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Sunday, June 28, 2020

Paul Horton: Why Study History? | Diane Ravitch's blog

Paul Horton: Why Study History? | Diane Ravitch's blog

Paul Horton: Why Study History?


I invited Paul Horton, a history teacher at the University of Chicago Lab School, to write on the topic, “Why study history?” He wrote this essay.
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Without history we are lost. Without history we are disconnected, thrown into limitless space and time that has no ground or purpose. Learning history is central to learning individual identity and how that individual identity fits into a larger picture or purpose.
Up until the “age of mechanical reproduction,” to use Walter Benjamin’s phrase, history was passed from generation to generation in the form of face to face storytelling. The griot, the elder, or grandma and grandpa, wove meaning into the telling of family and human history. The storyteller wove the individual, family, and human stories together into a fabric or pattern of meaning, into a place and a purpose. The teleology of the individual became a part of a fabric of a larger human story that had beginning and ending points with a purpose.
In the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, as storytelling has been largely lost in an endless sea of competing CONTINUE READING: Paul Horton: Why Study History? | Diane Ravitch's blog