Promoting historical empathy with a local history research project about the pandemic

Katherine Perrotta, Katlynn Cross
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Abstract

PurposeWe examined how high school students demonstrated historical empathy through conducting local history place-based research to create an exhibit and companion book about the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on their community. The majority of existing historical empathy scholarship focuses on classroom-based inquiry of historical events, people and time periods. We contend that broader examination of how historical empathy can be promoted beyond school-based instruction can contribute to the field by examining how student analyses of historical contexts and perspectives, and making affective connections to historical topics of study are needed when engaging in placed-based local history projects.Design/methodology/approachQualitative case study methodology was implemented for this study. A Likert-scale survey with a questionnaire was distributed to 30 high school study participants. Thirteen students gave follow-up interviews. Students’ responses on the surveys, interviews and questionnaires were organized into three categories that aligned to the theoretical framework – identification of historical contexts of the sources that students collected, analysis of how contexts shaped the perspectives expressed in the collected sources and expression of reasoned connections between the students’ emotions and experiences during the pandemic. A rubric was used to examine how students’ writing samples and reflections reflected demonstration of historical empathy.FindingsStudents responded that their local history research about the pandemic contributed to their displays of historical empathy. Students displayed weaker evidence of historical empathy while examining archival resources to explain the historical contexts of the pandemic. Student demonstration of historical empathy was stronger when analyzing community-sourced documents for perspectives and making reasoned affective connections to what they learned about the historical significance of the pandemic. The place-based aspects of this project were strongly connected to the students’ engagement in historical empathy because the sources they analyzed were relevant to their experiences and identities as citizens in their community.Originality/valueDocumenting the diverse human experiences during the COVID-19 pandemic is crucial to preserving the history of this extraordinary time. Every person around the globe experienced the pandemic differently, hence riding out the same storm in different boats. At some point, the pandemic will appear in historical narratives of the social studies curriculum. Therefore, now is an opportune time to ascertain whether place-based local history research about the contexts, perspectives and experiences of community members and children themselves, during the pandemic can foster historical empathy.
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通过有关大流行病的地方历史研究项目促进历史共鸣
目的我们研究了高中学生如何通过开展基于地方历史的研究,制作有关 COVID-19 大流行病对其社区影响的展览和配套书籍,来展示历史同理心。大多数现有的历史移情研究都侧重于在课堂上对历史事件、历史人物和历史时期进行探究。我们认为,对如何在学校教学之外促进历史移情进行更广泛的研究,可以为该领域做出贡献,因为我们研究了学生在参与基于地点的地方历史项目时,如何分析历史背景和视角,以及如何与历史研究课题建立情感联系。向 30 名高中研究参与者发放了李克特量表调查问卷。13 名学生接受了后续访谈。学生们在调查、访谈和问卷中的回答被归纳为三个与理论框架相一致的类别--确定学生们所收集资料的历史背景、分析背景如何影响了所收集资料中表达的观点,以及表达学生们在大流行病期间的情感和经历之间的合理联系。学生们回答说,他们对大流行病的地方史研究有助于他们表现出历史同理心。在研究档案资源以解释大流行病的历史背景时,学生的历史同理心表现较弱。在分析社区来源的文献以了解观点,并将所学知识与大流行病的历史意义建立合理的情感联系时,学生的历史同理心表现得更为强烈。本项目以地方为基础的方面与学生参与历史移情活动密切相关,因为他们分析的资料来源与他们作为社区公民的经历和身份相关。全球各地的每个人都以不同的方式经历了这场大流行病,因此同舟共济,共度难关。在某些时候,大流行病会出现在社会研究课程的历史叙述中。因此,现在正是确定以地方为基础的地方史研究是否能够促进历史共鸣的好时机,这些研究涉及大流行病期间社区成员和儿童自身的背景、观点和经历。
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