This is basically the fundamental question for my history extension project, as it falls under the dot point "an interdisciplinary approach to the study of history of a personality, issue or event". I'm incorporating some of the methodologies I've learnt in Society and Culture, and plan to focus on some of the fundamental components of the course. I'm trying to write a survey atm, and therefore would like some help for the "tick-the-box" section. I just need your answers on how you learn about history, what do think is the most reliable forms of history, and how you access it. And why you would learn about history from a source that you do not deem as reliable. I posted the same question on the Yahoo!Answers site, with the following:
How do you learn about history? For example, Do you research it on the net, or watch a movie? Read a history fiction novel or ask an educated person? Play video games or watch a documentary? Read a non-fiction book or watch a docudrama?
What forms of history do you deem as being more reliable? A movie or a internet site? A documentary or a non-fiction text?
Why do you access history? To better understand the future? To understand the past? Because you're curious? To be entertained? To be educated?
I'd really appreciate any help I can get for this!
Thanks!
How do you learn about history? For example, Do you research it on the net, or watch a movie? Read a history fiction novel or ask an educated person? Play video games or watch a documentary? Read a non-fiction book or watch a docudrama?
What forms of history do you deem as being more reliable? A movie or a internet site? A documentary or a non-fiction text?
Why do you access history? To better understand the future? To understand the past? Because you're curious? To be entertained? To be educated?
I'd really appreciate any help I can get for this!
Thanks!