Abstract
The proposed project is based upon creating an App related to an introductory course on historical theory. The course grounds incoming students to CUHK’s Department of History in fundamental concepts tied to the study of historical investigation, and accordingly introduces and explains basic abstract notions and practices associated with historical inquiry. Within this structured pedagogical framework students are trained to recognize how both theoretical and pragmatic procedures affect comprehension of historical processes, people, and events.
The proposal is tendered so as to offer an interactive learning experience as part of the course’s compulsory fieldtrip. It, thus, is composed to establish a schooling opportunity away from the classroom in which skills central to historical investigation, explanation, and understanding, e.g. critical thinking capacities and aptitudes tied to the use of sources, can be developed. Accordingly the proposal is established with a number of objectives: to grant learners a structured out-of-classroom educational experience that supplements training exercises introduced in lecture and tutorial scenarios; to bestow a practical opportunity to produce deep learning, in so doing boosting student knowledge, skills, and learning motivation; to utilise eLearning as part of course assessment and student learning self-assessment. Designing an App to give learners instantaneous feedback serves two significant purposes: it makes them immediately aware of weaknesses in how they grasp History; it grants enriched understanding of to learn, and so do historical inquiry.
Ultimately, the fieldtrip App is designed to sanction prescribed learning outcomes. Enabling learners on their phones or tablets to follow a demarcated trail in the Central District they will be encouraged to click on old photographs and maps, use weblinks, and answer questions (on pop ups) so that they can think, analyse, and explain Hong Kong’s past. As such pop ups will be employed not only to quiz students about their factual knowledge, but owing to the different nature of questions, they will be asked these will collectively act as a structured guide to consider and evaluate how historical thinking is formed, how meaning is attributed to historical ‘facts’, and how critical appreciation is central to comprehending not only what happened in the past, i.e. how and why it happened in that particular way.