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Dutch students’ understanding of the interpretative nature of textbooks when comparing two texts about a significant event in the development of democracy

Houwen, A.; van Boxtel, C.; Holthuis, P.; (2020) Dutch students’ understanding of the interpretative nature of textbooks when comparing two texts about a significant event in the development of democracy. History Education Research Journal , 17 (2) 10.14324/HERJ.17.2.06. Green open access

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Abstract

In history education, the deconstruction of narratives is an important skill for students. The skill teaches them to look critically at the offered texts. In this study, we investigated the extent to which students are able to critically analyse the narratives in their history textbooks. To answer this question, we asked 106 students in pre-university education (16–17 years of age) to read and compare two texts – from two different textbooks – about a turning point in the development of the Dutch state and democracy: the introduction of universal suffrage for men and women in 1917–19. One group of students (N=10) worked on the assignment while thinking aloud. We found that most students recognized the author’s voice in the selection of persons and dates and in the attention paid to a particular topic, but that they hardly mentioned recognizing the voice in aspects such as the choice of words or headings. The students who analysed and compared the texts while thinking aloud all indicated after the assignment that they understood that these texts are different interpretations of the same historical development.

Type: Article
Title: Dutch students’ understanding of the interpretative nature of textbooks when comparing two texts about a significant event in the development of democracy
Open access status: An open access version is available from UCL Discovery
DOI: 10.14324/HERJ.17.2.06
Publisher version: https://doi.org/10.14324/HERJ.17.2.06
Language: English
Keywords: textbooks, historical thinking, historical interpretation, historical narratives, upper secondary education
URI: https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10114001
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