发生了什么,为什么?帮助学生像历史学家一样阅读和写作

Patrick Rael
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引用次数: 8

摘要

JVIOST历史学家知道问题对他们的事业有多重要。诗人W.H.奥登(W.H. Auden)明白,好的学术只能来自好的问题,他说:“严格地说,历史就是对问题的研究。”其他人也表示赞同。伟大的英国历史学家休·特雷弗-罗珀(Hugh Trevor-Roper)写道:“天才的作用不是给出新的答案,而是提出新的问题。”但好问题从何而来?在历史中,正如在大多数社会科学和人文科学中一样,这是一个关键问题,尽管在我们的学科方法教学中经常被忽视。历史学家——或者,就此而言,所有优秀的学者——如何使用问题来构建他们的分析?更实际的是,学生对这个“问题化”过程的理解如何能帮助他们更有效地阅读和书写历史?以下是我对这个问题的看法,这些想法是我在新英格兰一所文理学院教授本科生十年后产生的。此外,多年来与教授美国大学先修课程历史的高中教育工作者一起工作,使我确信,良好的学术研究原则也适用于高中水平的学生。在我看来,在这两个层面上提高提出好问题的关键,是更好地理解专业历史学家是如何工作的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
What Happened and Why? Helping Students Read and Write Like Historians'
JVIOST HISTORIANS know how important questions are to their enterprise. The poet W.H. Auden understood that good scholarship can only come from good questions, saying "history is, strictly speaking, the study of questions." Others have concurred. The great British historian Hugh Trevor-Roper wrote, "the function of a genius is not to give new answers, but to pose new questions." But where do good questions come from? In history, as in most social sciences and humanities, this is a key concern, though one often neglected in the teaching of our disciplinary methodologies. How do historians—or, for that matter, all good scholars—use questions to frame their analyses? More practically, how can students' understanding of this process of "problematizing" help them read and write history more effectively? What follows are my thoughts on the subject, thoughts that have emerged from a decade of teaching undergraduates at a liberal arts college in New England. Additionally, years of working with high school educators who teach advanced placement United States history have convinced me that the principles of good scholarly investigation are also applicable to students at the high school level. The key to improving the asking of good questions at either level, it seems to me, is developing a better understanding of how professional historians do their work.
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