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The EPQ and GCE History

The EPQ and GCE History. Praise for the EPQ. “The EPQ received praise for developing many of the academic skills identified as problems… Interviewees thought that one benefit of the EPQ was that it encouraged reflection across a wide range of content and issues.”

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The EPQ and GCE History

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  1. The EPQ and GCE History

  2. Praise for the EPQ.. “The EPQ received praise for developing many of the academic skills identified as problems… Interviewees thought that one benefit of the EPQ was that it encouraged reflection across a wide range of content and issues.” “We’re very keen on the extended project, and very, very positive about it. We make alternate offers sometimes, we might make, say, an A*AA offer excluding the extended project, and then an A*AB offer including the extended project, and give somebody an either/or. The extended project [provides the] thinking skills that we’re interested in.” Admissions Staff, HEI, England (quoted in Higton et al, 2012)

  3. “I am a history teacher and I have to supervise a student’s projectWhat do I do?”

  4. Teach students to learn independently

  5. Prepare students for project work through the ‘taught-course basis’ • Address skills development: • Critical thinking • Skills in handling documentary sources • Skills in academic writing • Referencing, bibliography construction • The conventions of a dissertation • Explore stimulus material • Classroom discussion and debate • Case studies • Extension from existing subject knowledge • Cross-curricular exploration of themes

  6. The Extension Criterion • Successful EPQs draw on a base of existing subject knowledge and skills but involve significant extension Options here include: • Acquisition of new skills (e.g. field-work) • Exploration of a theme using cross-curricular links (e.g. linking history with philosophy, politics, psychology, science) • A deeper analytic study, which goes beyond the confines of the A level syllabus (e.g. questions about the nature of history or exploration of a concept such as revolution)

  7. Ask students to submit a project proposal

  8. Negotiate the terms of the proposal

  9. Successful Research Proposals • have a clear central focus • are often drafted and re-drafted as the project proceeds • are linked to the student’s aspirations for future work or study Good questions to ask include: • Is there research material which can be accessed by the student? • Is the project sustainable over a significant period of time? • Is the project at all interesting, to the student or anyone else? • Does the project give an opportunity for the development of a personal perspective? • Is there a central (controversial) issue or question the student can respond to?

  10. A focused research question is essential

  11. EPQ titles with a base in history • What do the approaches of Louis XIV and Woodrow Wilson reveal about the problem of ethics in international relations? • How much can we learn about Ancient Greek women from Greek tragedy? • Why were some Nazi buildings neo-classical whilst others weren’t? • Why has our perception of the perfect female body in the western world changed? • Can the history of science help us to understand the witch hunts? • How has scientific progress and ethical thinking reduced the stigma attached to mental illness? • Is ‘Femininity’ biologically or culturally constructed? • To what extent is objectivity possible in history? A case study of..

  12. Agree a series of deadlines for the different sections of the project

  13. A general framework for projects

  14. Insist that students write up as they go

  15. Begin with a mini literature review

  16. Guide students as they expand their research into a full review of the literature

  17. Check the literature review for plagiarism, referencing, evaluation of sources, thematic organisation

  18. The student now needs to respond to the material they have researched by writing an analytical discussion

  19. A framework for discussions • Survey of the main theoretical ideas on the topic • Clear statement of the student’s own answer to their research question • Creation of a supporting line of argument using objective evidence (from primary and/ or secondary research) • Identification of counter-arguments • Response to counter-arguments

  20. Ask the student to write a conclusion and an evaluation

  21. ..then the introduction

  22. ..and finally the abstract

  23. Add a table of contents, title page and appendix

  24. That is the first draft!

  25. Good projects are drafted and re-drafted to maximize relevance, clarity, flow, helpful structural division, balance and completeness

  26. Tips for supervisors • Play to your strengths • Make use of case studies to give focus • Use other sources of support – get students to do this too • Give students exemplars and discuss the criteria with them • As appropriate and possible, encourage students to work in supervised conditions when you can do mini tutorials. • Keep a supervisory log.

  27. More tips • Be on the lookout constantly for articles which might help • Re-visit the project proposal to see whether they are answering their question • Be directive about reading and research at the outset but aim to move to a back seat position • Encourage students to plan ahead, at least a few weeks – e.g. using the library, ordering books in, contacting experts...

  28. Final tips • Don’t take anything students submit for granted – run a plagiarism check on each project • Get a student group together for work-in-progress sessions, guidance on bibliographies etc • Keep hammering home the key points about the requirements of each section • Give students a chance to practise talking about their work before the viva • Use a vle for submission

  29. The EPQ and History

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