Considering the past and present of Romani in Sweden: secondary school pupils’ thinking and caring about the history of the Romani in national tests

In this study, we analyse 126 secondary pupils’ responses to national test questions designed to make them think and care about the history of national minorities in Sweden. Using a mixed method approach we find that historical thinking and empathy as caring are tightly interlinked in the responses....

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Main Authors: Olle Nolgård, Thomas Nygren
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2019-10-01
Series:Education Inquiry
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/20004508.2019.1607708
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spelling doaj-27b170410684468283606f3b3ee52ad62020-11-25T02:17:29ZengTaylor & Francis GroupEducation Inquiry2000-45082019-10-0110434436710.1080/20004508.2019.16077081607708Considering the past and present of Romani in Sweden: secondary school pupils’ thinking and caring about the history of the Romani in national testsOlle Nolgård0Thomas Nygren1Uppsala UniversityUppsala UniversityIn this study, we analyse 126 secondary pupils’ responses to national test questions designed to make them think and care about the history of national minorities in Sweden. Using a mixed method approach we find that historical thinking and empathy as caring are tightly interlinked in the responses. In particular, the cognitive act of corroborating historical sources about the treatment of minorities is linked to historical empathy as caring – while sourcing seems like a separate process. We also find that pupils struggle to link the past to the present and the future more than they do with sourcing and corroboration. Engaging with the past of discrimination of minorities makes pupils take critical positions beyond established dimensions of historical thinking. Our findings highlight how we need to better understand how to scaffold pupils’ practical knowledge, skills and attitudes in ideologically and emotionally charged issues.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/20004508.2019.1607708social studies educationhistory educationhistorical thinking and empathyglobal citizenship education (gce)romani people
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Olle Nolgård
Thomas Nygren
spellingShingle Olle Nolgård
Thomas Nygren
Considering the past and present of Romani in Sweden: secondary school pupils’ thinking and caring about the history of the Romani in national tests
Education Inquiry
social studies education
history education
historical thinking and empathy
global citizenship education (gce)
romani people
author_facet Olle Nolgård
Thomas Nygren
author_sort Olle Nolgård
title Considering the past and present of Romani in Sweden: secondary school pupils’ thinking and caring about the history of the Romani in national tests
title_short Considering the past and present of Romani in Sweden: secondary school pupils’ thinking and caring about the history of the Romani in national tests
title_full Considering the past and present of Romani in Sweden: secondary school pupils’ thinking and caring about the history of the Romani in national tests
title_fullStr Considering the past and present of Romani in Sweden: secondary school pupils’ thinking and caring about the history of the Romani in national tests
title_full_unstemmed Considering the past and present of Romani in Sweden: secondary school pupils’ thinking and caring about the history of the Romani in national tests
title_sort considering the past and present of romani in sweden: secondary school pupils’ thinking and caring about the history of the romani in national tests
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Education Inquiry
issn 2000-4508
publishDate 2019-10-01
description In this study, we analyse 126 secondary pupils’ responses to national test questions designed to make them think and care about the history of national minorities in Sweden. Using a mixed method approach we find that historical thinking and empathy as caring are tightly interlinked in the responses. In particular, the cognitive act of corroborating historical sources about the treatment of minorities is linked to historical empathy as caring – while sourcing seems like a separate process. We also find that pupils struggle to link the past to the present and the future more than they do with sourcing and corroboration. Engaging with the past of discrimination of minorities makes pupils take critical positions beyond established dimensions of historical thinking. Our findings highlight how we need to better understand how to scaffold pupils’ practical knowledge, skills and attitudes in ideologically and emotionally charged issues.
topic social studies education
history education
historical thinking and empathy
global citizenship education (gce)
romani people
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/20004508.2019.1607708
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