Artículos de revistas
Do Master Narratives Change Among High School Students? A Characterization of How National History Is Represented
Fecha
2014-07Registro en:
Carretero Rodriguez, Mario; Van Alphen, Floortje; Do Master Narratives Change Among High School Students? A Characterization of How National History Is Represented; Taylor & Francis; Cognition and Instruction; 32; 3; 7-2014; 290-312
0737-0008
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Carretero Rodriguez, Mario
Van Alphen, Floortje
Resumen
Master narratives frame students’ historical knowledge, possibly hindering access to more historical representations. A detailed analysis of students’ historical narratives about the origins of their own nation is presented in terms of four master narrative characteristics related to the historical subject, national identification, the main theme and the nation concept. The narratives of Argentine 8th and 11th graders were analyzed to establish whether a change toward a more complex historical account occurred. The results show that the past is mostly understood in master narrative terms but in the 11th grade narratives demonstrate a more historical understanding. Only identification appears to be fairly constant across years of history learning. The results suggest that in history education first aiming at a constructivist concept of nation and then using the concept to reflect on the national historical subject and events in the narrative might help produce historical understanding of a national past.