Helgason / Lässig | Opening the Mind or Drawing Boundaries? | E-Book | sack.de
E-Book

E-Book, Englisch, Band Band 122, 283 Seiten, Format (B × H): 158 mm x 240 mm

Reihe: Eckert. Die Schriftenreihe

Helgason / Lässig Opening the Mind or Drawing Boundaries?

History Texts in Nordic Schools. E-BOOK
1. Auflage 2009
ISBN: 978-3-86234-061-3
Verlag: V&R unipress
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 0 - No protection

History Texts in Nordic Schools. E-BOOK

E-Book, Englisch, Band Band 122, 283 Seiten, Format (B × H): 158 mm x 240 mm

Reihe: Eckert. Die Schriftenreihe

ISBN: 978-3-86234-061-3
Verlag: V&R unipress
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 0 - No protection



History texts studied by students in schools are an important field for drawing boundaries between nations, beliefs, ethnic groups and countries, sometimes causing disputes and protests. Even in the democratic and peaceful Nordic countries, history texts carry a message of authorized content knowledge and situated values. At the same time, they are meant to foster the critical mind, a skillfull eye and a tolerant spirit.In this volume, scholars from Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden explore the question of 'Us and the Others' in Nordic textbooks and educational media and focus on teachers' opinions and use of history texts, partly based on a survey among Nordic history teachers in elementary and secondary schools. The questions dealt with are of national identity and multiculturalism, sameness and difference, content and pedagogy, skills and values, goals of history education and teachers' situations. The scholars and teachers compare the educational and societal aims with the actual teaching materials at hand. The potentialities and limitations of textbooks and other educational media are investigated and discussed.

Þorsteinn Helgason is Associate Professor for History Education at the University of Iceland, Reykjavik/Iceland.
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Weitere Infos & Material


1;Contents;7
2;About the Authors;9
3;Preface;15
4;Part One Ourselves and Others in Nordic Textbooks;21
5;Deconstructing the Eurocentric Perspective: Studying “Us” and the “Other” in History Books;23
6;Intercultural Education and the Representation of the Other in History Textbooks;35
7;Pictures of Greenlanders and Samis in Norwegian and Danish Textbooks;63
8;Encountering Others in Icelandic Textbooks: Imperialism and Racial Diversity in the Era of Nationalism;83
9;Part Two Ends and Means: Materials in History Teaching;99
10;History in the Textbooks and the Teachers Who Use them: a Teachers’ Survey and More;101
11;Beyond the Book Cover: Curriculum Goals and Learning Materials;109
12;Different Kinds of Teaching Resources – Different Kinds of Learning? Teachers’ Ends and Means;123
13;Narrativity in Teaching Materials;141
14;Critical Thinking and the Textbook in History: An Odd Couple?;165
15;“Critical Thinking” and Causality in History Teaching Material: an Analysis of how the French Revolution Is Presented in a Norwegian and a Swedish History Textbook for Junior High School;187
16;The Teacher, the History Text and Values;221
17;Facts, Functions and Narratives in History Teaching in Finland: Attitudes Towards History as Reflected in the Use of Textbooks;241
18;Appendix;271
19;Index;283


" (S. 99-100)



In the first section of this book textbooks and other teaching materials are investigated as tools in the hands of students and teachers and in society at large. Textbooks are indeed powerful tools as every student uses them and every member of society is or has been a student. History texts have a role in “opening the mind and drawing boundaries.” The investigation presented in this section of the book concerns the role of history textbooks and other teaching materials and the expectations of teachers as the users of the materials and the expectations of society in the form of official curricula. The study also looks at the evaluation of specific textbooks made by researchers and teachers.

In order to get a grasp on teachers’ opinions, an online survey directed at history teachers was conducted by part of the Nordic research group History in the Textbooks. Between November 2006 and April 2007, 409 Nordic teachers answered this questionnaire about their ideas and their evaluation of the role of textbooks and other educational materials in history instruction, both in general and regarding materials of their own choice with which they were familiar.

In the following chapters seven authors from each of the Nordic countries use the history teacher survey as a point of departure or as a frame of reference for their analyses, which concern the ends and means of materials used or not used in history teaching. The survey is a source for further discussion and investigation along with other materials, a tool among other tools. Some of the authors turn a critical eye on certain texts in specific textbooks (Skjelbred and Reichenberg, Poulsen), others turn to the aims and goals of written curricula (Hammarlund, Helgason), the kinds of teaching material used (Vinterek) or look at other surveys (Hammarlund, Vinterek).

The chapters focus on history texts as elements of history as a discipline and on history pedagogy. A variety of approaches are used by the authors. Textual analysis and literacy theory are used in Skjeldbred and Reichenberg’ Reichenberg’s investigation of s causality in Swedish and Norwegian textbooks."


Helgason, Thorsteinn
Þorsteinn Helgason is Associate Professor for History Education at the University of Iceland, Reykjavik/Iceland.

Lässig, Simone
Prof. Dr. Simone Lässig ist Direktorin des Deutschen Historischen Instituts Washington DC.

Lässig, Simone
Prof. Dr. Simone Lässig ist Direktorin des Deutschen Historischen Instituts Washington DC.

Dr. Simone Lässig ist Professorin für Neuere und Neueste Geschichte an der Technischen Universität Braunschweig und leitet das Georg-Eckert-Institut für Internationale Schulbuchforschung in Braunschweig.

Prof. Dr. Simone Lässig is Director of the Georg Eckert Institute for International Textbook Research and Professor for Modern History at the University of Braunschweig in Germany.

Þorsteinn Helgason is Associate Professor for History Education at the University of Iceland, Reykjavik/Iceland.



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