How can we teach ‘forgotten’ histories of war and empire in the classroom, responding to urgent needs to ‘decolonize’ the curriculum and pedagogic practice? This article reflects on an exercise in pedagogical experimentation – a ‘widening participation’ project based upon a series of workshops – to demonstrate a more global and ‘messy’ understanding of the role of empire in the First and Second World Wars and their commemoration. We discuss the role of students and teachers as co-producers of knowledge, engaging with race and colonialism in the classroom, and the intervention of such work in the project of ‘decolonizing’ curricula
History education researchers in the U.S. have largely focused on students’ capacities to improve th...
This article discusses the colonial mind and the classroom by investigating ways to decolonize the c...
How do we teach and learn the human experience of war? How far removed is this experience from a cla...
How can we teach ‘forgotten’ histories of war and empire in the classroom, responding to urgent need...
On the back of the Royal Historical Society’s 2018 report on race and ethnicity, as well as ongoing ...
Over recent years there has been a great deal of discussion and public debate in the UK about the ty...
The British Empire was instrumental in shaping the modern world as we know it. Despite its significa...
The brutal killing of George Floyd in the USA by white policeman has triggered the explosion of #Bla...
This paper is concerned with the purpose and the pedagogy of teaching History in schools,\ud primary...
A growing disturbance with history’s identity in the New Zealand schooling curriculum disrupted my e...
Paper given at History in Schools and Higher Education: Issues of Common Concern (second conference
In 2018 it is 30 years since the Educational Reform Act of 1988 introduced a National Curriculum to ...
The accession of a conservative led coalition government in the United Kingdom has brought calls for...
This article offers a trans-Tasman critique of approaches to the teaching of history in New Zealand ...
This thesis seeks to explore history teacher engagement in debates surrounding the 2013 draft Nation...
History education researchers in the U.S. have largely focused on students’ capacities to improve th...
This article discusses the colonial mind and the classroom by investigating ways to decolonize the c...
How do we teach and learn the human experience of war? How far removed is this experience from a cla...
How can we teach ‘forgotten’ histories of war and empire in the classroom, responding to urgent need...
On the back of the Royal Historical Society’s 2018 report on race and ethnicity, as well as ongoing ...
Over recent years there has been a great deal of discussion and public debate in the UK about the ty...
The British Empire was instrumental in shaping the modern world as we know it. Despite its significa...
The brutal killing of George Floyd in the USA by white policeman has triggered the explosion of #Bla...
This paper is concerned with the purpose and the pedagogy of teaching History in schools,\ud primary...
A growing disturbance with history’s identity in the New Zealand schooling curriculum disrupted my e...
Paper given at History in Schools and Higher Education: Issues of Common Concern (second conference
In 2018 it is 30 years since the Educational Reform Act of 1988 introduced a National Curriculum to ...
The accession of a conservative led coalition government in the United Kingdom has brought calls for...
This article offers a trans-Tasman critique of approaches to the teaching of history in New Zealand ...
This thesis seeks to explore history teacher engagement in debates surrounding the 2013 draft Nation...
History education researchers in the U.S. have largely focused on students’ capacities to improve th...
This article discusses the colonial mind and the classroom by investigating ways to decolonize the c...
How do we teach and learn the human experience of war? How far removed is this experience from a cla...