963 resultados para Teaching History
Resumo:
En el aprendizaje de enseñar historia, el profesor en formación experimentara unas preocupaciones, que cambian a lo largo de los años de formación, y algunas de ellas son de carácter general para todas las materias, pero otras son específicas de la historia. En este sentido, este texto trata de ser una guía práctica que ofrezca orientación para ayudar a superar estas inquietudes, aunque, es importante contar con la labor de los docentes en ejercicio que también tienen experiencia en trabajar como tutores con los alumnos.
Resumo:
Ofrece un gran número de ideas prácticas para ser utilizadas por los profesores de historia de varios niveles educativos, desde los primeros años de primaria hasta la secundaria, es decir, desde la etapa 1 hasta la 3 (key stage 1-3). Comprende actividades de entretenimiento, utilización de juegos y de las tecnologías de la Información y la Comunicación (TIC) para involucrar a los alumnos en su aprendizaje. Estas ideas no se han organizado por área temática, sino que se han agrupados en bloques que facilitan el desarrollo de determinadas capacidades y habilidades.
Resumo:
Esta guía ayuda a los profesores en período de formación inicial a superar el Qualified Teacher Status (QTS), aunque, también abarca el contenido del programa de historia para las etapas de infantil y primaria. Contiene además de los principales conceptos, habilidades y conocimientos para la enseñanza de la historia, una gran variedad de actividades para fomentar el aprendizaje.
Resumo:
In what Williams (1975) described as a dramatised world, a great deal of children’s historical knowledge is acquired through dramatised versions of historical events. As the characters who actually took part in historical events become the dramatis personae of re-enacted accounts, their stories are edited not only to meet dramatic necessities but the social, psychological and cultural needs of both storytellers and audience. The process of popularising history in this way thus becomes as much about the effects of events on people as the events themselves, so mirroring debates within history education regarding the teaching of ‘facts’ and the development of empathy. In this article, Andy Kempe explores how stories of evacuees and other ‘war children’ have been dramatised in traditional playscripts and through structured ‘process dramas’ in schools in the British Isles. It argues that drama and history as curriculum subjects may find common ground, and indeed complement each other, in the development of a critical literacy concerned not so much with either fact or empathy as with interrogating both why and how stories are told.
Resumo:
Whilst much academic rigour has been devoted to analysing the ‘contents’ of historical textbooks in Ukraine, this article examines the teacher's role in the ‘transfer’ of the state's message to schoolchildren. This article demonstrates that in Ukraine's eastern borderlands teachers are highly active in negotiating the new historical narrative. Teachers are found to subtly change the accent or focus away from the ‘nationalist’ stance towards Russia, as found in the school history textbooks, to a more tolerant stance which aims to promote rather than negate Ukraine's historical interactions with Russia. Thus, this simultaneously reinforces a particular ‘regional’ understanding of historical events.
Resumo:
This article analyzes traditions of debate about the teaching of history in Brazil since the 1964-1984 dictatorship. It discusses the changes, continuities, achievements and losses in the history of the discipline. It emphasizes the importance of school culture, the necessary continuity of the school as an institution and dialogue with non-school forms of education.
Resumo:
We report here part of a research project developed by the Science Education Research Group, titled: "Teachers’ Pedagogical Practices and formative processes in Science and Mathematics Education" which main goal is the development of coordinated research that can generate a set of subsidies for a reflection on the processes of teacher training in Sciences and Mathematics Education. One of the objectives was to develop continuing education activities with Physics teachers, using the History and Philosophy of Science as conductors of the discussions and focus of teaching experiences carried out by them in the classroom. From data collected through a survey among local Science, Physics, Chemistry, Biology and Mathematics teachers in Bauru, a São Paulo State city, we developed a continuing education proposal titled “The History and Philosophy of Science in the Physics teachers’ pedagogical practice”, lasting 40 hours of lessons. We followed the performance of five teachers who participated in activities during the 2008 first semester and were teaching Physics at High School level. They designed proposals for short courses, taking into consideration aspects of History and Philosophy of Science and students’ alternative conceptions. Short courses were applied in real classrooms situations and accompanied by reflection meetings. This is a qualitative research, and treatment of data collected was based on content analysis, according to Bardin [1].
Resumo:
This paper aims to define history didactics along the lines of the current German literature, which conceives it to be closer to history than to education. Associated to the word Geschichtsdidaktik, this definition is opposed to the concepts of history didactics as the art of teaching - Lehrkunst - history or as a collection of methods used both in the teaching of history and in the teaching of other school subjects - Unterrichtsmethoden. In opposition to these two definitions, this paper discusses German, French and Brazilian literatures to propose a conception of history didactics as a subarea of history, once it does not encompass only history teaching, but all history elaborations without a scientific form - nicht- wissenschaftsformigen Geschichtsverarbeitungen.