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Chew E E

Authors List

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Volume 7

Authors List

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Author/s:
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Chew E E (St Andrew’s Secondary School (Singapore)) Marek Otreba (St Andrew’s Secondary School (Singapore)) Gwee Yi Fen (St Andrew’s Secondary School (Singapore)) Keywords History Secondary School pedagogical tool Abstract This paper reports the experience of a History Professional Learning Team (PLT) from St. Andrew’s Secondary School in 2017 in developing literary strategies to improve student ability to […]

Chew E E (St Andrew’s Secondary School (Singapore))
Marek Otreba (St Andrew’s Secondary School (Singapore))
Gwee Yi Fen (St Andrew’s Secondary School (Singapore))

Keywords
History
Secondary School
pedagogical tool

Abstract
This paper reports the experience of a History Professional Learning Team (PLT) from St. Andrew’s Secondary School in 2017 in developing literary strategies to improve student ability to read and interpret pictorial sources. An action research strategy was used with 150 students for this purpose. Students were explicitly taught the “Triangle Method” of source analysis, as well as specific persuasive techniques used in political cartoons to help them make sense of visual sources. The team found that the strategy of focusing on students’ prior knowledge and allowing them to engage in think aloud protocols had resulted in significant improvements in students’ ability to analyze pictorial sources.

Introduction
While the History PLT members at St. Andrew’s Secondary School had varying degrees of experience teaching upper secondary history, they shared a common concern in managing students’ difficulty with interpreting visual sources in history. Pictorial sources like political cartoons and posters convey various messages and offer diverse perspectives. They also offer both popular beliefs and discerning views shared by different sections of a society on particular historical events. However, the messages in political cartoons tend to be abstract; interpreting these sources would involve deep understanding of rhetorical devices and persuasive techniques that are seldom (explicitly) taught in history classrooms. (Schoelfeldt, 2000; Gallavan, Webster & Dean, 2012). Interpreting historical sources like political cartoons, then, would require a deeper understanding of historical context as they may contain hidden messages that are not easily deciphered or uncovered. As such, some writers have suggested that perhaps more intelligent or high performing students may benefit from analyzing such cartoons as they are more adept at critical thinking. (Haas, 2012). Yet, pictorial sources are a staple in the compulsory Source Based Question (SBQ) component of the national exams, which assesses students’ ability to understand, analyze and evaluate a range of historical source materials as part of historical inquiry (MOE, 2017). Hence, regardless of their ability levels, history students in Singapore must be equipped with the skills and the ability to interpret all manner of historical sources, including political cartoons and other similar pictorial sources. This undertaking has become quite a challenge for both history students and history teachers in Singapore.

In the course of our discussions, the History PLT identified three issues that seemed to imped students’ understanding of pictorial sources:

  • First, students face difficulties in “getting” the overall message of pictorial sources;
  • Second, many students are unable to provide relevant evidence to support their interpretation of the source (i.e. the “message” of the source); and
  • Third, students are more likely to describe and make observations without providing historical contextualization as the basis upon which the analysis or interpretation of the sources were made.

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Noel T P Ong (Ministry of Education (Singapore)) Keywords History Junior College Secondary School Rethinking Approach Introduction Core to historical research and the teaching of history is the concept of causation – in fact, E. H. Carr (1961: 87) famously opined, “the study of history is a study of causes”. Without an awareness and understanding of […]

Noel T P Ong (Ministry of Education (Singapore))

Keywords
History
Junior College
Secondary School
Rethinking Approach

Introduction
Core to historical research and the teaching of history is the concept of causation – in fact, E. H. Carr (1961: 87) famously opined, “the study of history is a study of causes”. Without an awareness and understanding of the concept of causation, it would be difficult to comprehend the reasons why events happened the way they did, and that evidence could be marshalled within a historical context to justify the relative hierarchy of factors for any given historical occurrence. However, based on my teaching experience and interaction with other teachers as well as feedback from students, I discovered that students found it difficult to make causal explanations that harnessed their knowledge and understanding of events in history. Specifically, these difficulties included their inability to construct viable historical explanations and to evaluate the relative importance of certain causes in explaining an event, development or action. This article describes an intervention carried out in a school in Singapore in 2015, using ideas and strategies developed by history educators related to the concept of historical causation and the ways to improve students’ causal reasoning skills.

Challenges in teaching historical causation
Scott (1990) broadly defined causation as

an understanding of the difference between long-term and short-term causes; an understanding that some causes are likely to be more important than others; an appreciation of the difference between, and the interdependence of, motivatory and enabling factors; and an understanding of the inter-relationship of different causatory factors.

(Scott, 1990: 9 cited in Phillips, 2002: 42)

However, many students in Shemilt’s Evaluation Study of the Schools History Project (SHP) seemed to “misconstrue even the most apparently self-evident features of the causality concept” (Shemilt, 1980: 30). The tendency was for these students to see causation as “something with the power to make something else happen” (Shemilt, 1980: 30). Exacerbating this issue was the students’ inability to understand “motivated action” as they “insist[ed] on seeing History as a record of what happened to people rather than of what they made happen” (Shemilt, 1980: 32) [emphasis mine]. Much of Shemilt’s findings pointed to apparent difficulties students faced when trying to make causal explanations.

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Jane Choong (Tanglin Secondary School (Singapore), National Institute of Education (Singapore)) Keywords History Secondary School Discussion-Based Introduction In Historical Thinking and Other Unnatural Acts, Sam Wineburg argued that historical thinking “in its deepest forms, is neither a natural process nor something that springs automatically from psychological development” (2001: 7). He proposed that in order to understand and grapple […]

Jane Choong (Tanglin Secondary School (Singapore), National Institute of Education (Singapore))

Keywords
History
Secondary School
Discussion-Based

Introduction
In Historical Thinking and Other Unnatural Acts, Sam Wineburg argued that historical thinking “in its deepest forms, is neither a natural process nor something that springs automatically from psychological development” (2001: 7). He proposed that in order to understand and grapple with the past, we must change our existing mental structures. In reality, however, Singapore teachers often find themselves “telling history” to their students, as if particular stories about the past can be told in a linear manner or told through a given narrative. The idea that students would need to learn how to mentally wrestle with unfamiliar content, and to also become competent at requisite examination skills that demonstrate proficiency in managing the specified content, may perhaps seem an unfeasible expectation. But, as Wineburg maintained, historical thinking is “an unnatural act” – it requires students to think about the past in a way that goes against how they ordinarily think. Such an approach involves getting students to think about the past in a methodical way and enabling them to make sense of the past using disciplinary lenses. The inability to take on this approach in the history classroom may lead teachers to resort to the very familiar strategy which is to “tell history”, or what I would call “shouting history” at students.

As a history educator, “shouting history” may seem like a terrible notion but it has become a necessary method in our bag of tools. When we teach history to some of our weaker learners, we may find ourselves spending a lot of time getting these students to repeatedly recall materials already covered in previous lessons. When faced with such challenges, it may be easy for us to make certain assumptions about these students: that they are struggling with the subject because they do not read history sufficiently, or that the content is too much for them to digest in a short time, or that they lacked the language skills to comprehend historical sources. These difficulties are indeed real issues that confound students and impede their ability to learn history well. Yet, there are students who also may be “too lazy to think” as they prefer to simply wait for the teacher to give them the “correct answer”. The fact that they are working with the notion of “correct answers” not only points to certain flawed assumptions these students may hold about history, but also their understanding about the nature of historical study. So, why is learning history challenging for students? Is it challenging because it involves the learning of an overwhelming amount of factual details, or is it challenging because it is difficult to interpret sources in their specific historical contexts? I strongly believe it is the latter.

In this article, I am going to make two assumptions: first, that learning history is challenging because the past is not easy for students to picture or imagine; and second, that engaging in historical thinking is challenging for students because of the “unnatural” way students are expected to view the past. As history educators, we need to make this “unnatural act” more intuitive and instinctive so that we can develop students who are discerning in judgement and are able to think independently and critically about the world around them.

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Goh Hong Yi (Beatty Secondary School (Singapore)) Tham Chin Pang Joseph (Academy of Singapore Teachers (Singapore)) Keywords History Secondary School Role-Play Introduction For the average fourteen-year-old student in Singapore, knowledge about the nation’s road to independence may be limited to a rather narrow field-of-view, i.e. seen through the actions of leaders from the People’s Action Party (PAP) […]

Goh Hong Yi (Beatty Secondary School (Singapore))
Tham Chin Pang Joseph (Academy of Singapore Teachers (Singapore))

Keywords
History
Secondary School
Role-Play

Introduction
For the average fourteen-year-old student in Singapore, knowledge about the nation’s road to independence may be limited to a rather narrow field-of-view, i.e. seen through the actions of leaders from the People’s Action Party (PAP) and the events that led to the achievement of independence under Mr. Lee Kuan Yew’s leadership. They may not be aware of the different political parties that were vying for political power at the time or the complex circumstances that paved the road towards independence. While the ruling party and our first Prime Minister undoubtedly played a significant role during this period in Singapore’s history, the sheer prominence of the dominant political party in the state’s narrative may impede students’ understanding of the past and their awareness of the diversity of experiences during this period. Students’ lack of knowledge about the historical context of post-war Singapore would lead them to view the current government’s dominance in Singapore’s politics as natural and inevitable. However, to develop deeper historical understandings, students would not only need to know the various personalities, as well as the actions of prominent leaders of the time, but also the reasons and the circumstances that led to the political contest and the PAP’s eventual victory in the elections.

How might we design suitable learning experiences that can allow students to appreciate factors that had influenced political developments in Singapore in the 1950s? One way is to perhaps reduce their fixation with attributing significance primarily to the actions of the PAP and to show how other political parties at that point in time were themselves seen as viable options in their own right. A teaching strategy that uses role-play as a centrepiece may help enhance students’ historical empathy and enable them to recognize the diversity of perspectives that existed during this complex period.

Issues in teaching the history of Singapore’s political development
Chapter 6 of the Lower Secondary History syllabus is titled, What aspirations did people have for Singapore from 1945 – 1959? This is an especially challenging topic to teach, and much of it may be due to inadequate knowledge base that students had to learn prior to this chapter.

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Edward Tan Yu Fan (National Institute of Education (Singapore)) Keywords History Migration Why should we place an emphasis on the wave of mass migration to Singapore in the years before the Second World War? Most Singaporeans already know something about this mass movement of people to Singapore, or at least they think they know. These preconceived […]

Edward Tan Yu Fan (National Institute of Education (Singapore))

Keywords
History
Migration

Why should we place an emphasis on the wave of mass migration to Singapore in the years before the Second World War? Most Singaporeans already know something about this mass movement of people to Singapore, or at least they think they know. These preconceived understandings and misunderstandings formed the first obstacle for a history teacher to overcome when discussing the phenomena of mass migration that fundamentally shaped Singapore.

The pre-existing understandings of students were forged by a symbiotic combination of National Education messages and the popular media portrayals of the period. Drama serials such as The Awakening and The Price of Peace proved to have a significant and enduring impact on the popular memory of Singaporeans regarding the narratives of mass migration to Singapore.[i] This narrative, reinforced every National Day, was that migrants came to Singapore in search of a better life, and together they built a shining city on the hill that we are still enjoying the fruits. An appreciation of the achievements of our forefathers plays an important role in the process of nation-building, by providing younger Singaporeans something they can feel proud of. Mass migration is therefore the bedrock upon which the Singapore Story was built.

There is much validity in this narrative. It is true that Singapore was a migrant society that was made up of thousands of men and women seeking a better life. However, in the context of a historical classroom, we should aspire to go beyond that narrative and give our students a deeper understanding of the complex global forces that were at work which drove the founding of Singapore, and triggered a large wave of migration to Singapore – bearing in mind that this was a wave of migration that was only second in numbers to European migration to the Americas, Australia and New Zealand during this period.

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Andrew Yap Ming Hwee (National Institute of Education (Singapore)) Keywords History Bipolar Introduction As a student, I understood the dichotomy between Communism and Democracy, and how such ideological divide set the basis for the Cold War. However, my understanding of this dichotomy was being challenged subsequently because stating their differences is not sufficient in accounting for […]

Andrew Yap Ming Hwee (National Institute of Education (Singapore))

Keywords
History
Bipolar

Introduction
As a student, I understood the dichotomy between Communism and Democracy, and how such ideological divide set the basis for the Cold War. However, my understanding of this dichotomy was being challenged subsequently because stating their differences is not sufficient in accounting for the Cold War which lasted almost half a century: it was the tensions from the ideological difference between the USA and the USSR which manifested itself in different aspects which led to the deterioration of relations between both superpowers. Eventually, my own specialisation in intellectual history – the study of ideas across time and space – during my university years prompted me to further re-visit the historical concepts which I encountered during my schooling years. This has been especially useful because I would be teaching these concepts in the history classroom and given the benefit of hindsight, I have started to think about ways in which the teaching of these concepts could be enhanced. If I were to think about one key idea from my university days which could be brought into the teaching of history in classrooms, it would be that ideas assume varying meanings across time and space, and that it would be worthwhile to track these changes.

My own teaching experience also led me to contend the possibility of linking my university experience in exploring the enduring understandings behind intellectual history to the teaching of historical concepts in the classroom. I had to teach the concept of détente to a Secondary Four history class once, and the class’s initial confusion about the concept and its implication on their understanding of the Cold War struck a discordant note with me for two reasons. Firstly, their confusion about the détente appeared to reflect their overly simplistic understanding of the Cold War as a monolithic struggle between the USA and the USSR. Secondly, their understanding of the various stand-offs between both superpowers in the Cold War has also hindered their understanding of the moments during the Cold War in which both superpowers co-operated. In other words, their approach towards understanding the Cold War did not differ from the way in which they conceived the two World Wars and did not deviate from the thinking that “wars” in general entailed total hostility and military standoffs. It is perhaps such misconceptions about the nature of the ideological tensions and bi-polarity during the Cold War which have prompted me to think about the way in which we approach the teaching of the Cold War in general, and our treatment of the concept of bi-polarity in the history classroom specifically. Moreover, such misconceptions have also led me to further examine the way in which knowledge about the Cold War was constructed within the syllabus before analysing the ways in which the concept of bi-polarity can further developed.

Owing to the construct of and constraints within the syllabus, the students’ knowledge of the Cold War is constructed around key developments. Such approach is both rewarding and challenging for the teaching and learning of the Cold War – while students are able to study in-depth the key developments which broadly shaped the political trajectory of both the USSR and the United States after the Second World War, certain developments such as détente and the Sino-Soviet split which could have allowed for a more nuanced understanding of the Cold War were thus accorded less attention. This, however, does not mean that the syllabus has neglected these developments, because students still gain an awareness of these events through the timeline and brief description of developments in the 1970s bridging the intermediary time gap between the Cuban Missile Crisis and the end of the Cold War provided in the coursebook.

Author/s:

HSSE Online EDITORIAL This special geography issue of HSSE Online focuses on the research-practice nexus for teaching and learning geography. It celebrates the professional identities of geography teachers as reflective thinkers and education researchers who work towards excellence in their classroom practice through evidence-based interventions. This collection of articles highlights research conducted by both pre-service […]

Past Issues

02 Mar 2023

Volume 7, Issue 1 2018

HSSE Online EDITORIAL

This special geography issue of HSSE Online focuses on the research-practice nexus for teaching and learning geography. It celebrates the professional identities of geography teachers as reflective thinkers and education researchers who work towards excellence in their classroom practice through evidence-based interventions. This collection of articles highlights research conducted by both pre-service and in-service geography teachers that have important implications for teaching and learning. Although the research data focuses on geography classrooms and topics, the articles have wider application to a humanities audience as they deal with broader themes of supporting the co-construction of knowledge and critical thinking skills, and using data strategically in both the classroom and the field.

The first four papers stem from research conducted by pre-service teachers on geography education issues. Debi Lim analyses the role of talk in engaging students in critical thinking and learning. She highlights how the quality of dialogue and learning outcomes in the classroom are linked inextricably to power and authority in the classroom, and calls for more student-led dialogue in discussions. Lim En Qi examines the role of fieldwork in developing cognitive thinking in students using an adapted model of Bloom’s Taxonomy. Her research suggests both an improvement in higher-order cognitive skills, as well as deeper thinking within each level, stemming from participating in field-based inquiry. Esther Wong draws on the Mediated Learning Experience framework to analyse the geography curriculum and suggest improvements to support inquiry learning in practice. Given the difficulties geography teachers face in planning for fieldwork in unfamiliar sites, Heidi Tan’s paper illustrates the efficacy of using GIS techniques to determine the suitability of sites for sampling in fieldwork.

The remaining three articles are contributions by practicing teachers who have conducted action research focused on improving the quality of students’ writing. Zainab Hassan and David Toh address the role of formative written feedback as a constructive pedagogical strategy to help improve students’ geographical writing, and as a means for teachers to model a reflective attitude towards learning. A group of teachers from five secondary schools (Jamilah Sukimi, Samantha Lim, Sarifah Tamsir, Tan Say Pin & Wong Yi Jun) developed a writing framework that combines Paul’s Elements of Thinking with Neighbour’s Core Questions to guide students’ writing in level descriptor questions. The aim of the research is to provide both structure in extended writing, and encourage the use of geographical concepts in quality responses. Finally, Ong Ka Min Yuan and Arulushamaheswary D/O Anbalagan developed a framework to help students who struggle with writing answers to data response questions. Using Bloom’s taxonomy, the authors developed a step-by-step guide on how to analyse data in geography.

Tricia Seow
Editor, HSSE Online

Author/s:

HSSE Online EDITORIAL The collection of papers in this special issue of the HSSE Online – the first part of a two-volume edition on history

Past Issues

02 Mar 2023

Volume 7, Issue 2 2018

HSSE Online EDITORIAL

The collection of papers in this special issue of the HSSE Online – the first part of a two-volume edition on history education – brings together expertise and experience from all sections of the history education community to discuss matters related to the teaching and learning of history in the classroom. This “conversation” between historians, history educators, curriculum specialists, teacher educators, pre-service teachers, and seasoned practitioners takes on a mostly reflective tone when describing instructional strategies that can enhance the quality of student learning, yet challenges readers into an ongoing dialogue with the pedagogy and practice of school history. Beyond simply thinking about history teaching in terms of standards, competence and performance, the authors postulate more creative and innovative means to address the real and concrete problems students face in learning history. Collectively, they encourage a critical reflection of both the epistemic and methodological aspects of the discipline, and indirectly seek to promote a reflective environment that allows teachers to become more thoughtful and self-evaluative practitioners.

In his paper, Historical Sources in the Classroom: Purpose and Use, renowned US history educator Keith C. Barton addresses the lack of clarity in teachers’ understanding and use of historical sources. He urges deeper reflection on the purposes of using historical sources in the classroom and illustrates how sources can be used both as a means to an end, and as ends in themselves. He argues that using historical sources in more effective ways can help students develop deep understanding of historical content and allows them to appreciate how historical knowledge is constructed.

Ivy Maria Lim takes on a key idea raised by the previous author and shares her own personal experience as a professional historian. In her paper, Studying and Constructing History: A Historian’s Take, she delves deep into the historian’s world and highlights the intricacies and uncertainties involved in historical work. She emphasizes the distinction between academic and school history and cautions the dangers of oversimplification in students’ understanding of historical sources and the historian’s craft.

The discussion on the use of sources and evidence in the classroom continues in Oh Ying Jie’s paper, Historical Evidence: Archaeological Practice as a Pedagogical Tool for Historical Education in Singapore. In her paper, Ying Jie highlights the difficulties history teachers face when communicating knowledge about Singapore’s pre-1819 past. She shares her experience working on an instructional approach that uses an amalgamation of archaeological methods and close examination of historical sources to teach 14th century Singapore, and believes that such an approach can reverse students’ misconceptions about the subject and engage them in the process of constructing history.

The next paper describes an action research project undertaken by history teachers at St. Andrew’s Secondary School. In their paper, Improving Student Ability in Interpreting Visual Sources through Action Research, Chew Ee, Marek Otreba and Gwee Yi Fen reflect on the team’s strategy to develop literary strategies meant to improve their students’ ability to read and interpret pictorial sources. They found that an approach that focuses on addressing students’ prior conceptions, the explicit teaching of interpretation methods and persuasive techniques, and the use of think-aloud-protocols, can result in significant improvements in students’ ability to analyze pictorial sources.

The use of teaching interventions to improve student learning and historical understanding lies at the core of the next three papers. In his paper, Rethinking the Approach to Teaching Causation in the History Classroom, Noel T P Ong highlights the challenges students face in understanding the nature of historical causation, and the common mistakes they are likely to make when demonstrating causal reasoning. He reflects on his experience conducting a small-scale study that tests the effectiveness of a teaching intervention meant to improve students’ confidence and understanding when responding to causation-focused questions.

In a similar vein, Jane Choong explores the use of a discussion strategy to improve her students’ understanding and thinking in history. In her paper, Classroom Conversation: The Use of Discussion-Based Strategy in the History Classroom, she describes how having students engaged in intentional, constructive and critical discussions can lead to more effective learning. She found that using discussion-based strategy in her classrooms has helped resolve some learning difficulties her students faced, and allowed them to overcome specific challenges involved when dealing with the historical past.        

Helping students deal with a complex past appears to also be the concern of Goh Hong Yi and Tham Chin Pang Joseph. In their paper, Teaching Historical Understanding through Role-Play, the authors raise pertinent issues confronting teachers when teaching the history of Singapore’s post-war political developments. They demonstrate a role-play strategy that allows students to consider events from diverse and multiple perspectives, and propose that such a strategy enhances students’ historical understandings and help develop empathy with characters or personalities who lived in the past.

The final two papers shift the focus to the teaching of substantive concepts in history. Pre-service teachers, Edward Tan Yu Fan and Andrew Yap Ming Hwee, reflect on their academic grounding as students of history and offer insights on ways teachers can more precisely, and in a more opportune way, approach the teaching of “migration” and “bi-polarity” to secondary school students.

In his paper, The Significance of Mass Migration, and How to Better Talk about It, Edward ponders the heavy emphasis, and the enduring impact of narratives surrounding mass migration to Singapore in the post-1819 years. He considers the event unexceptional given greater developments that were taking place elsewhere around the world. He suggests that teachers aspire to go beyond this narrative and give students a deeper understanding of the complex global forces that were at work and which led to Singapore’s founding. Andrew’s paper, Enhancing Students’ Understanding of Bi-Polarity in the History Classroom, proposes a re-consideration in the teaching of “bi-polarity” as a concept. He believes that the concept can be approached in less limited ways, and proposes strategies that can broaden students’ understandings of developments during the Cold War. By studying events using historical lenses such as chronology, change and continuity, teachers can demonstrate how the Cold War was fundamentally an ideological struggle between the USA and the USSR, before helping students appreciate the fluctuations or variations in the ways “bi-polarity” is viewed at various points in the conflict.

Suhaimi Afandi
Editor, HSSE Online

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