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The
Three Reasons We Must Teach History
By Walter
A. McDougall
“If
we act only for ourselves," wrote Samuel
Johnson, "to neglect the study of history
is not prudent. If we are entrusted with
the care of others of others it is not just."
"Prudence" and "justice"
are often two words conspicuous by their
absence in our otherwise verbose debates
on how, why, and what to teach to American
children. The infamous National Standards
for History, for instance, were criticized
from many perspectives, but to my knowledge
I was the only reviewer to question the
strength of those Standards as well as their
weakness. I found them altogether too inclusive,
demanding, and sophisticated for high school
teachers and students. For instance, I considered
the Standards' repeated invitations to debunk
the sainted image of Woodrow Wilson entirely
legitimate, but asked whether "it is
wise to teach grade-schoolers that Wilson
was foolish or hypocritical to proclaim
democracy, disarmament, self-determination,
free trade, and a League of Nations to a
war-ravaged world?" A college seminar
should take a critical stance toward the
icons of American history. But is it prudent
to turn 11th graders into cynics with regard
to the values their nation holds dear?
The sterility of the ongoing
debate over history standards may be explained
by the failure of combatants of all political
stripes to acknowledge and grapple with
the fact that the teaching of history serves
three functions at once. One, obviously,
is intellectual. History is the greatest
vehicle for vicarious experiences; it truly
educates ("leads outward" in the
Latin) provincial young minds and obliges
them to reason, wonder, and brood about
the vastness, richness, and tragedy of the
human condition. If taught well, it trains
young minds in the rules of evidence and
logic, teaches them how to approximate truth
through the patient exposure of falsehood,
and gives them the mental trellis they need
to place themselves in time and space, and
organize every other sort of knowledge they
acquire in the humanities and sciences.
To deny students history, therefore, is
to alienate them from their community, nation,
culture, and species.
The second pedagogical function
of history is quite different, and often
seems to conflict with the first. That is
its civic function. From the ancient Israelites
and Greeks to the medieval church to the
modern nation-state, those charged with
educating the next generation of leaders
or citizens have used history to impart
a reverence for the values and institutions
of the creed or state. The civic purpose
of history cannot be abolished since all
history—traditional or subversive
of tradition—has a civic effect. So
the real questions are whether American
schools ought to tilt toward extolling or
denouncing our nation's values and institutions,
and how the civic function may be fulfilled
without violence to the intellectual function
of history.
Those questions are painfully
hard to resolve, and are a matter of conscience
as much as of reason—which brings
us to the third, moral, function of history.
If honestly taught, history is the only
academic subject that inspires humility.
Theology used to do that, but in our present
era—and in public schools especially—history
must do the work of theology. It is, for
all practical purposes, the religion in
the modern curriculum. Students whose history
teachers discharge their intellectual and
civic responsibilities will acquire a sense
of the contingency of all human endeavor,
the gaping disparity between motives and
consequences in all human action, and how
little control human beings have over their
own lives and those of others. A course
in history ought to teach wisdom—and
if it doesn't then it is not history but
something else.
I believe it is possible to
pursue all three purposes of history in
books and the classroom. None of us will
do so without friction and shortfalls because
we are no less creaturely than the historical
people we teach about. Moreover, the quality
of our instruction is limited and skewed
by the finite set of facts we know or set
before our pupils. However, errors of fact
and judgment as to what to include or omit
are excusable and correctable. What is inexcusable,
and, as Samuel Johnson wrote, unjust, is
the willful denial of truth or promotion
of falsehood in order to "slam-dunk"
into students an intellectual, civic, or
moral purpose at the expense of the other
two. Johnson may have been thinking about
statesmen when he referred to those "entrusted
with the care of others." But no one
is more entrusted with others' care than
teachers, and no teachers more than historians.
There is no magic formula for the concoction
of curricula that mix the three functions
of history. But we could do worse than to
follow the prescription of eminent world
historian William H. McNeill:
One cannot know everything,
hence one must make choices. And just as
some facts are more important to know than
others, so have certain cultures displayed
skills superior to those of others in every
time and place in history. Imagine living
in proximity to a competitor possessing
skills greater than yours. There is no use
asserting that your culture is just as good
as his. It palpably isn't, and you must
do something about it…. Superiority
and inferiority, real and perceived, are
the substance of human intercourse and the
major stimulus to social change throughout
history…. And the principle of selection
is simply this: what would we need to know
in order to understand how the world became
what we perceive it to be today? Thus, we
must focus the attention of our students
on the principal seats of innovation throughout
history, while remaining aware of the costly
adaptations and adjustments and in many
cases the suffering of those conquered or
displaced by dint of their proximity to
those seats of innovation.
McNeill's principle is no less
applicable to U.S. history. An honest history
must hear and pass on the laments of those
displaced (including many white males) in
the course of our nation's growth. But the
main story line must remain that of the
Euro-American dominant culture, its ideals
and aspirations, creativity and service
to itself and others in peacetime and war:
the good as well as the bad and ugly. For
only by learning that story will tomorrow's
leaders—of whatever race or sex—know
the standards they are supposed to live
up to, gain the knowledge needed to excel,
and begin to acquire good judgment, without
which the power that knowledge imparts is
a curse.
Walter A. McDougall, a
Pulitzer Prize-winning historian, is the
Alloy-Ansin Professor of International Relations
at the University of Pennsylvania. His latest
book is Promised Land, Crusader State: America's
Encounter with the World Since 1776, and
he is currently writing a book with David
Gress, on The Use and Abuse of History.
Reprinted
from the May 1998 issue of Education Matters.
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