Unsettled histories: Transgressing History education practice in New Brunswick, Canada

In this paper, we examine national trends in Canadian history education with regard to decolonising history education and how those trends have been manifested in the context of the province of New Brunswick’s Anglophone education system. We begin with outlining three key characteristics of...

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Main Authors: Rowinski, James, Sears, Alan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Newcastle 2014-05-01
Series:Historical Encounters: A Journal of Historical Consciousness, Historical Cultures, and History Education
Online Access:https://www.hej-hermes.net/8-206
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spelling doaj-187552f6e8184bcbae01443a323852a52021-05-12T03:17:44ZengUniversity of NewcastleHistorical Encounters: A Journal of Historical Consciousness, Historical Cultures, and History Education2203-75432014-05-018210712310.52289/hej8.206Unsettled histories: Transgressing History education practice in New Brunswick, CanadaRowinski, JamesSears, Alan In this paper, we examine national trends in Canadian history education with regard to decolonising history education and how those trends have been manifested in the context of the province of New Brunswick’s Anglophone education system. We begin with outlining three key characteristics of Canadian history education: it has been assimilationist and destructive for the languages, cultures, and collective memories of Indigenous Peoples; it has turned in recent years to an emphasis on teaching historical thinking; and there is an ongoing scholarly and professional debate in Canada about the best way to include attention to Indigenous Peoples and their history in Canadian schools. We show how these trends have been and are present in New Brunswick and argue that unsettling traditional approaches to history education involves rethinking approaches to historical content and processes as well as taking seriously the capacity of young people to engage deeply with the past.https://www.hej-hermes.net/8-206
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rowinski, James
Sears, Alan
spellingShingle Rowinski, James
Sears, Alan
Unsettled histories: Transgressing History education practice in New Brunswick, Canada
Historical Encounters: A Journal of Historical Consciousness, Historical Cultures, and History Education
author_facet Rowinski, James
Sears, Alan
author_sort Rowinski, James
title Unsettled histories: Transgressing History education practice in New Brunswick, Canada
title_short Unsettled histories: Transgressing History education practice in New Brunswick, Canada
title_full Unsettled histories: Transgressing History education practice in New Brunswick, Canada
title_fullStr Unsettled histories: Transgressing History education practice in New Brunswick, Canada
title_full_unstemmed Unsettled histories: Transgressing History education practice in New Brunswick, Canada
title_sort unsettled histories: transgressing history education practice in new brunswick, canada
publisher University of Newcastle
series Historical Encounters: A Journal of Historical Consciousness, Historical Cultures, and History Education
issn 2203-7543
publishDate 2014-05-01
description In this paper, we examine national trends in Canadian history education with regard to decolonising history education and how those trends have been manifested in the context of the province of New Brunswick’s Anglophone education system. We begin with outlining three key characteristics of Canadian history education: it has been assimilationist and destructive for the languages, cultures, and collective memories of Indigenous Peoples; it has turned in recent years to an emphasis on teaching historical thinking; and there is an ongoing scholarly and professional debate in Canada about the best way to include attention to Indigenous Peoples and their history in Canadian schools. We show how these trends have been and are present in New Brunswick and argue that unsettling traditional approaches to history education involves rethinking approaches to historical content and processes as well as taking seriously the capacity of young people to engage deeply with the past.
url https://www.hej-hermes.net/8-206
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