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History teaching as a designed meaning-making process: Teacher facilitation of student–subject relationships
Author(s) -
Heidi Eskelund Knudsen
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
history education research journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2631-9713
DOI - 10.18546/herj.17.1.04
Subject(s) - dialogic , meaning (existential) , subject (documents) , pedagogy , psychology , process (computing) , teaching method , meaning making , cohesion (chemistry) , mathematics education , sociology , computer science , chemistry , organic chemistry , library science , psychotherapist , operating system
This article is an empirical analysis of history teaching as a communicative process. Dialogic history teaching develops as a designed meaning-making process that depends on thorough pedagogical strategies and decisions, and requires cohesion in teacher expectations, introductions and interventions. A micro-dialogic study is presented in this article to document a paradoxical teaching situation where history as subject-related content all but disappeared from a group of students' meaning-making processes because they were preoccupied with figuring out their teacher's intentions. History teaching thus turned into 'just teaching' without the teacher or the students being aware of it. A strong emphasis on history teaching as a communicative process and dialogue as a key pedagogical tool have potential with regard to pedagogical decision-making and strategies on the one hand, and for relationships between students and history as subject-related content on the other. The analysis presented in this article contributes to a growing field of studies on dialogic history teaching, of which the focus on students as an important part of classroom dialogues is central.

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