109°F
weather icon Windy

Guidelines for teaching history OK’d

The debate on the causes of ignorance of history flared Thursday when the Nevada Council to Establish Academic Standards adopted new guidelines for history education.

Joe Enge, a former history teacher and Carson City school board member, protested that the new standards were too vague and favored a thematic, big ideas approach to history rather than teaching the subject chronologically.

The new approach to teaching students history, he said, was "like constructing a roof without any walls or a foundation. It just doesn't work."

Education officials responded that history education that emphasizes only memorization was shallow. "American education is often criticized for being a mile wide and an inch deep," said Chris Cox, a consultant to the council.

History is too broad a subject not to be taught without some themes to organize the material, officials said.

The council unanimously approved the new standards after education officials assured members that the standards were the minimum guideline for what should be taught. School districts can develop their own curriculums.

The standards now go to the state Board of Education, which can approve them or ask the council for revisions.

MOST READ
Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
Trump says he will meet Putin next Friday in Alaska

President Donald Trump said Friday that he will meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin next Friday in Alaska to discuss ending the war in Ukraine, a potential major milestone after expressing weeks of frustration that more was not being done to quell the fighting.

Apollo 13 moon mission leader James Lovell dies at 97

It was during his last mission — immortalized by the popular film starring Tom Hanks — that he came to embody for the public the image of the cool, decisive astronaut.

MORE STORIES