PhD Candidate
University of New Brunswick
(Fredericton)
At the risk of self-promotion, I would like to draw your attention to a research note that has just been published in the Journal of New Brunswick Studies. As a graduate student who has devoted the past 5 years to exploring the phenomenon of historical consciousness, I am (needless-to-say) thrilled and honoured to see a small piece of my research published in a scholarly journal.
All this
aside, the findings also warrant further discussion, since they provide an
intriguing glimpse into an age group less commonly discussed in conversations
around historical consciousness and historical thinking in Canada. The data was
collected as part of a pre-survey that expanded upon the Canadians and their Pasts (2013) investigation with an entire class
of Anglophone 7th graders. In
working with this group of students, I had the privilege of learning a little
bit more about their relationship with the past, and the narratives that they
carry. Over a period of 15 weeks, we worked together to explore a material
history framework for historical thinking in museums, which served as a
cultural tool for deepening students’ historical consciousness.
As Stéphane Levesque (2014) has pointed out, “the study of historical consciousness makes
it possible to understand how people use
the past.” For the students participating in this inquiry, it was evident that
they initially used the past to
situate themselves within a Canada narrative of privilege and war. These “broad
pictures” for remembering represented common themes that (just as Levesque has indicated) served
as “backdrops” for acquiring new knowledge. For these students, their themes of
privilege and war were predominantly optimistic.
In somewhat contradiction to this optimism, however, many
of the students paralleled this schema with more pessimistic perceptions about
change over time. In this regard the students were very unlike adult samplings
in the larger Canadians and Their Pasts
study. Hence, rather than perceiving things as getting better over time, nearly
half (42%) of the students recognised progression as a contradiction. For these
students, while technology had made life easier, the resulting pollution and
conflict had also made life worse. In this sense, students’ narratives of
privilege seemed to be somewhat at odds with their beliefs in change over time.
What is perhaps even more interesting about this dataset, is what it reveals about students’ beliefs around historical knowledge. For the majority of students (63%), they believed that whenever anyone disagrees about the past it is simply a matter of consulting with experts, or secondary sources, to find out what happened. In this sense, students demonstrated a belief in knowledge as something that can be found—by simply asking an expert or consulting a secondary source.
At first
glance, such a strategy for resolving disagreements about the past might seem
very effective. What is problematic about this approach, however, is that students
did not see themselves as part
of a community of historical inquiry. Instead, history
was something that someone more knowledgeable did for them. As a result, all
they had to do was know how to find
it.
As I have explained in my previous blog posts (see September 2014 and March 2013), by
engaging students in active historical thinking, using artifact sources as starting
points for critical historical inquiry, participants in this study came to adopt
more complex understandings around the nature of historical knowledge. In this
sense, students came to see history as a narrative that is re-constructed (from historical evidence), rather than simply
found.
I invite you to read the full research note as it
appears in the current issue of the Journal of New Brunswick Studies.
Credits:
Conrad et al (2013). Canadians and Their Pasts. Toronto: University of Toronto.
Levesque, S. (2014). "Between memory recall and historical consciousness: Implications for education". Public History Weekly. Web.
Wallace-Casey, C. (2014). "7th graders and thier pasts: A New Brunswick case study". Journal of New Brunswick Studies. Web
Wallace-Casey, C. (2014). "Taking time for role reversals in museums"
Wallace-Casey, C. (2013). "De-constructing cabinets of curiosity: History's mysteries in museums."
Wallace-Casey, C. (2014). "Taking time for role reversals in museums"
Wallace-Casey, C. (2013). "De-constructing cabinets of curiosity: History's mysteries in museums."
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