Putting History to the Test

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History Exams Around the World, Forum Historisches Lernen

ISBN: 3734417600
ISBN 13: 9783734417603
Herausgeber: Peter Gautschi/Lindsay Gibson/Karel Van Nieuwenhuyse et al
Verlag: Wochenschau Verlag
Umfang: 652 S.
Erscheinungsdatum: 01.06.2026
Produktform: Kartoniert
Einband: Kartoniert

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Artikelnummer: 1569888 Kategorie:

Beschreibung

Exams play a major role in history education. They influence how history is taught, learned, and assessed in schools. They also reflect the knowledge, skills, and values that are identified as being most important to measure. In this book, experts from countries spanning five continents analyze 28 history exams in terms of their purposes and goals, design, the knowledge and skills they assess, and the effects they have on teaching and learning history.

Autorenporträt

TIMOTHY ADAMS, EdD, is the Principal of the Sacred Heart Academy in Louisville, Kentucky. Prior to becoming the principal, Timothy taught sec¬ondary history in Indianapolis, IN and Chicago, IL, and earned his EdD from Vanderbilt University in 2021. ANITHA OFORIWAH ADU-BOAHEN, PhD, is a Senior Lecturer and the cur¬rent Head of the Department of History Education at the University of Education, Winneba. She holds a PhD in Arts Education from the Univer¬sity of Cape Coast. Her primary research areas of interest include history education, curriculum implementation, and evaluation. She is the author of several research papers published in reputable journals. She has presented papers at international conferences on history education and other educa¬tion-related fields. Additionally, she has undertaken several consultancy as¬signments for local and international organizations, including Transforming Teacher Education and Learning (T-TEL) and the National Council for Curriculum and Assessment (NaCCA), among others. Internationally, she has participated in various projects, including the Free University of Berlin project on Post-Colonial Historical Learning and the Professionalization in Teacher Training in History: The Example of West Africa, as well as a project with the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) in the NORPART initiative. SUHAIMI AFANDI is Assistant Dean in the Office of Graduate Studies and Professional Learning and Senior Lecturer with the Humanities and Social Studies Education Academic Group at the National Institute of Education (NIE) of Singapore. He received his doctoral degree from UCLs Institute of Education. His research focuses on teacher conceptions about students ideas in history and how students understand the past. He taught histo¬ry at secondary and junior college levels in Singapore. At NIE, he teaches history education at undergraduate and postgraduate levels, focusing on in-quiry-based practices and research-informed pedagogies that support the development of students historical understandings. GULZAR AHMAD, PhD Candidate, Department of Curriculum and Pedagogy, Faculty of Education, University of British Columbia. His PhD research employs Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) to examine grand narratives, exclusions, hidden meanings, and silences in history and social studies text¬books in Pakistan from the perspectives of religion, ethnicity, and gender. It specifically investigates the implicit and explicit representation of Islam as a complete code of life from the perspectives of religion, ethnicity, and gender entrenched in the textbooks, which serve as ideological state apparatuses de¬signed to cultivate consent that feeds into popular culture, further aligning with the religiously informed exclusionary national discourse prevalent in the country. FREDRIK ALVÉN in an Associate Professor in History and History Didac¬tics and works as a Lecturer in History and History Didactics at Malmö University. His research interests include historical consciousness, historical culture and narratives, history and morality, and history teaching and assess¬ment. He was part of the working group that constructed the first national tests in history in Sweden. Alvén has also worked as a history teacher for fourteen years in the compulsory school, grades 7-9. ALISON BEDFORD is Senior Lecturer of Curriculum and Pedagogy at the University of Southern Queensland, Australia. Her research focuses on his¬tory curricula and pedagogy, and the teaching and study of literature. Her recent publications have focused on history in the Australian curriculum and effective inquiry pedagogies, and in representations of diversity in chil¬drens literature. She also has an interest in the intersections between science and fiction. Alison is a co-founder of the German-Australian Literature and Artistic Collective (GALACTIC), an international research collaboration focusing on childrens literature. She is co-founder of the History Educators Regional Network. DENISE BENTROVATO, PhD, is a Senior Researcher in History Education at the University of Pretoria and a Research Fellow at the Catholic University of Leuven. She currently serves as the Co-director of the African Associa¬tion for History Education and as President of the International Research Association for History and Social Sciences Education. Her research cen¬ters on the history, politics and practice of history education across the Afri¬can continent, including issues around decolonization, historical justice, the place of the minoritized and young peoples historical consciousness. MARKUS BERNHARDT has been a Professor of History Didactics at the Uni¬versity of Duisburg-Essen since 2011. He studied history and Latin at the Justus Liebig University in Giessen and subsequently worked as a teacher for eleven years. In 2002, he moved to the University of Kassel as an Assis¬tant Professor of History Didactics. From 2008 to 2011, he was a Professor of History and its Didactics at the Freiburg University of Education. His didactic research focuses on empirical studies of image perception and lan¬guage acquisition in history classes. Another focus is on the methodology of history teaching and the significance of time concepts and practices for historical learning. RAN BI is a bilingual history instructor in Shanghai, China, teaching students aged 15 to 17. In 2019, she enrolled in University College London, majoring in Education (History), and obtained a Masters degree in Education. She has possessed teaching experience as a history instructor since her under-graduate studies. She is now dedicated to examining the history curriculum from an Asian viewpoint, encompassing cross-cultural exchanges related to gender and nationality. CARLA VAN BOXTEL is Professor of History Education at the Research Insti¬tute of Child Development and Education of the University of Amsterdam. She leads the research group on domain-specific learning and works as a teacher trainer. She is trained as a historian and educational scientist. Her main research topics are the learning and teaching of history in schools and museums, and particularly students historical thinking, reasoning, and argumentation, epistemic beliefs, critical thinking, and the understanding of controversies. YEOWTONG CHIA, PhD, is Senior Lecturer in History Education at the Uni¬versity of Sydney. His research centers on the critical issues of education, citizenship, and state formation, including history, civics, and social studies curricula, as well as higher education in the Asian context. His work in¬terrogates the complex intersection between Asian studies, the history of education, and comparative education by recalibrating current comparative and international education approaches. He authored the book Education, Culture and the Singapore Developmental State: WorldSoul Lost and Re¬gained? (Palgrave Macmillan 2015), and coauthored Teacher Education in Singapore: A Concise Critical History (Emerald 2022). His latest book, coedited with Zhenzhou Zhao, is Citizenship and Education in Con¬temporary China: Contexts, Perspectives and Understandings (Routledge 2023). JANNET VAN DRIE is Associate Professor in the Research Institute of Child Development and Education, University of Amsterdam. Her main research focus is on the teaching and learning of history, in particular students his¬torical reasoning and how this can be promoted in the classroom. Research topics include, among others, teaching historical thinking and reasoning, disciplinary writing, and classroom interaction. Next to these research activ¬ities, Jannet also works as a teacher trainer. SYLVAIN DOUSSOT is Professor of Science Education (History Didactics) at the University of Nantes. His PhD (2009) focused on graphic and language tools for conducting historical investigations in the classroom and among historians. He has also researched the conditions for developing stu...

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