I work in an intermediate school in the far corner of the US on a tropical island. Most of the students in this school have ancestors who have lived in this archipelago for hundreds or thousands of years.
Their whole lives, they read books and textbooks about people who live thousands of miles away in a four-season climate. They watch movies and TV shows about these people who never go squidding, never hunt pigs, wouldn't know an 'ulua from a mahi, don't own a rice cooker, can't surf, never paddled an outrigger canoe, and can't even hula. The limits of the interest these kids have in people who live so far away have been reached and passed.
Most kids of 14 and under anywhere don't even know enough about how people live in different parts of the world to sustain enough interest to read a textbook chapter on the subject, let alone a whole textbook. In a way that's because their brains are still developing the ability to think abstractly.
They really aren't able to "put themselves in the shoes" of someone who disagrees with them, or has a different kind of background. They'll say something like , "The Bible is nonfiction," and they're not going to be able to process the idea that most people in the world do not believe or worship the same as they do in their families. And if you try to get them to think like someone who lived in the past, most just would not be able to do that.
To be honest, some people don't develop any kind of interest in world history or geography (sorry, I'm a geographer, can't get away from it) until they have graduated from high school. That being said, I have made a deliberate effort to bring videos into classrooms that open a window into how people live and have lived in other parts of the world. I showed my Latino, African, and American Black 5th graders in Washington, DC a documentary about Hawaiians rediscovering the ancient art of navigation by the stars. Those Hawaiians sailed a double-hulled canoe thousands of miles with no GPS, no sextant, no compass and landed in Tahiti. I actually know a few of the crew members personally! I showed my 7th graders in Hawaii a documentary about the overthrow of apartheid in South Africa. They were able to understand what happened in South Africa, because they know what happened in Hawaii.
Kids this age are probably more ready for bits and pieces of world history than the school systems give them credit for. They may not ready for a systematic study of the history of the whole world.
2006-06-20 14:07:14
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answer #1
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answered by Beckee 7
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nicely, i do no longer comprehend pertaining to to the massive apple college equipment. replace into worldwide history presented and you in user-friendly terms did no longer take it? permit's no longer overlook that the schoolbooks in colleges are chosen by making use of the schoolboard and that they practice what they choose you to nicely known. So whether you had worldwide history available you probable does not are turning out to be a extensive exposure. With constrained type time and much extra history and cultures to verify. nonetheless it truly is extra clever to have a sprint perspective on worldwide history than none. i assume you could take maximum any history type as an optionally available in college, even in massive apple. of direction there is often the library or a e book keep in case you opt to verify extra approximately history or magazines, new papers or the internet for cutting-edge activities. Wikipedia is great for primary advice. the embedded links make following factors of pastime effortless. i for my section love atlases from distinctive situations.just to work out how distinctive the worldwide replace into at a given factor and time or how maximum of the worldwide replace into got here upon. right that's a starter for ya. locate Djibouti.
2016-10-31 05:17:12
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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The study of the world is a complex process. You've got to understand the words, how to pronounce the words, where to research...
Let 'em stop pledging allegiance to the flag of "...the United Skates of America" first.
2006-06-20 13:23:13
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answer #3
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answered by kinsmed 5
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Because all the important stuff happens inside the United States.
2006-06-20 13:23:46
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Depends what country in the continent of America you are
2006-06-23 13:51:37
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answer #5
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answered by gabypalma 3
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I think you essentially answered your own question.
My school system started history in kindergarten.
2006-06-20 13:19:53
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answer #6
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answered by MysticSong 3
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Invalid question. You are wrong.
2006-06-20 13:33:18
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answer #7
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answered by rhymingron 6
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because we all are learning how to spell, idiot
2006-06-20 13:32:11
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answer #8
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answered by jeffy 2
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