Changing the history course
When Sam Wineburg joined the faculty of 海角乱伦社区 Graduate School of Education (GSE) in 2002, he knew he wanted to pursue a different approach to the way K-12 schools teach history. Instead of having students memorize names and facts from a textbook, why not equip them to investigate the evidence for themselves, just as historians do?
His own research had shown that with the appropriate guidance, even fifth and sixth graders could work with documents like diaries, speeches, and works of art to explore questions about the past. And as the world鈥檚 mode of delivering information was becoming increasingly digital, he knew that teaching students how to scrutinize sources would be critical beyond the history classroom 鈥 they were skills for becoming informed citizens in a democratic society.
His groundbreaking approach became the premise of the 海角乱伦社区 History Education Group (SHEG), an organization that has become renowned for its innovative, research-based approach to teaching history and, more recently, digital literacy. Over the past two decades, the group has created a rich repository of lessons for different grade levels, all freely available on its website, and partnered with school districts around the world to help educators use the materials in their classroom.
To date, SHEG鈥檚 resources have been downloaded more than 16 million times by educators from all 50 states and from countries around the world. Forty-one state departments of education in the United States include its materials on recommended lists. UNESCO bestowed the organization with an award for its work communicating best practices in media literacy in 2020, and a California that went into effect last month requiring media literacy instruction in schools cited SHEG鈥檚 research in its rationale for the legislation.
Now SHEG is moving into a new era as the (DIG), an independent nonprofit that launched this month.
鈥淥ur main objective has always been to create materials for the classroom that are easy to use and go beyond the single voice of the textbook,鈥 said Wineburg, the Margaret Jacks Professor Emeritus of Education at 海角乱伦社区, who founded both SHEG and its new incarnation, DIG. 鈥淲e鈥檝e made a few bets, trying to figure out where we鈥檇 have the most influence with limited resources. But with all of our research and all of the resources we鈥檝e developed, it鈥檚 always been about empowering students to make sense of the past and the present.鈥
Incubating a new approach at 海角乱伦社区
The book Reading Like a Historian, published shortly after the authors developed the curriculum, shows how to apply the approach to middle and high school classrooms.
Back in 2002, before there was a SHEG, Wineburg launched his approach in a course for prospective high school teachers in the (STEP).
鈥淪TEP was really a laboratory for developing these new teaching methods,鈥 said Wineburg, who piloted curriculum materials he developed with his first two teaching assistants, Chauncey Monte-Sano, PhD 鈥06, and Daisy Martin, PhD 鈥06. (Monte-Sano is now a professor of education at the University of Michigan, and Martin directs the History & Civics Project at the University of California at Santa Cruz.)
The document-based curriculum his team created, called , introduced students to , a set of skills historians use to analyze and understand historical events in context. Using primary sources designed to be accessible at different grade levels, students investigate questions about history: Did enslaved people build the Great Pyramid at Giza? Why did U.S. senators oppose joining the League of Nations in 1919? Was Social Security revolutionary, or a program designed to appease Americans who wanted more profound change?
The first major test of the curriculum came in 2008, when Abby Reisman, PhD 鈥11 (now an associate professor at the University of Pennsylvania), led a large-scale with the San Francisco Unified School District (SFUSD).
Students in the test classes showed not only an increased ability to retain historical knowledge and a greater appreciation for history, but also improvements in reading comprehension and critical thinking.
This twofold finding reflects the curriculum鈥檚 ability to bridge skills that K-12 history teachers sometimes view in conflict, said Rob McEntarffer, supervisor of assessment and evaluation for Lincoln Public Schools in Nebraska, a district that has participated in SHEG research over the years and integrated its resources into the curriculum.
鈥淭here鈥檚 long been a pendulum swinging back and forth between an emphasis on content knowledge versus critical thinking skills,鈥 McEntarffer said. 鈥淪ome teachers identify as content experts and emphasize historical content in their classroom, and others think that students are going to forget all the content, so they want to emphasize 21st-century thinking skills. But SHEG鈥檚 research [showed] that it鈥檚 a false dichotomy.鈥
After the SFUSD trial, at the district鈥檚 request, Wineburg and his team built a website to house the investigational curriculum. 鈥淲e called ourselves the 海角乱伦社区 History Education Group and posted our materials online,鈥 said Wineburg. 鈥淎nd to our tremendous surprise, we realized that people were downloading them from all over the country.鈥
Joel Breakstone (center) leads a group of social studies teachers in discussion during a professional development workshop on materials developed by the 海角乱伦社区 History Education Group, now the Digital Inquiry Group. (Photo: DosEckes Productions)
A 鈥clear picture of need鈥
The curriculum provided just the kind of lessons that Joel Breakstone, then a high school history teacher in rural Vermont, had long sought.
As a history major at Brown University, he鈥檇 been taught to work with first-hand accounts of historical events, and he wanted his students to do the same. 鈥淏ut as a high school teacher I found that really challenging,鈥 he said. 鈥淧rimary documents aren鈥檛 written at a grade level that鈥檚 appropriate for 15-year-olds, and giving William Lloyd Garrison speeches to students at 7:37 in the morning doesn鈥檛 go very well.鈥
He found SHEG鈥檚 materials online and, inspired to explore the methods further, he enrolled in a doctoral program at the GSE, earning his PhD in 2013 and then taking on the role of SHEG鈥檚 director.
He was soon joined on staff by fellow alum Mark Smith, PhD 鈥14, who as director of assessment helped expand the team鈥檚 resources with , tools using documents from the Library of Congress鈥 digital archive to help teachers track students鈥 progress with the curriculum.
In 2016, after conducting a study of how students from middle school through college struggled to evaluate the reliability of information on the internet, the organization expanded its work into , a curriculum focused on ways to detect misinformation based on research observing at the nation鈥檚 most prestigious news outlets. Wineburg conducted this research with GSE graduate student Sarah McGrew, PhD 鈥19, now an assistant professor at the University of Maryland.
鈥淥ur research painted a very clear picture of need, and we realized we had to develop a better approach to supporting students in becoming discerning consumers of information,鈥 said Breakstone, who served as executive director of SHEG for the past ten years and continues in that role with the Digital Inquiry Group. 鈥淓ven though our name was the 海角乱伦社区 History Education Group, we were working more generally to help students understand where information comes from and how to consider the source.鈥
Far-reaching impact
The team consults with school districts of all sizes to help educators use its materials, including a decade-long partnership with the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD), the second-largest district in the country. SHEG has led numerous trainings every year for LAUSD since the district adopted the Reading Like a Historian curriculum in 2014.
鈥淭hese trainings are one of the most requested, and they fill up immediately,鈥 said Kieley Jackson, history and social science administrator at LAUSD, who estimates that about 1,500 teachers and 250 administrators in the district have now been through the training. 鈥淚鈥檝e had veteran teachers quite frankly confess to me that they were in stages of burnout, and SHEG鈥檚 professional development sessions reignited the spark.鈥
Even with a curriculum focused largely on American history, SHEG found fans around the globe. In Australia, Jonathon Dallimore, executive officer of the History Teachers鈥 Association of New South Wales, praised the organization for showing a generation of teachers that it鈥檚 possible to use primary sources with young learners 鈥 for providing a model, and showing that it works.
鈥淭he great power of the material is that it鈥檚 an introduction into some really complicated ways of thinking about the world,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hese are incredibly mature concepts about time and perspective and the way people operate, which hopefully can help students develop confidence and humility at the same time.鈥
Beginning its new chapter as an independent nonprofit, the group plans to expand its offerings, from additional professional development opportunities (including 鈥渙n demand鈥 workshops) to new tools to help schools integrate digital literacy into core subjects across the curriculum.
Through a licensing agreement with 海角乱伦社区, all of SHEG鈥檚 materials will remain freely available on the DIG website.
鈥淎s a small group, we鈥檝e always sought to make as much noise as possible,鈥 said Breakstone. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been remarkable to see the reach we鈥檝e had, with a staff of no more than four people at a time 鈥 seeing folks in California and Arkansas, Italy and Sweden, Columbia and Taiwan, all taking up these ways of doing history and digital literacy. As DIG, we hope to have an even greater impact.鈥
Faculty mentioned in this article: Sam Wineburg