In defence of school history

Sign Now
petition image
We, the undersigned, are very concerned about the government's plans for school history. Education Minister Michael Gove apparently intends to take us back to the days of 'traditional' teaching methods, combined with a more prescriptive curriculum. It is in opposition to such methods - and the disengagement that they engendered – that ‘New History’ emerged from the late 1960s. This encouraged students to analyse sources and to compare and evaluate interpretations for themselves. It valued international history and a diverse range of voices, including those of the marginalised and oppressed. It is telling that the three historians leading the public consultation - Niall Ferguson, Simon Schama and David Cannadine - are all US-based university lecturers rather than teachers in British schools. The fact that all three attended Oxbridge and both Ferguson and Schama attended private schools (with Cannadine attending a grammar) suggests that Michael Gove has an elitist vision that does not regard highly the experiences of the vast majority of teachers and learners of history in state schools. We also wish to correct a misrepresentation encouraged by this government about the alleged sidelining of British history. As the Ofsted 'History for All' report found, 'The view that too little British history is taught in secondary schools in England is a myth. Pupils in the schools visited studied a considerable amount of British history and knew a great deal about the particular topics covered.' We believe that such history, alongside local and international history, has a place, but that this should include a critical appraisal of the dark side of the British Empire - e.g. slavery, exploitation, colonialism - and not just be a celebratory story in support of a jingoist political project. In conclusion, we aim to ensure that the public consultation results in: •a flexible framework responsive to the needs and interests of students, rather than a prescriptive straightjacket •an emphasis on rich learning rather than narrow test-led indicators •a prioritisation of methods which engage students in enquiries and projects, rather than those that relegate them to being passive consumers
Sign The Petition
OR

If you already have an account please sign in, otherwise register an account for free then sign the petition filling the fields below.
Email and password will be your account data, you will be able to sign other petitions after logging in.

Privacy in the search engines? You can use a nickname:

Attention, the email address you supply must be valid in order to validate the signature, otherwise it will be deleted.

I confirm registration and I agree to Usage and Limitations of Services
I confirm that I have read the Privacy Policy
I agree to the Personal Data Processing
Shoutbox
Sign The Petition
OR

If you already have an account please sign in

I confirm registration and I agree to Usage and Limitations of Services
I confirm that I have read the Privacy Policy
I agree to the Personal Data Processing
Goal
6 signatures
Goal: 1,000
Latest Signatures
17 July 2011
6. Sasha Elliott | I support this petition
17 July 2011
5. Lucy Cox | I support this petition
17 July 2011
4. Jeremy Taylor | I support this petition
17 July 2011
3. Scott FitzGerald | I support this petition
17 July 2011
2. Rachel Jones | 100% in agreement.
17 July 2011
1. James Looker | I support this petition
17 July 2011
0. Andrew Stone | Trust teachers and liberate students
browse all the signatures »
Information
In: -
Petition target:
Michael Gove, Education Minister
Tags
No tags
Embed Codes
direct link
link for html
link for forum without title
link for forum with title
728×90
468×60
336×280
125×125