History Education in the News

Source The Washington Post

Published: February 5

By Kevin Sieff

KABUL — In a country where the recent past has unfolded like a war epic, officials think they have found a way to teach Afghan history without widening the fractures between long-quarreling ethnic and political groups: leave out the past four decades. 

A series of government-issued textbooks funded by the United States and several foreign aid organizations do just that, pausing history in 1973. There is no mention of the Soviet war, the mujaheddin, the Taliban or the U.S. military presence. In their efforts to promote a single national identity, Afghan leaders have deemed their own history too controversial. 

“Our recent history tears us apart. We’ve created a curriculum based on the older history that brings us together, with figures universally recognized as being great,” said Farooq Wardak, Afghanistan’s education minister. “These are the first books in decades that are depoliticized and de-ethnicized.”

High school students across the country are expected to receive the textbooks in time for the school year this spring. The books are the only ones approved for use in public classrooms as part of the new “depoliticized curriculum.” Elementary and middle school textbooks, which also conclude history lessons in the early 1970s, have been distributed over the past several years. 

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Date: 23 January 2012
 
What role do your state’s history standards play in your teaching life? Do they help you figure out the units and topics to study in a year? Do they encourage you to teach students to investigate the past and debate its implications? Do they burden you with a list of names, dates, and places that seems endless and disconnected? Maybe they languish in a closet gathering dust?
 
Forty-nine states have history/social studies standards and their content, form, length, and level of detail can vary enormously from state to state. (Iowa is the exception with a “core” set of “essential concepts and skills” rather than standards.) Teachinghistory.org has recently published a Report on the state of history education and it includes information about those diverse state standards as well as other state policies regarding the teaching of history, including mandatory assessments and initial teacher licensure requirements.
 

Source: The Irish Times

Date: 28 December 2011

 

Sir, – From September 2014, history and geography are set to become compulsory in English schools, until pupils reach the age of 16.

In September 2014, with the introduction of a new junior curriculum in Ireland, the “prescriptiveness” of history will be removed. Individual schools at local level will be free to determine whether history will be taught, or presented as an examination subject.

In most European countries, according to Euroclio (the European Association of History Educators) history is obligatory till the end of compulsory education. Euroclio views history education as important in the building and deepening of democratic societies. It has, for instance, played a leading role in advancing history education in the countries of the former Soviet empire since 1991.

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