History teachers’ pedagogical reasoning and the dynamics of classroom implementation in Ghana

The Ghanaian senior high-school history curriculum encourages teachers to guide students to explore, question and construct historical interpretations, rather than accept established historical narratives. This study investigates how those teachers conceive and implement the curriculum intent by exp...

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Main Authors: Gideon Boadu, Debra Donnelly, Heather Sharp
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UCL Press 2020-09-01
Series:History Education Research Journal
Online Access:https://ucl.scienceopen.com/hosted-document?doi=10.14324/HERJ.17.2.04
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spelling doaj-391497f294b343098826d5257fecf59a2021-04-02T19:05:06ZengUCL PressHistory Education Research Journal2631-97132020-09-0110.14324/HERJ.17.2.04History teachers’ pedagogical reasoning and the dynamics of classroom implementation in GhanaGideon BoaduDebra DonnellyHeather SharpThe Ghanaian senior high-school history curriculum encourages teachers to guide students to explore, question and construct historical interpretations, rather than accept established historical narratives. This study investigates how those teachers conceive and implement the curriculum intent by exploring their pedagogical reasoning and classroom practices. The project described in this paper draws from a range of investigative instruments including in-depth interviews, classroom observations, post-lesson interviews and teachers’ planning paperwork from 15 public senior high schools in Ghana’s Central Region. This research found that teachers’ pedagogical reasoning was consistent with constructivist educational theory as well as responsive to the history curriculum, but that their stated understandings did not align with classroom practice. The findings indicate limited constructivist strategies in history lessons, as most teachers were didactic in approach and tended to teach history as a grand narrative.https://ucl.scienceopen.com/hosted-document?doi=10.14324/HERJ.17.2.04
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gideon Boadu
Debra Donnelly
Heather Sharp
spellingShingle Gideon Boadu
Debra Donnelly
Heather Sharp
History teachers’ pedagogical reasoning and the dynamics of classroom implementation in Ghana
History Education Research Journal
author_facet Gideon Boadu
Debra Donnelly
Heather Sharp
author_sort Gideon Boadu
title History teachers’ pedagogical reasoning and the dynamics of classroom implementation in Ghana
title_short History teachers’ pedagogical reasoning and the dynamics of classroom implementation in Ghana
title_full History teachers’ pedagogical reasoning and the dynamics of classroom implementation in Ghana
title_fullStr History teachers’ pedagogical reasoning and the dynamics of classroom implementation in Ghana
title_full_unstemmed History teachers’ pedagogical reasoning and the dynamics of classroom implementation in Ghana
title_sort history teachers’ pedagogical reasoning and the dynamics of classroom implementation in ghana
publisher UCL Press
series History Education Research Journal
issn 2631-9713
publishDate 2020-09-01
description The Ghanaian senior high-school history curriculum encourages teachers to guide students to explore, question and construct historical interpretations, rather than accept established historical narratives. This study investigates how those teachers conceive and implement the curriculum intent by exploring their pedagogical reasoning and classroom practices. The project described in this paper draws from a range of investigative instruments including in-depth interviews, classroom observations, post-lesson interviews and teachers’ planning paperwork from 15 public senior high schools in Ghana’s Central Region. This research found that teachers’ pedagogical reasoning was consistent with constructivist educational theory as well as responsive to the history curriculum, but that their stated understandings did not align with classroom practice. The findings indicate limited constructivist strategies in history lessons, as most teachers were didactic in approach and tended to teach history as a grand narrative.
url https://ucl.scienceopen.com/hosted-document?doi=10.14324/HERJ.17.2.04
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