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Different Accounts of the Same Event

META
HistoryHistorical Thinking|Ages 6—8|ID: mt_2GDBmKCJxs

Recognise that different people can give different accounts of the same event — and that both can be genuine while still disagreeing

Mastery Evidence

  • Wineburg corroboration heuristic
  • Initiating Historical Thinking in Elementary Schools

Assessment Prompt

“If [child] heard two different versions of the same historical event, would they understand that both people might be telling the truth from their own point of view — and want to know why the versions differ?”

Prerequisites4

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  • Evidence from the Past hard

    Recognising that accounts can differ requires first understanding that accounts exist because people left behind evidence

    • Thinking Before Starting soft

      Understanding that knowledge of the past comes from surviving evidence builds on the habit of activating prior knowledge — what do I already know, and where did that knowledge come from?

      • Persisting When It's Hard hard

        Activating prior knowledge requires the foundational habit of persistent engagement with new material

    • Vocabulary: historical thinking hard

      Understanding that everything we know comes from evidence requires 'evidence' and 'source' vocabulary

  • Comparing Characters Across Stories soft

    Recognising that different people give different accounts of the same event is the historical application of the English skill of comparing and contrasting two texts on the same topic

  • Vocabulary: historical thinking hard

    Recognising that different accounts exist requires 'source', 'perspective', and 'interpretation' vocabulary

  • Spotting Patterns soft

    Recognising that accounts diverge in systematic ways — based on who is telling the story — is an application of the universal pattern-recognition habit

    • Connecting New & Old Ideas soft

      Spotting patterns across domains is an extension of the habit of connecting new ideas to existing ones

      • Thinking Before Starting hard

        Making connections between new and old ideas requires the habit of activating prior knowledge first

        • Persisting When It's Hard hard

          Activating prior knowledge requires the foundational habit of persistent engagement with new material