What Are Upper Secondary School Students Saying About History?

This study sought to examine students' thinking about history to determine the extent to which their perceptions coincided with widely held views on the subject. The study employed a mixed-method research design aimed at triangulating quantitative and qualitative data obtained from questionnaires and focus group interviews. Four hundred and fifteen participants were randomly drawn from selected secondary schools in Tobago and the east/west corridor of Trinidad. Findings of the study revealed that while students largely rejected the notion that history is boring and irrelevant to contemporary life, many of them were still reluctant to pursue the subject further at the tertiary level. This apparent reluctance seems to be influenced by the perception that history becomes increasingly cumbersome and details-laden as one advances in study. Perhaps this perception could be adjusted if students were introduced to history differently at an earlier period. This study, therefore, has implications for curriculum policy and practice regarding the appropriate time history should be introduced as a subject in the school curriculum

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Joseph, Stephen
Format: Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: School of Education, UWI, St. Augustine 2011
Subjects:Secondary school students, Student attitudes, History education, Trinidad and Tobago,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2139/11304
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spelling oai:oai:uwispace.sta.uwi.edu:2139:2139-113042011-10-12T03:02:07Z What Are Upper Secondary School Students Saying About History? Joseph, Stephen Secondary school students Student attitudes History education Trinidad and Tobago This study sought to examine students' thinking about history to determine the extent to which their perceptions coincided with widely held views on the subject. The study employed a mixed-method research design aimed at triangulating quantitative and qualitative data obtained from questionnaires and focus group interviews. Four hundred and fifteen participants were randomly drawn from selected secondary schools in Tobago and the east/west corridor of Trinidad. Findings of the study revealed that while students largely rejected the notion that history is boring and irrelevant to contemporary life, many of them were still reluctant to pursue the subject further at the tertiary level. This apparent reluctance seems to be influenced by the perception that history becomes increasingly cumbersome and details-laden as one advances in study. Perhaps this perception could be adjusted if students were introduced to history differently at an earlier period. This study, therefore, has implications for curriculum policy and practice regarding the appropriate time history should be introduced as a subject in the school curriculum 2011-10-11T16:17:57Z 2011-10-11T16:17:57Z 2011 Article Joseph, S. (2011). What are upper secondary school students saying about history? Caribbean Curriculum, 18, 1-25 1017-5636 http://hdl.handle.net/2139/11304 en application/pdf School of Education, UWI, St. Augustine
institution UWI TT
collection DSpace
country Trinidad y Tobago
countrycode TT
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-uwi-tt
tag biblioteca
region Caribe
libraryname UWI library system TT
language English
topic Secondary school students
Student attitudes
History education
Trinidad and Tobago
Secondary school students
Student attitudes
History education
Trinidad and Tobago
spellingShingle Secondary school students
Student attitudes
History education
Trinidad and Tobago
Secondary school students
Student attitudes
History education
Trinidad and Tobago
Joseph, Stephen
What Are Upper Secondary School Students Saying About History?
description This study sought to examine students' thinking about history to determine the extent to which their perceptions coincided with widely held views on the subject. The study employed a mixed-method research design aimed at triangulating quantitative and qualitative data obtained from questionnaires and focus group interviews. Four hundred and fifteen participants were randomly drawn from selected secondary schools in Tobago and the east/west corridor of Trinidad. Findings of the study revealed that while students largely rejected the notion that history is boring and irrelevant to contemporary life, many of them were still reluctant to pursue the subject further at the tertiary level. This apparent reluctance seems to be influenced by the perception that history becomes increasingly cumbersome and details-laden as one advances in study. Perhaps this perception could be adjusted if students were introduced to history differently at an earlier period. This study, therefore, has implications for curriculum policy and practice regarding the appropriate time history should be introduced as a subject in the school curriculum
format Article
topic_facet Secondary school students
Student attitudes
History education
Trinidad and Tobago
author Joseph, Stephen
author_facet Joseph, Stephen
author_sort Joseph, Stephen
title What Are Upper Secondary School Students Saying About History?
title_short What Are Upper Secondary School Students Saying About History?
title_full What Are Upper Secondary School Students Saying About History?
title_fullStr What Are Upper Secondary School Students Saying About History?
title_full_unstemmed What Are Upper Secondary School Students Saying About History?
title_sort what are upper secondary school students saying about history?
publisher School of Education, UWI, St. Augustine
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2139/11304
work_keys_str_mv AT josephstephen whatareuppersecondaryschoolstudentssayingabouthistory
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