Reflecting From the Margins of Education Faculties: Refiguring the Humanist, and Finding a Space for Story in History

<p>Notwithstanding their traditional characterization as a foundations subject, history of education courses are marginal in pre-service teacher education. This marginalization is framed here in light of a broader concern for the discipline’s turn away from the humanities.  History of educatio...

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Main Author: Theodore Michael Christou
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Brock University 2010-07-01
Series:Brock Education: a Journal of Educational Research and Practice
Online Access:http://brock.scholarsportal.info/journals/brocked/home/article/view/145
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spelling doaj-6b0b92839c584fe488d1460fc55c60f62020-11-25T02:52:06ZengBrock UniversityBrock Education: a Journal of Educational Research and Practice1183-11891183-11892010-07-01201138Reflecting From the Margins of Education Faculties: Refiguring the Humanist, and Finding a Space for Story in HistoryTheodore Michael Christou0University of New Brunswick<p>Notwithstanding their traditional characterization as a foundations subject, history of education courses are marginal in pre-service teacher education. This marginalization is framed here in light of a broader concern for the discipline’s turn away from the humanities.  History of education’s fundamental purpose, it is argued, lies in the exploration of what it means to be human, and how education has historically been shaped by our values, authority, contexts, and norms.  Using stories drawn from literature and memoirs in the teaching of educational history is one means of exploring intersections of education with human cultures and societies across historical contexts.  History is etymologically linked with story telling, and both history and literature share narrative features; the two should not be conflated, however, due to distinctive disciplinary features of history, such as the requirement that any claims to truth require what John Dewey referred to as warranted assertability.</p><p>Keywords: history of education, teacher education,educational foundations, humanities, literature, historical mindedness, John Dewey.</p>http://brock.scholarsportal.info/journals/brocked/home/article/view/145
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Theodore Michael Christou
spellingShingle Theodore Michael Christou
Reflecting From the Margins of Education Faculties: Refiguring the Humanist, and Finding a Space for Story in History
Brock Education: a Journal of Educational Research and Practice
author_facet Theodore Michael Christou
author_sort Theodore Michael Christou
title Reflecting From the Margins of Education Faculties: Refiguring the Humanist, and Finding a Space for Story in History
title_short Reflecting From the Margins of Education Faculties: Refiguring the Humanist, and Finding a Space for Story in History
title_full Reflecting From the Margins of Education Faculties: Refiguring the Humanist, and Finding a Space for Story in History
title_fullStr Reflecting From the Margins of Education Faculties: Refiguring the Humanist, and Finding a Space for Story in History
title_full_unstemmed Reflecting From the Margins of Education Faculties: Refiguring the Humanist, and Finding a Space for Story in History
title_sort reflecting from the margins of education faculties: refiguring the humanist, and finding a space for story in history
publisher Brock University
series Brock Education: a Journal of Educational Research and Practice
issn 1183-1189
1183-1189
publishDate 2010-07-01
description <p>Notwithstanding their traditional characterization as a foundations subject, history of education courses are marginal in pre-service teacher education. This marginalization is framed here in light of a broader concern for the discipline’s turn away from the humanities.  History of education’s fundamental purpose, it is argued, lies in the exploration of what it means to be human, and how education has historically been shaped by our values, authority, contexts, and norms.  Using stories drawn from literature and memoirs in the teaching of educational history is one means of exploring intersections of education with human cultures and societies across historical contexts.  History is etymologically linked with story telling, and both history and literature share narrative features; the two should not be conflated, however, due to distinctive disciplinary features of history, such as the requirement that any claims to truth require what John Dewey referred to as warranted assertability.</p><p>Keywords: history of education, teacher education,educational foundations, humanities, literature, historical mindedness, John Dewey.</p>
url http://brock.scholarsportal.info/journals/brocked/home/article/view/145
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