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Andrew Payne Head of Education & Outreach The National Archives

Slaying the Dragon What’s the point of sources in the new narrative history?. Andrew Payne Head of Education & Outreach The National Archives. Using your historical knowledge…. Sort the 7 sources on your desks into chronological order Label each source with an approximate date

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Andrew Payne Head of Education & Outreach The National Archives

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  1. Slaying the DragonWhat’s the point of sources in the new narrative history? Andrew PayneHead of Education & OutreachThe National Archives

  2. Using your historical knowledge… • Sort the 7 sources on your desks into chronological order • Label each source with an approximate date • Label each source with a likely provenance • What narratives could these sources tell? • We’ll see how you did later…

  3. Trendy teaching is ‘producing a generation of history numbskulls’ 2nd July 2009

  4. “We are looking at a whole generation that knows almost nothing about the history of their country.” Prof. Derek MatthewsCardiff University, July 2009

  5. “Historical ‘skills’ such as source analysis, they argued, should be elevated above mere factual knowledge.” Niall FergusonThe Guardian, March 2011

  6. “I think far too much is given up to the analysis of source material” Ken BakerHistorical Association Public Debate, July 2010

  7. “Children should not work with sources” Chris Skidmore, MPBuilding a Better History Curriculum, October 2010

  8. “The facts, dates and narrative of our history in fact join us all together.” Nick Gibb, Schools MinisterReform Conference Speech, July 2010

  9. “Few fifteen year olds are able to map the past.” ?????

  10. More than just a Daily Mail rant… “What has not been attempted in Britain is to teach pupils how to handle the past as a whole. In consequence few fifteen year olds are able to map the past; even fewer can offer a coherent narrative; and virtually none can conceive of anything more subtle than a single ‘best’ narrative.” Denis ShemiltThe Caliph’s CoinKnowing, Teaching and Learning HistoryNew York University Press 2000

  11. Narrative supports understanding “Unless people are able to locate knowledge within narrative frameworks which link past with past and past with present, the uses that are made of history will range from the impoverished to the pernicious.” Denis ShemiltThe Caliph’s CoinKnowing, Teaching and Learning HistoryThe American History Association 2000

  12. Useful Teaching History Articles • Ian Dawson (2005) ‘Time for Chronology? Ideas for developing chronological understanding’ Teaching History 117 • Jonathan Howson (2007) ‘Is it the Tuarts and then the Studors or the other way round? The importance of developing a usable big picture of the past’Teaching History 127 • Ian Dawson (2008) ‘Thinking across time: planning and teaching the story of power and democracy at Key Stage 3’ Teaching History 130 • Rick Rogers (2008) ‘Raising the bar: developing meaningful historical consciousness at Key Stage 3’ Teaching History 133

  13. But will teaching Historical narrative help you pass the Matthews Test?

  14. Memory is the residue of thought “Your memory is not the product of what you want to remember or what you try to remember; it’s the product of what you think about” Daniel T. Willingham Why Don’t Students Like SchoolJossey-Bass 2009

  15. ἱστορ-ία = enquiry enquiry = sources “Children should not work with sources” Chris Skidmore, MP

  16. Sources vs NarrativesIs it really a zero-sum battle?

  17. Sources vs NarrativesIs it really a zero-sum battle? Not if students create the narrative

  18. Writing narrative is no mean feat

  19. Engage Prior Understanding (or Ignorance) “Students come to the classroom with preconceptions about how the world works. If their initial understanding is not engaged, they may fail to grasp the new concepts and information…” Suzanne Donovan & John BrandsfordHow Students Learn p.1National Academies Press 2005

  20. Using prior understanding to underpin source-based narrative tasks with students • What’s the Story? • Explanatory narrative based on a small number of related sources • Predicting the narrative source • Making predictions about the content of a narrative account to test against its actual content • Predicting the Grand Narrative • Hypothetic narratives based on a range of sources to test and review during the course • Testing the Grand Narrative • Validating and challenging Ferguson/Schama/Starkey with a range of sources

  21. T 70/1213 A Journal of a voyage to New Calabar in the ship the Arthur, Captain Robert DoegoodCommander. An the account of the Royal African Company of England of all actions & transactions from Gravesend to New Calabar & from thence to the Island of Barbados, our port of discharge December The 5th 1677 Signed: George Hingston Here’s a little narrative… www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/slavery/learn-more.htm

  22. Engage Priory Understanding

  23. Predict the Journey of the Arthur • Mark the departure of the Arthur from Gravesend – 5am Wednesday 5th December 1677 • Mark predictions on your calendar for the following: • How long it took to get to New Calabar • How long was spent trading around the West African coast • How long it took to cross the Atlantic to Barbados • The date of arrival in Barbados • Time to disembark all Africans and materials

  24. Predict the Journey of the Arthur • Add predictions for key events during the voyage to New Calabar • Weather • Sightings • Encounters • Add predictions for key events whilst in West Africa • Weather • Encounters with Africans – friendly, hostile? • What was traded and how? • Problems/difficulties/dangers for Africans? For crew?

  25. Predict the Journey of the Arthur • Add predictions for key events whilst crossing the Atlantic • Weather & encounters • Problems/difficulties/dangers for Africans? For crew? • Add predictions for key events on arrival in Barbados • Activities /problems • Predict the following • Total number of Africans transported • Total number of African deaths • Total number of crew deaths

  26. Step 2 – test your predicted narrative against the real narrative Investigate the Journey of the Arthur • Skim the transcript looking for factual details to support or counter your predictions • Mark the factual details on the second calendar • Compare the two calendars and score your accuracy of predictions from 1 (poor) to 5 (excellent) • What did you accurately predict? • What did you partly predict? • What did you not predict at all? • Do you find anything surprising or shocking about the journey of the Arthur? • What would you like to investigate further?

  27. Voyage of the Arthur • Departs Gravesend Wed 5 Dec 1677 • Arrives New Calibar Sun 10 Feb 1678 (9½ weeks) • Cruises West African coast to Sun 14 Apr 1678 (9 weeks) • Departs Cape Lopez Mon 15 April 1678 • Arrives Bridgetown, Barbados Wed 22 May (6 weeks) • Hingston leaves ship Sat 1 Jun (1½ weeks) • Total Africans Transported – 374 • Total Africans Died – 82 • Total Crew Died - 3

  28. Are you a Harvard Prof or a History Numbskull? • Document D - Magna Carta, third issue of Henry III 1225 Cat ref: DL 10/71 • Document A - Cambridgeshire roll of indictments 1381Cat ref: JUST 1/103, m. 5 • Document G - The Grand Remonstrance 1641Cat ref: SP 16/486 • Document C - The Olive Branch Petition 1775Cat ref: CO 5/76 f.256 • Document E - Minutes of 'Loyal Britons' meeting 1793Cat ref: HO 42/27, no. 625 • Document B - John Stuart Mill 1871 Cat ref: PRO 30/69/1834 • Document F - Harold Wilson to Terence O'Neill 1968 Cat ref: PREM 13/2841

  29. Helping students to map the past • What narratives could you write from your 7 sources? • How could these narrative help students map the past? • Could these help students appreciate ‘polythetic’ narratives? • Could students refine the narratives over time to help them record their own progression?

  30. Find out more at… www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/education

  31. Copy 1 /70 f.8

  32. Andrew PayneHead of EducationThe National Archives andrew.payne@nationalarchives.gsi.gov.uk 020 8392 5319 www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/education

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