History education in Ghana: a pragmatic tradition of change and continuity

IF 0.5 Q1 HISTORY
Samuel Adu-Gyamfi, E. Anderson
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

History education in Ghana has been situated within the pre-colonial, colonial and postcolonial trajectories and debates. Whereas there is a conscious effort by history teacher associations, academics and other interest groups to advance and develop the teaching of the subject at different levels of the educational system in Ghana, little attention has been paid to how the textbooks have conceptualised the cultural, ethnic and indigenous histories with their attendant differences and how they have affected or complicated narratives in the postcolonial setting of Ghana. Essentially, this contribution highlights how historical themes on empire, colonisation, decolonisation and the Commonwealth, and associated events, are explored in historiography and in the curricula of Ghana. This involves an examination of the dynamic relationship between political traditions, curriculum, historiography, and scholarship at university level. Overall, the paper highlights the political contexts that have shaped the various stages and manifestations of the history curriculum as it concerns British influence, decolonisation, independence and postcolonialism in Ghana before, during and after the development of the Nkrumahist and Danquah-Busia traditions.
加纳历史教育:变革与延续的务实传统
加纳的历史教育一直处于前殖民、殖民和后殖民的轨迹和辩论之中。尽管历史教师协会、学者和其他利益团体有意识地努力在加纳教育系统的不同层次上推进和发展这门学科的教学,但很少有人关注教科书如何将文化、种族和土著历史及其相关差异概念化,以及它们如何影响或复杂加纳后殖民背景下的叙述。从本质上讲,这一贡献强调了帝国,殖民,非殖民化和英联邦以及相关事件的历史主题是如何在加纳的史学和课程中进行探索的。这包括对政治传统、课程、史学和大学水平学术之间动态关系的考察。总体而言,本文强调了政治背景,塑造了历史课程的各个阶段和表现形式,因为它涉及英国在加纳的影响、非殖民化、独立和后殖民主义,在Nkrumahist和Danquah-Busia传统发展之前、期间和之后。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
33.30%
发文量
18
审稿时长
10 weeks
期刊介绍: Historical Encounters is a blind peer-reviewed, open access, interdsiciplinary journal dedicated to the empirical and theoretical study of: historical consciousness (how we experience the past as something alien to the present; how we understand and relate, both cognitively and affectively, to the past; and how our historically-constituted consciousness shapes our understanding and interpretation of historical representations in the present and influences how we orient ourselves to possible futures); historical cultures (the effective and affective relationship that a human group has with its own past; the agents who create and transform it; the oral, print, visual, dramatic, and interactive media representations by which it is disseminated; the personal, social, economic, and political uses to which it is put; and the processes of reception that shape encounters with it); history education (how we know, teach, and learn history through: schools, universities, museums, public commemorations, tourist venues, heritage sites, local history societies, and other formal and informal settings). Submissions from across the fields of public history, history didactics, curriculum & pedagogy studies, cultural studies, narrative theory, and historical theory fields are all welcome.
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