It’s
really not that hard. Just a little effort on your part and your students will
be hating history with the best of them. Because, after all, that’s our job.
1.
Memorize, memorize, memorize. If you try and have kids actually apply
knowledge, you’ll be sure to fall behind in your scope and sequence. Having
kids memorize and regurgitate is much faster.
“One of the advantages of teaching history is that you don’t have
to create things. You just have to remember stuff that happened and then parrot
it back.”
Sheldon Cooper
The Big Bang Theory
The Big Bang Theory
2.
Never use more than one source of information. Multiple perspectives just
confuse kids. Stick to one thing so there’s less ambiguity. What you don’t want
is a classroom full of kids asking questions that you can’t answer. My
suggestion? Textbook only.
3.
When you talk about history, be sure to use your best monotone voice. Passion
is a wasted emotion in a history class. If you’re not sure quite how to
approach this, that econ guy from Ferris Bueller’s Day Off is a great
place to find a little inspiration.
4.
If you actually decide to play a video or movie in your class, be sure to show
the entire movie spread out over four class periods. Showing short clips
that highlight key ideas won’t provide “the big picture.” Don’t provide
any sort of guiding questions either. Just give them a worksheet to fill out
while they’re watching that asks things like how many tanks were destroyed in
Saving Private Ryan. That way you know they were paying attention. (And don’t
forget to have your student aide grade that!) And never spend time on any sort of reflection – keep that scope and sequence in
mind.
5.
Don’t have students write. Ever. Classroom discussion is good enough to find
out what kids are thinking. See Econ Teacher in #3 above. Besides, the more you
have kids write, the more you’ll get kids (and parents) bugging you to actually
grade it.
6.
Make sure that your students always work alone. Having kids talk with other
kids makes no sense at all. And group work? You don’t have time for that.
7.
Provide the answers, not great essential questions. There should be no realistic
problems to solve in your class. Like Sheldon said:
You
just have to remember stuff that happened and parrot it back.
8.
Two words. Multiple choice. It’s really three words. Multiple, choice,
scantron. This sort of assessment has been proven (I’m pretty sure it’s been
proven. I read it somewhere.) to be the most effective and reliable so don’t
use any sort of authentic assessments. Authentic assessments = you guessed
it . . . rubrics and grading.
9.
Don’t read any history books yourself. You have all the history content
you’ll ever need right there in the textbook. And forget trying to connect and
discuss things with other history teachers. Some sort of argument always breaks
out about an historical interpretation like the main cause of the Civil War.
Who needs the headache?
10.
Ignore any sort of technology integration. There’s not any need for historical simulations, online primary source documents, social
media, web-based learning or mobile devices. School is for teaching, not for playing.
Ten
easy steps.
But
I’m sure more ideas are out there. What are your suggestions for getting kids
to hate history?
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