ISBN-13: 9780415833523 / Angielski / Twarda / 2013 / 282 str.
ISBN-13: 9780415833523 / Angielski / Twarda / 2013 / 282 str.
This book is the first to examine both history textbook controversies AND teaching historical controversy in Asian contexts. The many different perspectives provided by the book s authors offer numerous insights, examples, and approaches for understanding historical controversy that will provide a practical gold mine for scholars and practitioners for quite some time.
This book makes a compelling case for addressing historical controversy in contextually nuanced ways to help young people learn how to adjudicate competing accounts and deal with the range of controversies they are likely to encounter in public life. The book provides case studies of history textbook controversies ranging from treatments of the Nanjing Massacre to a comparative treatment of Japanese occupation in Vietnamese and Singaporean textbooks to the differences in history textbooks published by secular and Hindu nationalist governments in India. It also offers a range of approaches for teaching historical controversy in classrooms. These include Structured Academic Controversy, the use of Japanese manga, teaching controversy through case studies, student facilitated discussion processes, and discipline-based approaches that can be used in history classrooms. The book s chapters can also help educational researchers and curricularists consider new approaches for curriculum design, curriculum study, and classroom research.