences to refute common and generalised assessments of the period (often by those who have not looked closely at these specific sources) that the teaching of history was a negative and boring experience, limited mainly and simply to reading comprehension of lengthy pages devoid of timelines and visual materials. The article concentrates on the experience of English elementary schools and draws comparisons between past and present teaching approaches. The findings show that there is extant evidence that there d...
The paper reports the outcomes of a Qualifications and Curriculum Authority (QCA) funded study of pu...
The past three decades have seen radical changes in policymakers’, educationalists’ and history educ...
There is evidence in the literature that Junior Secondary students are becoming disengaged from scho...
This article draws on late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century teaching manuals, reports of Her ...
This paper brings together the ideas of three writers from the 1880s who argued for an enhanced stat...
The paper explores pupil attitudes towards history as a school subject in England, with a view to de...
This article attempts to review the rhetoric and the educational policies on the use of history for ...
The accession of a conservative led coalition government in the United Kingdom has brought calls for...
Estella Lewis’s handbook for teachers, Teaching History in Secondary Schools, published in 1960, is ...
The article examines the enduring popularity of a form of school history which is based predominantl...
This report evaluates the strengths and weaknesses of history in primary and secondary schools. It i...
The literature review paper provided reassures the reader that in fact it is beneficial and most imp...
The chapter traces developments in the ways in which history student teachers have been inducted int...
In 2018 it is 30 years since the Educational Reform Act of 1988 introduced a National Curriculum to ...
This article explores what English School theorists claim for history in the study of international ...
The paper reports the outcomes of a Qualifications and Curriculum Authority (QCA) funded study of pu...
The past three decades have seen radical changes in policymakers’, educationalists’ and history educ...
There is evidence in the literature that Junior Secondary students are becoming disengaged from scho...
This article draws on late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century teaching manuals, reports of Her ...
This paper brings together the ideas of three writers from the 1880s who argued for an enhanced stat...
The paper explores pupil attitudes towards history as a school subject in England, with a view to de...
This article attempts to review the rhetoric and the educational policies on the use of history for ...
The accession of a conservative led coalition government in the United Kingdom has brought calls for...
Estella Lewis’s handbook for teachers, Teaching History in Secondary Schools, published in 1960, is ...
The article examines the enduring popularity of a form of school history which is based predominantl...
This report evaluates the strengths and weaknesses of history in primary and secondary schools. It i...
The literature review paper provided reassures the reader that in fact it is beneficial and most imp...
The chapter traces developments in the ways in which history student teachers have been inducted int...
In 2018 it is 30 years since the Educational Reform Act of 1988 introduced a National Curriculum to ...
This article explores what English School theorists claim for history in the study of international ...
The paper reports the outcomes of a Qualifications and Curriculum Authority (QCA) funded study of pu...
The past three decades have seen radical changes in policymakers’, educationalists’ and history educ...
There is evidence in the literature that Junior Secondary students are becoming disengaged from scho...