将历史留在过去的不可能:超越认知科学,在被偷走的几代人中定位历史意义

IF 1.4 3区 教育学 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Asia-Pacific Journal of Teacher Education Pub Date : 2022-11-29 DOI:10.1080/1359866X.2022.2151415
N. Harrison, Ivan Clarke
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引用次数: 0

摘要

历史意义一直是历史教育中被遗忘的因素。如果学生没有能力确定他们认为什么是重要的,或者为什么他们会关心过去的某些事件和人物,学生将继续对历史研究不感兴趣。本文借鉴了一项为期三年的研究结果,旨在了解澳大利亚被偷走的一代如何成为职前教师的历史意义。我们发现,这些学生并不是对“被偷走的一代”的故事不感兴趣,而是对这些故事非常投入,以至于他们有时无法忍受听到这些故事。他们在获取知识的同时,也会抵制和忽视知识。因此,我们认为,无论是理性还是认知科学都无法抵制学生忽视的冲动,也无法抵制他们将差异同化为相同。要使历史在课堂上对学生有意义,就必须把它理解为不仅仅是一种认识论的追求。
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The impossibility of keeping history in the past: working beyond cognitive science to locate historical significance in the stolen generations
ABSTRACT Historical significance continues to be the forgotten element of history education. Without student capacity to establish what they think is important, or why they would care about certain events and people from the past, students will continue to be disinterested in the study of history. This paper draws on the results of a three-year study aimed at understanding how the Stolen Generations in Australia becomes historical significant for pre-service teachers. Rather than being disinterested in stories of the Stolen Generations, we find that these students are vitally invested in such narratives to the extent that they, on occasion, cannot bear to hear the story. While they acquire knowledge, they also resist and ignore it. Hence, we argue that neither reason or cognitive science are up to the task of resisting either the student’s drive to ignore, or their assimilation of difference into the same. For history to be significant in the classroom for students, it must be understood as more than an epistemological pursuit.
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来源期刊
Asia-Pacific Journal of Teacher Education
Asia-Pacific Journal of Teacher Education EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
4.40
自引率
7.70%
发文量
29
期刊介绍: This journal promotes rigorous research that makes a significant contribution to advancing knowledge in teacher education across early childhood, primary, secondary, vocational education and training, and higher education. The journal editors invite for peer review theoretically informed papers - including, but not limited to, empirically grounded research - which focus on significant issues relevant to an international audience in regards to: Teacher education (including initial teacher education and ongoing professional education) of teachers internationally; The cultural, economic, political, social and/or technological dimensions and contexts of teacher education; Change, stability, reform and resistance in (and relating to) teacher education; Improving the quality and impact of research in teacher education.
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