This was my first introduction to the progressive ideas of child-centred education. It is hard to overestimate the extent to which such ideas now dominate in our state schools. An organisation established at Leeds University in 1972 called the Schools History Project (SHP) has done untold damage to the teaching of history. The SHP was formed with the belief that history should be used to transmit "attitudes and abilities rather than the memorisation of facts". Classrooms should "create an active learning situation for the pupil, rather than those which cast the teacher in the role of transmitter of information". This conception of the subject was dubbed "New History"—an oxymoronic moniker apparently lost on the SHP. Since its formation, the SHP's philosophy has influenced everything from the national curriculum to teacher training, textbooks and GCSE examinations.
The main tenet of a child-centred view of history teaching is the idea that pupils should not be "passive" recipients of a teacher's knowledge, but "active" individuals empowered to find things out for themselves. As a result, "chalk and talk" teaching from the front is heavily discouraged. After a senior member of staff observed one of my lessons, I was told that my role was to be the "guide on the side" rather than the "sage on the stage".
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