Students explore why historians often disagree about the same events, understanding that history is an ongoing argument based on evidence and interpretation.
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Teach: interpretation, historiography, perspective, evidence, argument, revise, consensus. The key phrase: 'history is an argument about the past, not simply a record of it'.
Begin with a concrete, recent disagreement students can relate to — two people remembering the same event differently — before applying this to historical interpretation.
Can students give two reasons why historians might interpret the same event differently? Do they understand that better evidence leads to more persuasive interpretation?
Entirely discussion-based. No resources needed. The teacher provides the two contrasting interpretations orally.
Students often think disagreement means history is just opinion. Stress that interpretations must be grounded in evidence — a well-evidenced interpretation is better than a weakly evidenced one, even if both are 'opinions'.
Understanding historiography — how history is written and argued — is the highest level of historical thinking. It transforms students from history consumers into history analysts.
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