What is the role of the humanities in the modern school? Should geography, history, RE and Citizenship teachers remain faithful to long-standing subject cultures and pedagogies? Or is there another way to consider how the curriculum, and the notion of individual subjects and teachers’ pedagogy, could be constructed?Drawing on case studies taken from a range of innovative secondary schools, and interrogating the use of cross-curricular approaches in UK schools, Cross-Curricular Teaching and Learning in Humanities constructs a research based pedagogy with practical steps for students and teachers as they consider how cross-curricular approaches can be implemented in their own subject areas. Key features include:
This is Book 4 in the Cross Curricular Teaching and Learning in... Series. See all Cross Curricular Teaching and Learning in... books here.
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Richard Harris is Lecturer in History Education at the University of Reading.
Katharine Burn is Senior Lecturer in History Education at the Institute of Education, University of London.
Mary Woolley is Senior Lecturer in History Education at Canterbury Christ Church University.
Richard McFahn is an advisor in East Sussex and creator of www.historyresourcecupboard.co.uk
Neil Bates is a subject and advanced skills teacher in Hampshire
Ian Dawson is former Publications Director of the Schools History Project and creator of www.thinkinghistory.co.uk
Alec Fisher is History Leader at a school in Hampshire