With history classes in high school I wish they bumped up the abstraction level a little sooner. All those dates and names of important figures, almost completely useless information imho.
> All those dates and names of important figures, almost completely useless information imho.
As someone with an amateur's interest in history, I suspect that it's useless in the same way that learning words from a dictionary, or memorising multiplication tables, is useless. Learning words from a dictionary gives you no facility with a language, but you can't build much facility with a language if you don't know its words. Similarly, multiplication tables are useless for doing mathematics, but I think that it is good, both for the practice of math and in the real world, to have some basic number sense. (This is perhaps more contentious. My opinion is certainly shaped by the fact that I was among probably one of the last generations to be taught this skill, and am glad that I have it, but don't really know what it's like to grow up in a world where the skill is regarded as completely irrelevant.)
That's not to say that history classes don't lean too much on the names-and-dates approach. After all, it's easier for the teacher, both for preparing lessons and for evaluations—it's a lot easier to decide unambiguously whether a student has a date correct than if, say, that student has correctly understood the historical significance of some important event.
As someone with an amateur's interest in history, I suspect that it's useless in the same way that learning words from a dictionary, or memorising multiplication tables, is useless. Learning words from a dictionary gives you no facility with a language, but you can't build much facility with a language if you don't know its words. Similarly, multiplication tables are useless for doing mathematics, but I think that it is good, both for the practice of math and in the real world, to have some basic number sense. (This is perhaps more contentious. My opinion is certainly shaped by the fact that I was among probably one of the last generations to be taught this skill, and am glad that I have it, but don't really know what it's like to grow up in a world where the skill is regarded as completely irrelevant.)
That's not to say that history classes don't lean too much on the names-and-dates approach. After all, it's easier for the teacher, both for preparing lessons and for evaluations—it's a lot easier to decide unambiguously whether a student has a date correct than if, say, that student has correctly understood the historical significance of some important event.