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  1. The Structure of Historical Inquiry.Tyson Retz - 2017 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 49 (6).
    History educators find themselves in the peculiar situation of wishing to introduce students to the history discipline while lacking a clear conception of the features intrinsic to historical inquiry across its various specialisations and subject matters. In affirming that no one methodological charter hangs in the corridors of academic history departments, we fail to provide an adequate justification for an education in history. The doctrine that history is an exercise in disciplined knowledge, a specific way of knowing, is weakened by (...)
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  • Historical Empathy and Pedagogical Reasoning.Jason L. Endacott & John Sturtz - 2015 - Journal of Social Studies Research 39 (1):1-16.
    The process of engaging in historical empathy holds the potential for significant curricular and dispositional benefits for students in history classrooms. In order to realize these benefits, classroom teachers must be able to integrate historical empathy into their existing planning and teaching; a process that would benefit from empirical examination. This single subject case study examined the pedagogical reasoning process of an experienced classroom teacher who integrated historical empathy into an existing instructional unit designed to foster student knowledge of social (...)
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  • ‘Surprise Me!’ The (im)possibilities of agency and creativity within the standards framework of history education.Jennifer Clark & Adele Nye - 2017 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 49 (6).
    In the current culture of regulation in higher education and, in turn, the history discipline, it is timely to problematize discipline standards in relation to student agency and creativity. This article argues that through the inclusion of a critical orientation and engaged pedagogy, historians have the opportunity to bring a more agentic dimension to the disciplinary conversation. Discipline standards privilege that arrogant historical moment in the higher education sector when certain skills development and knowledge creation becomes a hegemonic discourse. As (...)
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