How can we educate children about the
conflicts of the past? I saw a wonderful example last week when I visited Wells
Cathedral, just to mosey around, and I came upon something amazing – a really
great example of education. A stunningly laid-out poppy display (see pic below) led up cathedral stairs to a Chapter House. I noticed that the display made
everyone who saw it stand stock still for a moment and stare speechlessly, but
once in the Chapter House there was something else really outstanding to see.
It was full of the work of children from local village schools around
Somerset. They had produced art and information displays
based on their research on the impact of World War One in their own villages.
The names on the memorials they passed by every day had been made real for
them as they had researched and imagined what it would be like to be people from their village during the war. What a clever way to spark their
imagination and get them really engaged in history. The work was of a very high
standard, and the pupils’ strong response to the topic shone out. I didn’t take
photos of their work, but if you happen to live in the
area do go and see it.
The poppies leading up to the display in Wells Cathedral Chapter House |
Apropos of this, it’s National Non-Fiction Month in November and that’s a very good thing
because the Federation of Children’s Book
Groups is focusing on some of the great non-fiction that we are lucky
enough to have out there. It’s in the limelight at last and that’s all good, but
there’s one non-fiction book strand - British History – which appears to be on
its way out. It’s dying due to lack of money from schools (they can't afford to buy the books) and the punitive
economics of trying to produce books that don’t sell internationally (the small print runs have become miniscule). I once
wrote a lot of educational history books specifically for the UK curriculum,
but the fees involved are now just too low to pay for the time needed for
research and writing, and there is so little
investment that one cheap or free photo per spread is the only visual element
allowed. The designer must do everything fast – meaning each spread is done
to the same template. The results are not dynamic.
It’s a shame because kids trying to find facts by surfing the internet
won’t get the benefit of an author sifting history for examples that will spark
their imagination. But that’s the way of the economic world, and perhaps self-publishing
could be the direction to go for British non-fiction children’s authors who
want to explore UK subjects such as the Celts, the arrival of the Vikings and the Anglo-Saxons, or the
impact of history in their local area, for example.
It’s important for children
to know, is it not, that we were once connected by land to Europe - that we are a mixture of many peoples - that we have had
refugees before - that the conflicts of the world do touch us….Well, you know
all that full well, being authors, and thank goodness some of our number have
written great historical novels. There is
an international market for those, and they seem ever more vital.
In
the meantime, here’s hoping for a re-invention of kids’ non-fiction history books
in the UK, using a model that’s financially viable as well as engaging, and
hats off to those teachers who helped the Somerset village children to engage so well with World War One, and to Wells Cathedral for mounting the display so
beautifully.
Moira Butterfield has written a number on children's non-fiction books. Her series FOUND!, for Franklin Watts, was her way of getting children to engage in curriculum history - by looking at real archaeological finds they could relate to.
www.moirabutterfield.com
Twitter: #moiraworld
Instagram: #moirabutterfieldauthor
Keep up-to-date with National Non-fiction Month by searching for the Twitter tag #NNFM
5 comments:
Let me recommend Gill Arbuthnott's newly launched A Secret Diary of the First World War for the 7-10 age range - absolutely excellent! https://www.florisbooks.co.uk/book/Gill-Arbuthnott/Secret+Diary+of+the+First+World+War/9781782505273
Thank you, Joan! I'll look that out.
Good to see Non-Fiction here, although I feel sad about the "international sales" effect on what could be viable topics.
(Moira, I think those folders of reproduced historical documents were called Jackdaws.)
Jackdaws! Thank you Penny. I’m going to look for some now!
Excellent piece, Moira. Thank you. It raises a million questions, such as what do we do about the serious lack of teachers with history degrees in primary schools? Yes, it does matter because when history is not taught properly in school - ie a search for objective truth and not simply looking at the past to reinforce current thinking - it is replaced by myths, fed from tv and movie drama, that distort the past for reasons of entertainment or political gain. Shakespeare did it in his day and Spielberg et al do it today. What they do is not wrong, but it's dangerous when there is no counter-balance from historians. The first books burned by dictators when they seize power are history books...
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