Abstract

Research on heritage education has progressed remarkably and a large number of studies point to a greater presence of active methodologies and the use of resources and primary sources in the classroom. At this point it seems important to investigate the perceptions and experiences of future history and social science teachers. Thus, this paper studies the value that 506 Spanish and English teachers in initial training place on heritage and its presence in the teaching-learning process of history, as well as their views on the existing connections between methodological perceptions and the use of cultural heritage in the classroom. It is a non-experimental descriptive and quantitative study with data collected through questionnaire. This questionnaire was built ad hoc to analyze the opinions and perceptions of teachers in initial training about history education in Secondary Education. The results show that teachers in initial training value highly or very highly the use of cultural heritage in Secondary Education to promote active methodologies, the critical teaching of history, and the development of historical skills. Teachers in training in Spain value more highly the use of heritage than English teachers. While English teachers in training value more highly the resolution of problems through historical documentary sources, Spanish teachers rate the emotional and motivational aspects higher.

Highlights

  • Some of these studies emphasize evaluation based on standards [10,11,12,13,14], others are oriented towards the evaluation of implementations, both in formal and non-formal spheres, with special emphasis on the use of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) [15,16]

  • The research question addressed in this paper is the following: “what is the relationship between methodological conceptions of history and opinions on the use of cultural heritage in the Secondary Education classroom?” With this research problem we propose two specific objectives: SO1: To compare the assessment of history teachers in initial training in Spain and England on heritage and its role in the teaching-learning process of history

  • The common starting points of the answers in the comparison between countries are a positive evaluation of the active learning methodologies, working with sources, and the development of historical competences. This assessment seems to be the result of the effort carried out in recent decades by research and innovation groups in historical education at an international level, which have advocated surpassing teaching methodologies based on linear and factual content in favor of teaching critical history and providing civic values

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Summary

Introduction

In Spain, in particular, scientific production derived from research in heritage education has increased, coinciding with the creation of two powerful heritage management instruments by the Central Administration: the National Education and Heritage Plan from the Ministry of Culture [7] and the Spanish Heritage Education Observatory from the Ministry of Universities [8]. In this sense, Fontal and Ibañez-Etxeberria [9] (2017). Offer a bibliometric study of the scientific production on heritage education over the last ten years and show how the evaluation of programs accounts for the greatest scientific production in the last 6 years. Coinciding with the European Commission’s demand, studies on accessibility and social inclusion through heritage [26,27] have begun to have an impact, seeking learning for all people, in all contexts and moments of life and with special attention to people with functional diversity [28,29,30]

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