AREAS OF KNOWLEDGE:
HISTORY
Class activities
The past has gone. How on earth are we to make sense of it?
Here are some class activities that will enable students to explore the scope of history. Students will reflect on their own relationship to history as an academic discipline, and how historians bring their own perspectives to the evolving edifice of historical knowledge. Students will encounter the distinct methods and tools of history, as well as some of the ethical conundrums confronted by historians as they strive to inquire, interpret, and tell meaningful stories about the past.
Draw history (including cubist history)
Evoke history without words
Cubist history
History is not what happened
What historians do
Comparing history to science
Trotsky air-brushed
The map that made a nation cry
Napoleon rendered in oil paint
The Retreat from Moscow
Tchaikovsky 1812 Overture
History vs. historic fiction
Hilary Mantel perspective
KNOWLEDGE QUESTIONS
The new Theory of Knowledge Guide (2020) provides 385 Knowledge Questions for student exploration. Here are my personal favorites from the history section.
SCOPE
Are all areas of knowledge concerned with knowledge of the past to some extent?
PERSPECTIVE
How can we gauge the extent to which history is being told from a cultural or national perspective?
METHODS AND TOOLS
On what criteria can historians evaluate the reliability of their sources?
Is there less emphasis on collaborative research in history than there is between researchers in other areas of knowledge?
How do the methods and conventions of historians themselves change over time?
ETHICS
Should terms such as “atrocity” or “hero” be used when writing about history, or should value judgments be avoided?
CONNECTING TO THE CORE THEME
How might the methods of the historian help us to evaluate claims we are exposed to in the media today?
What ethical concerns are raised by the digitization and online publication of archive material containing people’s personal images and documents?