Teaching bias in history lessons: An example using Maltese history

Yosanne Vella
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Historians collect and verify evidence and then interpret it in an acceptable way. A general consensus is that history does not present us with an absolute truth – the most we can hope for is historians' reliable, evidentially based interpretations of the historical topic. History not viewed as interpretation has long raised alarm bells in history pedagogy circles. History educators are acutely aware that history taught as an uncontested body of positivistic knowledge with a canon of given factual information can promote prejudice, bias and bigotry – it can ultimately fuel civil and international conflict and violence. Alternatively, history teaching as a constructivist process with multiple interpretations can be used to promote positive values – history pedagogy can be a tool to support peace, reconciliation and conflict resolution. This places a major responsibility on a key objective of history teaching: addressing the concept of historical bias with effective methods of teaching on how to detect and analyse bias in historical sources for both primary and secondary schools. This paper reports an attempt at teaching secondary school students (aged 13 to 14 years) how to detect bias in primary written history sources while learning about a controversial topic in Maltese history – church– state relations in Malta in the 1960s. The method employed is qualitative research – specifically pedagogical research – which is research into the processes and practices of learning and teaching. In this case, the researcher tries new teaching methods with a small group of students, and their feedback regarding the exercise is examined. The students' ultimate answers after trying out the new scaffolding activities were quite encouraging, and show that breakdown of tasks is the key to helping understanding in history learning. The pedagogy employed is discussed in comparison to other approaches to teaching about bias. The paper also analyses student feedback on their learning about bias. Crucially, the paper addresses the impact of a specific intervention strategy to improve student understanding of, and ability to detect, bias in historical sources.
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历史课的教学偏见:以马耳他历史为例
历史学家收集和核实证据,然后以一种可接受的方式解释它。一个普遍的共识是,历史并没有给我们一个绝对的真理——我们最多能希望的是历史学家对历史主题的可靠的、基于证据的解释。不被视为解释的历史一直是历史教育界的警钟。历史教育者敏锐地意识到,将历史作为一种毫无争议的实证主义知识体系,以既定的事实信息为标准来教授,可能会助长偏见、偏见和偏执——最终会助长国内和国际冲突和暴力。另外,历史教学作为一个具有多种解释的建构主义过程,可以用来促进积极的价值观——历史教学法可以成为支持和平、和解和解决冲突的工具。这给历史教学的一个关键目标带来了重大责任:通过有效的教学方法来解决历史偏见的概念,如何在小学和中学发现和分析历史来源中的偏见。本文试图教中学生(13至14岁)在了解马耳他历史上一个有争议的话题——20世纪60年代马耳他的政教关系时,如何发现主要书面历史资料中的偏见。所采用的方法是定性研究——特别是教学研究——这是对学习和教学过程和实践的研究。在这种情况下,研究人员在一小群学生中尝试新的教学方法,并检查他们对练习的反馈。同学们在尝试了新的搭建活动后,得到了令人鼓舞的最终答案,这表明任务分解是帮助理解历史学习的关键。与其他关于偏见的教学方法进行比较,讨论了所采用的教学法。本文还分析了学生对偏见学习的反馈。至关重要的是,本文阐述了特定干预策略的影响,以提高学生对历史来源偏见的理解和检测能力。
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