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Ways of seeing women's history: an action research study of student responses to a document-based lesson sequence centring black women in a historical narrative

This thesis investigates a document-based enquiry as a way of integrating the teaching of women's history in the classroom. This need arises given women's misrepresentation, marginalisation, and erasure by history teaching practice and curricula in high schools in South Africa and further afield. Ex...

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Main Author: Fish, Roslyn
Other Authors: Angier, Kate
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: School of Education 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Fish, Roslyn
author2 Angier, Kate
author_browse Angier, Kate
Fish, Roslyn
author_facet Angier, Kate
Fish, Roslyn
author_sort Fish, Roslyn
collection Thesis
description This thesis investigates a document-based enquiry as a way of integrating the teaching of women's history in the classroom. This need arises given women's misrepresentation, marginalisation, and erasure by history teaching practice and curricula in high schools in South Africa and further afield. Existing research shows students resist valuing women's history when presented as token additions to the traditionally male-centred narrative. Gaps identified in the disciplinary and critical approaches to teaching history provide a theoretical framework for foregrounding the necessity of examining the impact of affect in enabling as well as in obstructing student learning. Scholarship on resistance to learning both within and beyond history education further facilitates theorising the importance of affect in impeding learning. In this action research study conducted in my own Grade 11 history classroom, I curated accessible documents centring Black women in events that secured the ending of bus segregation in Montgomery, Alabama in the 1940s-1950s. Textbook extracts presented alongside documentary evidence allowed my eight students in their penultimate year at an all-girls school to interrogate the divergent narratives. To elicit students' enthusiastic participation and close reading of the material, I sequenced engaging pedagogical activities across ten lessons. Plenary and group discussions, constructions, and writing, along with individual reflections, were collected as data. My positionality is evident in my choice of Tetreault's feminist framework to analyse how the enquiry informed students' ways of seeing events in Montgomery, and reflexive thematic analysis is used to analyse how the enquiry informed students' ways of seeing the construction of textbook history. My findings indicate that the extended enquiry enabled all students to critique the textbooks' erasure and misrepresentation of women. Several students' affective engagement enhanced their capacity to enact sophisticated criticality and disciplinary learning that exceeded my expectations. By contrast, affect unconsciously partially impeded the learning of others, as their embedded notions absorbed from the social milieu they inhabit compelled them at times to resist using aspects of the documentary evidence consistently. In response, I contribute three reconceptualised disciplinary, critical, and psychosocial literacy lenses as interlocking pedagogical approaches to capacitate and enhance student learning in the history classroom. They would also assist teachers in noticing and responding constructively to students experiencing knowledge as discomfiting their sense of themselves and how they wish to be seen socially. My study highlights the dearth of research in history education that uses an affective and psychosocial lens to examine student learning in the classroom, and shows that this lens is essential to facilitating and enhancing student progression in this subject.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:36.207Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
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publisher School of Education
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/41601 Ways of seeing women's history: an action research study of student responses to a document-based lesson sequence centring black women in a historical narrative Fish, Roslyn Angier, Kate Mckinney, Carolyn Women's history This thesis investigates a document-based enquiry as a way of integrating the teaching of women's history in the classroom. This need arises given women's misrepresentation, marginalisation, and erasure by history teaching practice and curricula in high schools in South Africa and further afield. Existing research shows students resist valuing women's history when presented as token additions to the traditionally male-centred narrative. Gaps identified in the disciplinary and critical approaches to teaching history provide a theoretical framework for foregrounding the necessity of examining the impact of affect in enabling as well as in obstructing student learning. Scholarship on resistance to learning both within and beyond history education further facilitates theorising the importance of affect in impeding learning. In this action research study conducted in my own Grade 11 history classroom, I curated accessible documents centring Black women in events that secured the ending of bus segregation in Montgomery, Alabama in the 1940s-1950s. Textbook extracts presented alongside documentary evidence allowed my eight students in their penultimate year at an all-girls school to interrogate the divergent narratives. To elicit students' enthusiastic participation and close reading of the material, I sequenced engaging pedagogical activities across ten lessons. Plenary and group discussions, constructions, and writing, along with individual reflections, were collected as data. My positionality is evident in my choice of Tetreault's feminist framework to analyse how the enquiry informed students' ways of seeing events in Montgomery, and reflexive thematic analysis is used to analyse how the enquiry informed students' ways of seeing the construction of textbook history. My findings indicate that the extended enquiry enabled all students to critique the textbooks' erasure and misrepresentation of women. Several students' affective engagement enhanced their capacity to enact sophisticated criticality and disciplinary learning that exceeded my expectations. By contrast, affect unconsciously partially impeded the learning of others, as their embedded notions absorbed from the social milieu they inhabit compelled them at times to resist using aspects of the documentary evidence consistently. In response, I contribute three reconceptualised disciplinary, critical, and psychosocial literacy lenses as interlocking pedagogical approaches to capacitate and enhance student learning in the history classroom. They would also assist teachers in noticing and responding constructively to students experiencing knowledge as discomfiting their sense of themselves and how they wish to be seen socially. My study highlights the dearth of research in history education that uses an affective and psychosocial lens to examine student learning in the classroom, and shows that this lens is essential to facilitating and enhancing student progression in this subject. 2025-08-18T09:31:57Z 2025-08-18T09:31:57Z 2025 2025-08-07T06:03:19Z Thesis / Dissertation Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41601 en eng application/pdf School of Education Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Women's history
Fish, Roslyn
Ways of seeing women's history: an action research study of student responses to a document-based lesson sequence centring black women in a historical narrative
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Ways of seeing women's history: an action research study of student responses to a document-based lesson sequence centring black women in a historical narrative
title_full Ways of seeing women's history: an action research study of student responses to a document-based lesson sequence centring black women in a historical narrative
title_fullStr Ways of seeing women's history: an action research study of student responses to a document-based lesson sequence centring black women in a historical narrative
title_full_unstemmed Ways of seeing women's history: an action research study of student responses to a document-based lesson sequence centring black women in a historical narrative
title_short Ways of seeing women's history: an action research study of student responses to a document-based lesson sequence centring black women in a historical narrative
title_sort ways of seeing women s history an action research study of student responses to a document based lesson sequence centring black women in a historical narrative
topic Women's history
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41601
work_keys_str_mv AT fishroslyn waysofseeingwomenshistoryanactionresearchstudyofstudentresponsestoadocumentbasedlessonsequencecentringblackwomeninahistoricalnarrative