A great deal has been written about causation in the pages of Teaching History. From camels to linguistics, this is a second-order concept that teachers and pupils frequently deliberate. Departments balance the need for substantive knowledge with explicit discussion of causation. Ben Jarman wanted to introduce a 'change and continuity' enquiry to his department but similar questions arose: should change and continuity be considered explicitly and separately as concepts? This article describes a journey from one enquiry question to another; from 'When were Jews in medieval England most in danger?' to 'Were Jews in medieval England always in danger?' Along the way, Jarman uses a careful analysis of students' work to critique his own practice ...
‘Why would you burn witches? They do not exist!’ Such statements are familiar for history teachers. ...
How the eternal questions about 'what it means to be human' translate in and trough the Holocaust, e...
This study investigates the presence of multiperspectivity in history teaching through teachers' con...
The small-scale research that Yosanne Vella reports in this article was driven by concern to help pu...
This volume examines the teaching of Jewishness within the context of medieval England. It covers a ...
Paper given at History in Schools and Higher Education: Issues of Common Concern (second conference
The purpose of this paper is to contribute with knowledge for what students might need to learn to m...
In this article we argue for the use of Counterfactual Historical Reasoning (CHR) in history educati...
The theme of the conference is a celebration of history teaching in the 350th year of schooling in S...
International audienceKnowledge in history can be defined as an answer to the question: “why things ...
It has become the orthodoxy in recent years to assume that anti-Semitism globally is not only rising...
This study aims to investigate how history teachers talk about the historical thinking concepts chan...
Accusations of Jewish ritual murder have persisted into the modern era, but the medieval origins of ...
[Extract] Studying time, continuity and change is the special province of history. The chapter consi...
The objective of this study was to gain knowledge concerning what up-per secondary students need to ...
‘Why would you burn witches? They do not exist!’ Such statements are familiar for history teachers. ...
How the eternal questions about 'what it means to be human' translate in and trough the Holocaust, e...
This study investigates the presence of multiperspectivity in history teaching through teachers' con...
The small-scale research that Yosanne Vella reports in this article was driven by concern to help pu...
This volume examines the teaching of Jewishness within the context of medieval England. It covers a ...
Paper given at History in Schools and Higher Education: Issues of Common Concern (second conference
The purpose of this paper is to contribute with knowledge for what students might need to learn to m...
In this article we argue for the use of Counterfactual Historical Reasoning (CHR) in history educati...
The theme of the conference is a celebration of history teaching in the 350th year of schooling in S...
International audienceKnowledge in history can be defined as an answer to the question: “why things ...
It has become the orthodoxy in recent years to assume that anti-Semitism globally is not only rising...
This study aims to investigate how history teachers talk about the historical thinking concepts chan...
Accusations of Jewish ritual murder have persisted into the modern era, but the medieval origins of ...
[Extract] Studying time, continuity and change is the special province of history. The chapter consi...
The objective of this study was to gain knowledge concerning what up-per secondary students need to ...
‘Why would you burn witches? They do not exist!’ Such statements are familiar for history teachers. ...
How the eternal questions about 'what it means to be human' translate in and trough the Holocaust, e...
This study investigates the presence of multiperspectivity in history teaching through teachers' con...