12 research outputs found
Making history: the enactment of historical knowledge in the classroom
'Making History. The enactment of historical knowledge in the classroom', a PhD thesis by Josefine Raasch, investigates the knowledge production in History classes. Based on six months of ethnographic fieldwork in a Berlin high school, this thesis describes how two different types of historical knowledge were enacted in the classroom and how one type was prioritized whereas the other type was no longer identifiable as historical knowledge. Supported by the results of the research undertaken, it is suggested that History should be taught in a modular way rather than chronologically, thereby acknowledging the legitimacy of both types of historical knowledge
Murat and Nevin and the divided past
How do young Germans from migrant backgrounds view the injustices of the past? Josefine Raasch talks to two sixteen-year-olds in Berlin
Connecting with the past: bicultural notions of historical justice in Berlin high school students
Abstract not available
Dicksein: wie Kinder damit umgehen [Being fat: how children deal with it]
Obesity is a hot topic in the media and science. The debate is full of stereotypes and social prejudice. Josefine Raasch shows the example of Berlin primary school children. In her book she describes the understanding of the children of the body in general and obesity in particular and compares it to the adult manifestations of politics and science