Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Pedagogical Aspects of Local and Community History: Final Report Alison Twells October 2007 Description of project Groups of 'local history' enthusiasts have proliferated in recent years, many forming in areas not traditionally associated with Local History Association-type activities. In particular, 'regeneration' initiatives have placed considerable emphasis on local history as a means of bringing together potential community participants, inspiring pride in the locality, and developing skills and confidence. A Department of Culture, Media and Sport’s consultation document, ‘Culture at the Heart of Regeneration’ (2004) emphasised the need for evidence-based examples of culture’s impact on regeneration. Two key areas were highlighted: A Sense of Place, which focused on positive outcomes on the physical environment; and Delivering for Communities, building individual capacity and community engagement. At the same time, many universities are increasingly attracting ‘local’ students, and as part of the widening participation agenda, are keen to attract non-traditional entrants. The key focus of this project was to explore the pedagogical aspects of 'local history' and 'community history', especially in terms of facilitating enthusiasm and motivation for the study of history in a variety of contexts. Aims and objectives The project explored the practice of ‘local history’ in two contexts: in ‘regeneration’ projects in the Sheffield region; and by first-year students taking an innovative local history module at the University of Gävle in Sweden. It had the following objectives: 1. To explore the extent to which the pursuit of ‘local history’ in the context of regeneration projects inspires confidence and enthusiasm; whether this translates into a desire to pursue the study of history at higher education level; the possibilities presented for university widening participation agendas. 2. To understand more about the motivational aspects of local history through investigating a successful first-year local 1 history project run by historians at the Swedish University of Gävle. This university has a strongly ‘first-generation’ and regional student population. As so many universities in the UK are moving towards a local intake, and many, like Sheffield Hallam, are periodically struggling with the 'culture' of first year students, I was keen to explore what history lecturers in British universities might learn from the Gävle experience. 3. To evaluate student responses to a new third year module, Community History, in terms of the enhancement of student learning; and to design a new first-year module on local public history, which combines both theory and practice and places an emphasis on independent learning. Conclusions 1. Local and Community History in Sheffield For this part of the project, I met with local historians associated with three very different community history initiatives in the Sheffield region. I interviewed both key workers and, where appropriate, community participants at the following projects: Burngreave Voices; the Burton Street Community History Project; and the Beighton Project. There are such vast differences in terms of the range and scope of their activities and the extent and terms of involvement of the community, that it is best to consider each one in turn. Burngreave Voices This is a three-year project, coming to an end in April 2007, jointly funded by Burngreave New Deal for Communities and Sheffield Galleries and Museums Trust. Burngreave is one of Sheffield’s most deprived areas. Once a salubrious suburb, it has been since the postwar period the home of generations of immigrant and, more recently, refugees and asylum seekers. There is a higher than average unemployment rate and relatively low educational achievement. The area is a designated ‘New Deal’ area, and in receipt of £50million regeneration funds. The Project Worker, Nikky Wilson, sees community history in terms of stories about lives, and is interested in 'living history', rather than archival sources (although some archival work, especially in relation to oral history, is being done). She views community history as a ‘tool for community engagement’, especially among groups who don’t usually get to tell their stories or to participate in local development initiatives. For example, she undertook interviews with Yemeni women which were then printed in the local independent 2 Burngreave Messenger. The emphasis is on the positive aspects of the locality, pride and identity. Burngreave Voices has undertaken a range of activities, some of which have proved more popular and successful than others. These have included: an impressive local history pack, investigating social change over the past two centuries, was written by the project workers and a local primary school teacher; a play about the visit to Sheffield in 1790 of the black antislavery activist Olaudah Equiano was written by Dead Earnest Theatre Company and performed at all four primary schools during Black History Month in 2005 and 2006; Community events held in local parks. For example, a Victorian Tea Party was held at Abbeyfield Park in September 2006; Vocational placements with Sheffield’s Millennium Galleries through the Apprenticeships for All scheme; oral history interviews have been undertaken and form a community archive; The project is to round off with a book, website and an exhibition. Some initiatives have not taken off. Individual family-based history activities, called ‘Who do you think you are?’ after the popular TV programme, saw little take-up, and Local History courses (run by the WEA) did not recruit. Nikky speculated as to why this might be and especially why there appeared to be so much less interest among ethnic minority communities (the dynamic with a white interviewer, the difficulty of sharing some memories, the feeling that their stories were not ‘real’ history, the issue of some communities being very much less settled than others etc). This requires further investigation, however, especially in the light of successful oral history projects conducted by public history workers, especially museums staff, among ethnic minority communities in other parts of the country (e.g. East Midlands) and indeed within the African-Caribbean community in Burngreave itself. The levels of individual community engagement in culturally mixed Burngreave is in contrast with that in the white working-class communities and ex-community of Beighton and Owlerton. The Burton Street Project, Owlerton, Sheffield The Burton Street History Project is part of the Burton Street Project, based in a school in an area of Sheffield 6 that no longer exists as a residential district. Once a large working-class 3 community of terraced housing, the area was cleared in the 1960s and 1970s and its population dispersed, mostly locally. The History Project began in 2000 with a school reunion mailing list of a few hundred names. The project workers, Penny Hardcastle and Molly Powell, began to contact the people on the list, and were contacted in return by many more ex-pupils. They began an oral history of the school (2000) and of people who lived/worked in the area (from 2003). On each occasion, they had no difficulty persuading people to be involved. People enjoyed coming back, meeting old acquaintances, reminiscing about an area in which two or three generations of the same family had lived in the same house, but which had gone by 1975. The project held reunions, gathered photographic evidence and artefacts and encouraged people to write about their memories. The Schools Project took older people into schools in north-west Sheffield to talk about aspects of history. Particular emphasis was placed on life in Sheffield during the war and the experience of evacuation. The speakers received prepared questions from students, took in artefacts and displays, and talked to students. Although aspects of the schools’ work have been very successful, its dependence upon the teacher's engagement with and commitment to the project can make it an unpredictable venture. Penny and Molly plan to develop the reminiscence work, using memory maps as a tool for generating written memories. I also interviewed participants in the reminiscence and schools projects. Seven people came to the meeting in May 2006. All had been pupils, at different times, at Burton Street school (built in 1879). They had been brought together by school reunions, and had had a number of enjoyable get-togethers, at which there was a really good atmosphere. One person speculated as to whether the events were so successful because the area no longer existed as a residential district. The group talked about the point in life when the interest arises, and agreed that it was often at a certain age, as your own parents die, emerging with the realisation of your own mortality. Their own children were not yet interested. It was often women, although not exclusively, who were the keepers of memories and photos. Much of the conversation consisted of reminiscence: discussion included the date the houses around Capel Street and Burton Street were built; the design of houses, their condition (crickets and bugs and tarring the walls); the size of families; the local shops, brewery and Cunios ice cream; the rent man, the pikelet man; chapel, Upperthorpe slipper baths, Hillsborough Park, and childhood games. 4 In these discussions, the enthusiasm for local history and enjoyment of reminiscing was very much in evidence. A number of people present had been involved in the schools’ projects. The general feeling was these sessions had been very successful; the children had been really interested; the visitors talked of being ‘stumped’ by the ‘quality’ of the questions that they were asked. People felt that they remembered more as a result, and were further enthused to record their memories. One member of the group, for example, had started writing his memories down as a result of one such visit. The themes had included evacuation, growing up in the 1950s and clothes, toys and childhood games. When probed about what it is they believed is important for children to know about the past, people emphasised the difference from life today and how it felt to live such a life: feelings about the war and being away from home and family; about having to make your own entertainment; and about poverty. The children ‘can’t comprehend how poor we were’, one man said, and reminisced about wearing Wellington boots all year round, the tops turned down in the summer, and rolled up in winter. It felt important that children knew how hard things were, but also that, despite the poverty, it was a good childhood. I have reflected on some of these points, especially about the issue of nostalgia in relation to childhood, and about poverty and material change. For example, it can be assumed from the discussion that the members of the group at Burton street had, in their own families and communities, experienced considerable material improvement since the Second World War. The same might not be true of all children in the city today, however, but there seemed no where of introducing these issues at this point without appearing to undermine feelings and experiences. The work of an inexperienced oral historian, maybe! People extended their historical interests in different ways. One chap had a particular interest in the census and in other aspects of Sheffield history, such as the men who died in WW1. He enjoyed local history items on the radio and had compiled his own file – of newspaper cuttings etc. - relating to Burton Street. One woman was a member of Sheffield and Owlerton Local History. For another, doing family history, especially tracing the Irish side of his family tree, had given him more reasons to travel: to Tipperary and to the USA in search of ancestors. He found family history really exciting, and had attended family history sessions at Sheffield University. A number of people were interested in becoming involved in new phases of the Burton Street project, especially in a book about experiences of the war. It appears that the interest is very ‘local’, 5 albeit bound up in national themes, and no-one expressed an interest in pursuing the study of history in a more formal setting (i.e. a history degree). The Beighton Project The final project investigated is Discover Beighton, the community heritage strand of the wider ‘Full Circle’ Project, which was established in the ex-mining community of Beighton in 2002. This operated on a far grander scale than either of the previous two, largely on the basis of a £300,000 programme, funded by Objective 1 South Yorkshire, a funding stream for ex-mining and steel communities in the region. 'Full Circle' was coordinated by Eventus, a ‘cultural planning and development agency that uses creativity as a catalyst for change’ based in Sheffield. Eventus saw its role as 'community capacity building’. There have been three main strands to the work: Time Works (public art); Growing Space (focused on the environment); and Discover Beighton (the community heritage project). 'Discover Beighton' was managed by a steering group, which included people involved in Time Works project, others active in the community and members of the Local History group. It focused on oral history initiatives, getting together a team of eight community interviewers/transcribers by a process of open recruitment (via nomination and selection according to theme). The group organised visits to museums to gain ideas and inspiration. They held archive days, encouraging community members to share their memories at, for example, a heritage fete, or an event at the local allotments. The group produced ‘time walks’, a resource pack for schools, a website and a book. Oral History interviews are now housed in the National Coal Mining Museum and Sheffield Archives. School pupils (10-15 year olds) created animations from the oral history and were recent winners of the Roots and Wings Award. The ‘Full Circle’ project has been ‘an outstanding success’, meeting every one of its targets, which focused on themes such as: building community cohesion; raising aspirations; enhancing the reputation of the village; improving the quality of life; giving a sense of shared place and history; building human and social capital; increasing social, educational and employment opportunities; and instilling pride in the area. Discover Beighton has also been successful in its primary objective of ‘community capacity building’. Individuals developed confidence and skills (in computing or interviewing, for example). Oral history worked as ‘a tool’ for community cohesion although, one year on, interviews suggest the impact is more in personal terms: young people use the project for their media 6 studies coursework; friendships and connections have been formed between interviewers. One interviewer, who is partially sighted and had done voluntary but not paid work, participated in interviewing, wrote a song, used her recording studio at home to digitise transcripts, and generally found her confidence boosted by involvement in the project. People who used libraries and Sheffield Local Studies Library have been inspired to do family history research. The Vicar of Beighton, Mike Cameron, is trying to get funding to produce a local history of mining in the village, to display in the church. It is hoped that experience of Discover Beighton will ensure that more people are willing to join in. Beighton is now regularly in the press, due to people trained to do press releases. No group has emerged to continue with the project, however, and one year on, the website is not being regularly updated. Project worker Catherine Maihac reported that, despite the successes of the project, a number of problematic issues were encountered along the way. For example, the process of transcribing the oral history interviews was much more difficult and time-consuming than had been anticipated. The interviewees were unsettled by the transcripts, and especially by the use of vernacular, where individuals felt patronised, felt like they were made to look stupid, or just disputed the form used ('mi dad' was widely unacceptable, whereas 'me dad' was not). Another family was upset by some things that were said about a local man who was a family member. Lots of diplomacy and individual sessions were required to ensure this aspect of the work ran smoothly. Another difficulty concerned village identity. There was some anger over the sculpture, for example, as some community members wanted it to be a pit wheel. The steering group were keen to capture a broad history that focused not just on mining, but on the agricultural past and domestic life. At the same time, the group wanted to explore the miner’s strike but, twenty years on, the tensions between families and objections to interviewing police made this impossible. Programme Managers did not always see the value of the History project. It was one of lots of projects for Objective 1 and others were more obviously concerned with regeneration in that they provided childcare, jobs, website for local businesses etc. Unfortunately, no members of the Discover Beighton group responded to my request for interviews and so I have been unable to include the views of community participants in this report. I have, through a different route, arranged interviews with people in 7 Beighton who were not involved with the History project, but who have strong views on ways of telling the history of the village, but these are not available for this report. Even more fruitfully, I have formed a good working relationship with the ongoing History project in a nearby village. Six students from my third-year Community History module were attached to the Kiveton Park and Wales History project during 2006-07 (see below). Some produced outstanding work, including KS2 lesson plans, resources for local family historians and a fabulous set of oral history interviews of miner’s wives, which have formed the basis for a new section of the project website on Kiveton women. A vibrant group of volunteers have agreed to be interviewed in early December about the business of ‘Remembering for the Future’: the place of oral and community history in ‘regeneration’ projects; its personal value and its role in increasing pride and commitment to a wider project; and its role in ‘capacity building’. These interviews will form the basis of part of papers to be delivered at two international oral history conferences in 2008. I have also been invited to speak on history and regeneration to a group of Swedish historians and teachereducators. 2. Local History Project, University of Gävle, Sweden In May 2006, I visited the history department at the University of Gävle, where I interviewed 10 students and three members of staff about an innovative first year module, the ‘Local History Case Study’. In this section of the report, I will discuss: the origins of this module; its current format; and the reflections of staff and students. The university of Gävle is situated in a region of Sweden (Gastrikland) which has the highest rate of first-generation and regional university students. On arrival at university, they present a range of potentially problematic issues, identified by tutors as follows: Little disciplinary knowledge, due to History not being compulsory at high school level; Low ability and willingness to read scholarly texts in English; Poor written Swedish; Struggling with a cultural gap between high school and university, in particular the expectation that students will be independent; 8 A lack of commitment among non-programme (teachertraining) students, which results in a higher drop-put rate among this group; The ‘Local History Case Study’ was the ‘baby’ of Bengt Shüllerqvist (now at Karlstad University), devised when he was a postgraduate student at Uppsala University and very much influenced by his experiences teaching in adult education. In designing the module, his aims were various, and focused on: motivating and building the confidence of students, especially those who were returning to education after a long break, and whose backgrounds did not predispose them to traditional academic work; personalising the study of history, bringing it alive through a focus on public or family history; exploring the relationship between ‘small’ and ‘big’ histories (described as the strongest didactic principle of the module); bridging the gap between school and university through an emphasis on life experiences; bridging the gap between popular history and ‘scientific’ or professional history, encouraging students to do practical work in investigating and experimenting with sources and questions. Bengt was influenced by the principles of ‘grounded theory’: of developing theory from the story itself, building upwards from observations. He was concerned to question the canonical idea that we start teaching history by focusing on earlier periods and continue up to the present day. Learning about history, he believes, doesn’t necessarily happen this way in the minds of teachers or learners. The work for this module was to be the first piece of history a student undertook, an introduction which both presented their own lives/communities as part of history and which de-mystified the Archives etc. through enabling students to undertake a piece of historical research. Over the years, the module has been re-shaped as it has been taught by other colleagues. The module is no longer the first thing students encounter on arrival at university, but now follows two World History modules (to 1600 and from 1600 to the present). The local focus seems to be a welcome relief after this! It is then followed by a module on Swedish history, which students seem to feel better prepared for as a result of undertaking their local study. Among the students, the general feeling about the order of the modules was that it was best to start with the World History as this 9 provided an outline and prior knowledge which students felt gave them the confidence to then study a topic in depth. Some students felt the project provided a good basis for the Swedish history module, whereas others would have preferred to study Swedish history first. One said she would have been terrified to have to do the case study first of all and another commented that he believed the drop out rate would be higher if students were required to do the archival work first. This of course may merely reflect the hypothetical fears and insecurities and may not be borne out in practice! The emphasis in the module now is less on the personal: one of the tutors and the students were quite resistant to the idea of studying themes with a personal value and were emphatic that they needed a broader knowledge before embarking on an in-depth local study. (Oral history is also not a possibility; the aim is to ‘face the documents’.) Again, this represents the shaping of the module by different staff, and the students’ opinions may well have been shaped by experience of the module as it stands. The focus on the small/big histories, the local/global remains (discussed below). The organisation of the module is as follows: In the early weeks the students: identify the theme of their project and find a published PhD thesis (all are published in Sweden) in Gävle University library; they than undertake some archival research on a related theme; undertake small assignments following introductory sessions at archives (City archives, Popular Movements Archive; Sandviken archives); attend a lecture on source criticism and complete small tasks; read three books and discuss them in seminars. These vary between ‘regular’ (straight history) students and ‘didactic’ (teacher training) students. All read a book by ethnologists about Victorian bourgeois and peasant cultures (Jonas Frykman, Orvar Löfgren, Den kultiverade människan [The cultivated man]. ‘Regulars’ read a history of a Saw Mill Town (Ronny Ambjörnsson, Den skötsamme arbetaren: idéer och ideal i ett norrländskt sågverkssamhälle 1880-1930. [The respectable worker: ideas and ideals in a North Swedish sawmill community 1880-1930]) and a piece by Henrik Ågren about student culture in Uppsala in Henrik Ågren (ed.), När studenten blev modern: Uppsalas studenter 1600-1850 [When the student became modern: The students of Uppsala 1600-1850]). 10 The ‘didactics’ students also read Ambjörnsson. In addition, they read two books about education: U. Johansson, Normalitet, kön och klass. Liv och lärande i Svensza lärovek 1927-1960 (Normality, gender and class: life and learning in Swedish high schools, 1927-1960 (2000)); and B. Erik Shüllerqvist, En lärares bildungsgång (A teacher's way to learning, 2002). Students pass or fail on the basis of their seminar performance. Few students fail, although the proportion varies between semesters. A common reason for failure is non-attendance at mandatory seminars. Students can re-write their papers, so those who do not pass at the first attempt can resubmit. Tutors believe the module encourages a questioning approach, especially after a rather ‘passive’ experience in World History; they start to ask questions about single perspectives and to think about how history is put together. In this sense the module is designed to provide a remedy for the gap between high school and university level teaching. Tutors’ belief that the module inspires confidence in those students who go on to study history in the second semester is borne out by the comments by students (see below). Students demonstrate a greater ability to be able to work on a related social history theme which they would otherwise have found difficult. Student feed back: Students were given a list of questions/discussion points prior to our meeting (see attached) and met with the interviewer for about two hours. They began by outlining their individual case studies, which were as follows: a study of Gävle harbour, which developed from the student’s own maritime interests. Used records held in the community archives to investigate imports, exports etc; the impact of the oil crisis; the new goods that are shipped in and out. the charity Mother Aid in Gävle in 1937-38. Used community records, which detailed the support given to individual mothers; compared attitudes with today. the 1918-1919 Spanish flu in Gävle and its impact on families, hospitals and public spaces in the town. Used the records of the Epidemic Hospital and the minutes of local politicians meetings. two studies of the ‘Big Strike’ of 1909. One student used minutes of meetings to explore how a local union acted when the strike broke out. The second student used union protocols, financial statements, members' listings etc to examine why the workers (at the saw mill) went back when they did. 11 a temperance society in a small village between 1838-1844, looking at its membership and influence, its regulations, the involvement of women, and its activities. the building of Gävle theatre in 1788. This student had problems with the lack of primary sources, and had to base many of her questions on secondary accounts. the origins of a park and zoo on the outskirts of Gävle. Used information in the Archives. female crime at the turn of the twentieth century. Used court records and secondary sources to ask general questions about the crimes women committed and to undertake a case study of one female criminal. The students reported finding the trips to Archives particularly valuable. Many were surprised at the accessibility of sources. Entering town archives, working with newspapers, manuscripts etc., was for them a very positive experience which built confidence in their ability to be historians. The student of the harbour project, for example, enjoyed gathering facts and making his 'precise' statistical curve. He commented: It is 'one thing to read a book and have ... all the graphs done, but here ... have to make your own history and use the facts to make your own conclusion.' Others enjoyed having 'to work like a detective' and a number wanted to dig deeper and develop more knowledge. Many were simultaneously surprised at how easy it was to use archives and how hard it can be to get it right; they were very engaged by the business of translating history into their own words. It ‘felt more real’. 'You realise what history is when you do a local study' Students repeatedly emphasised that they now had a different view of local history. They enjoyed seeing how a small piece of Swedish history can highlight broader, sometimes global, concerns. The student who undertook the harbour study, for example, enjoyed seeing 'what is going on behind the structures' of the harbour and exploring the global connections. One student (the flu project) enjoyed seeing how 'something big came to small Sweden'; stating that for him, ‘Swedish history became larger’. Others realised that there is ‘so much history here in Gävle’. While some students were uncomfortable about their work becoming too personal, others enjoyed feeling a sense of emotional engagement. The student who studied Mother Aid, for example, herself a single mother of three children, found herself very involved in the work. Her interest was in the 'big picture' concerning help and support given to single mothers, the involvement and commitment of the government, the place of this within the welfare 12 state in the early-mid twentieth century. The project has influenced her decision to become a teacher. A student who undertook a project on the 1909 strike came from a family who owned shipping companies in Stockholm in the last century and discovered they were ‘very hard on the workers’. He says his project has inspired interest in working-class history. The student who looked at female crime was inspired by family stories about a relative, Pila Britta, who was a prostitute who ran an illegal bar; she became a case study for the project. A number of student reported feeling inspired to develop future research projects and, for teacher training students, ideas for becoming teachers. Their main criticisms of the module focused on a desire for more guidance in writing the report. Some would have liked to work in groups (although the split was fairly even on this issue). To conclude, the study highlights the potential for local historical studies in building confidence and enabling students to see the links between different kinds of history. It also points to the importance of the tutor in contextualising the module however; in particular, how a module may lose its ‘edge’ over time as its purpose and its relationship to other parts of the curriculum is viewed differently by subsequent tutors. The Gävle case study was one inspiration for the shape of the new Public History module at Sheffield Hallam (see below, Making History 2). It has also provided the context for further collaboration in terms of research into cultural heritage and local identity in Sheffield and Gävle, and to preliminary conversations about the formation of a joint module taught between the two universities. 3 (a). My module Community History (see appendix 2) has gone swimmingly well. Last year, I had a very small group, and students were attached to a community history group (Burngreave Voices) and worked on two projects: an education pack for KS 2 on Burngreave Cemetery; and an oral history project at Grimesthorpe Allotments. Both have been really successful. Partners in the community were pleased with the work; and students were extremely happy with their work. The following are some of their comments: ‘Our project is complete and I’ve enjoyed it very much. By far, my favourite module this year.’ 13 ‘This course was very challenging; it required the learning of many new skills and demanding much more commitment than any other one that I had partaken in before. Despite this however, I found it thoroughly enjoyable. It has provided me with the opportunity to try many new skills and with the forum to meet lots of very pleasant people, whom I would otherwise not have had the opportunity to meet. For this reason alone I would recommend it to future students.’ ‘... The transcription was long and arduous and extremely time consuming, but once done there was a sense of achievement which has been unique amongst my modules this semester. I think this project has definitely been the highlight of my module choices and I would advise any student thinking of taking it next year of two things. Firstly, I would warn them that it is a big commitment, and you have to be prepared to organise, arrange and meet with complete strangers sometimes in places you’ve never been before, so it is best to be as confident and positive as possible. Secondly I would say, go do it! Despite the work load being high, and without sounding melodramatic, I think (we) will have gained more than just points and grades from this module. Although it has been hard, it has also been a lot of fun and I would definitely consider helping on another community research project in the future.’ ‘It is hard to say what overall value the project will have to the school children who carry it out but for me it has proved invaluable. As an aspiring teacher, it has given me experience in planning projects and will help me next year in my teacher training. Local history has proven to be important to many communities and I feel proud to have been part of something that encourages this... If there was anything I would change it would have been the time we had for the project... Overall it has been a pleasure to do the project and I feel that I worked well and am pleased with the work that I have done.’ This year, a larger group of students a larger groups of students were attached to three projects: Green City Action, to produce small historical studies of the history of Abbeyfield House and Park; Kiveton and Wales History Project, a wide-ranging and ambitious project housed in the former pit offices; and Dore Oral History Society. Although fortunes were mixed this year, some of the work undertaken at Kiveton and at Abbeyfield house was outstanding in quality (see above). Students have again commented favourably on a number of themes: 14 the independence, responsibility and flexibility given them by the structure of the module; the choice provided and the impact of this in terms of interest in and commitment to the project; the creativity allowed by the above; the pleasure gained from an increased understanding of the locality; the opportunity to develop skills of use in their future planned careers (teaching) – although it was felt that this aspect of the module needed to be better publicised. Students also encountered problems, some to do with the availability of sources; but mostly relating to the differential input by the ‘host’ project workers: while one was very enthusing and positive, for example, another was rather too distant and a third experienced as over-controlling. I have arranged for an internal and external evaluation of this module. The internal evaluation is currently taking place, and involves giving consideration to the assessment in relation to elearning possibilities. Thus, the report will begin life as a wiki, as group members collaborate on-line; while the weekly diary, until now submitted by email, will take the form of a blog in which two separate groups comment on their own and each others projects as they develop. The external evaluation will take place during the Spring of 2008, and will focus in particular on assessment, independent learning and employability. 3 (b) Public History module (see Appendix 3, Making History 2). This new module focuses on group studies of public history sites in Sheffield. These include the Queen Victoria memorial, General Cemetery, Weston Park Museum etc. Students are required to read secondary texts, visit the Local Studies Library and formulate questions about ‘their’ site. The assessment is in three parts: a group project report; a presentation of the project findings; and a reflective individual report. 15 Appendix 1: Local History Case Study: questions/discussion points for meetings with students, May 2006 Provide a brief summary of your local history project (in no more than 50-100 words) What were your findings/conclusions? How different was your study from the history you have done before (e.g. in school, world history etc?) Reflect upon the way you did the study: What precisely did you enjoy? In what ways did it engage your interest? What are the distinctive historical skills required to undertake your particular local history project? In what ways could you ‘bridge’ or make connections between what you were studying and your own life/family/neighbourhood? How has the project changed your perspective on the locality? How has the project changed your perspective on history? How has the project changed your perspective on the relationship of local history to Swedish/European and World History? What ideas has your project generated for future work (e.g. your dissertation)? Some people see Local History as inferior to history on a larger scale. How would you refute this argument? 16 MODULE TITLE Community History Module Code 14-6103-00S Level 6 Credit Points 20 Indicative Assessment Components & Percentage Weightings Pre-Requisite Modules (if applicable) Delivered according to Standard Academic Calendar YES Portfolio of coursework 100% 1 One level 5 History module Long: 2 semesters Short: 1 semester NO YES Other delivery pattern: Please specify MODULE AIMS 2 To introduce students to the developments in British social history which have seen the growing popularity of family, community and oral history in the postwar years; To enable students to become familiar with some of the main sources used by community historians; To provide the research skills necessary to undertake project work in the fields of community/local history; To examine debates about oral history theory and practice; and about history and heritage; To examine the relationship between life histories, community history and academic history; To examine the relationship between community history and urban regeneration; To develop skills in collaborative working. MODULE LEARNING OUTCOMES BY THE END OF THE MODULE YOU WILL BE ABLE TO explain developments which have seen the growing popularity of family, local and community history; critically assess a key primary source/sources used by community historians; demonstrate skills in the identification and analysis of key issues in oral history theory and practice; discuss awareness of some aspects of the ‘heritage debate’; situate your own project in relation to local /community history and academic history; 17 3 use historians’ skills in the practise of community history. INDICATIVE LEARNING, TEACHING AND ASSESSMENT ACTIVITIES The module will be taught by a 2.5 hours weekly session, which will include, variously: a lecture and seminar; a workshop; and communitybased work. The first three weeks will take place in university, with lectures and seminars on the subjects of: community and local history; oral history; and heritage. The lectures will introduce students to the theoretical aspects of the subject, while the appended seminars will enable students to undertake preparatory work for their community projects. Weeks 5-11 will be spent developing the community history project, both in local Libraries and in the community. An individual learning contract will be drawn up which will specify the nature of the project work and the assessment requirements. Students will undertake project work for 2.5 hours per week, under my supervision. Week 12 will be a feedback and debriefing session. The module assessment comprises a portfolio, to include: a project (50% weighting, equivalent to 2500 words). This assessment task will be negotiated between the student(s), tutor and the community history project worker. Examples of projects might typically include: a report, an education pack, a video, a piece of primary research for a community-based organisation, a set of oral history interviews and transcriptions. a critical appraisal of a primary source used by community historians (eg Census, wills etc) (1000 words, 10%); a weekly learning diary, in which students record and reflect upon the development of their community history projects and placements (10%); an individual project analysis which will critically reflect upon the project (equivalent to 1500 words, 30%). Students will be expected to discuss their own project in relation to community and academic history; reflect critically upon sources, methodology and working practices; assess the successes and weaknesses of the project. 18 4 INDICATIVE MODULE CONTENTS / TOPICS Family and community histories: growth and popularity; Community history and 'history from below'; Community history and academic history Sources used by the family and community historian; using Archives, Local Studies etc. Theory and practice of oral history; memory as a historical source; conducting life history interviews History and the heritage debates; History projects and urban regeneration FURTHER INFORMATION ABOUT THIS MODULE FURTHER / ADDITIONAL INFORMATION IS AVAILABLE TO SUPPORT THIS MODULE, INCLUDING ASSESSMENT CRITERIA DETAILING HOW YOUR PERFORMANCE IN THE MODULE WILL BE MEASURED, HOW YOU WILL RECEIVE FEEDBACK, DETAILS OF LEARNING RESOURCES AND KEY READINGS THIS INFORMATION CAN BE FOUND IN Course Handbook for the BA in History, English and History, Criminology and History and Film and History Module Handbook NOTE THAT THIS ADDITIONAL INFORMATION MAY BE SUBJECT TO CHANGE FROM YEAR TO YEAR 19 MODULE TITLE Making History 2 Module Code 14-4065-00S Level Level 4 Credit Points 20 Indicative Assessment Components & Percentage Weightings Pre-Requisite Modules (if applicable) Delivered according to Standard Academic Calendar YES CW 100%. 1 None Long: 2 semesters Short: 1 semester NO YES Other delivery pattern: Please specify MODULE AIMS 2 to provide a 'bridge' between A-Level/Access courses and study at university undergraduate level, and to prepare students for the demands of studying history at Levels 5 and 6; to consolidate and develop skills in research, presentation, group work and report writing for more effective learning at Levels 5 and 6; to develop understanding of key debates in public history and apply these to a group project based on the Sheffield region to promote the principles of independent learning and reinforce the importance of personal development portfolios in the learning process MODULE LEARNING OUTCOMES BY THE END OF THE MODULE YOU WILL BE ABLE TO demonstrate a range of skills (information retrieval, research, presentation, group work, writing) essential to successful study at undergraduate level; develop an understanding of public history and be able to relate this to an aspect of history in the Sheffield region; be more independent and autonomous in your approach to learning; reflect on your progress and produce written work to place in your personal development portfolios 20 3 INDICATIVE LEARNING, TEACHING AND ASSESSMENT ACTIVITIES The focus of this module is programme of eight seminars, where group work activities and formative feedback on project work will be central. Early seminars will focus on getting group projects up and running, and ensuring that students are aware of the demands of group work. Subsequent meetings will take the form of progress meetings with the tutor, monitoring the development of the projects and finally, presenting before the seminar group/tutor the findings of the project. The seminars are accompanied by a short spine (4 in total) of 1 hour lectures at the beginning of the semester. These will provide a framework for student understanding of public history, history and heritage and the themes of the group projects. The module will be supported by a Blackboard site. Assessment is by 100% coursework. The coursework component consists of three elements which assess research, presentation and writing skills Element 1: Group project report (20%) Short outline of the chosen project, stating main aims, research questions and how the work has been distributed within the group, and a short bibliography (Proforma provided on the Blackboard site). Element 2: Group presentation (40%) 15-20 minutes presentation; assesses your skills in researching, condensing and presenting your findings on a public history project with a group of 3-4 students. You will be marked on the presentation AS A GROUP. Element 3: Individual report on project/presentation (40%) A self-reflective report evaluating your individual contribution to the group work and the presentation assessing both strengths and weaknesses of the project (Proforma provided on the Blackboard site) Feedback Written feedback will be provided on all elements of the assessment. Formative feedback on the group project reports will be handed back and discussed in seminars. Students will also be provided with informal oral feedback on their seminar work during the semester. 21 4 INDICATIVE MODULE CONTENTS / TOPICS Project work in History Project work; working in a team; understanding your role in a group; compiling a plan; compiling a bibliography; successful presentations. Project themes Weston Park Museum: the birth and rebirth of a museum Kelham Island Industrial Museum: the urban past Abbeydale Industrial hamlet: schools history Victoria Monument, Endcliffe Park: national and local history Cholera Monument: commemoration and remembrance Sheffield General cemetery: conservation and reconstruction Sheffield Flood website: history online Chatsworth House: the National Trust and the commercialisation of history Sheffield Manor and Restoration: preservation and display Pride and Prejudice: the past as costume drama FURTHER INFORMATION ABOUT THIS MODULE FURTHER / ADDITIONAL INFORMATION IS AVAILABLE TO SUPPORT THIS MODULE, INCLUDING ASSESSMENT CRITERIA DETAILING HOW YOUR PERFORMANCE IN THE MODULE WILL BE MEASURED, HOW YOU WILL RECEIVE FEEDBACK, DETAILS OF LEARNING RESOURCES AND KEY READINGS THIS INFORMATION CAN BE FOUND IN This information can be found in Making History 2 module handbook and Blackboard site, the BA (Hons) History Course Guide, and the History Subject Group Assessment Handbook for History Students NOTE THAT THIS ADDITIONAL INFORMATION MAY BE SUBJECT TO CHANGE FROM YEAR TO YEAR 22