IELTS JOURNAL 145 world. The ongoing tension between Christianity and Islam, for instance, requires
some knowledge of patterns that took shape over 12 centuries ago. Indeed, the
pressing need to learn about issues of importance throughout the world is the basic
reason that world history has been gaining ground in American curriculums. Historical
habits of mind are enriched when we learn to compare different patterns of historical
development, which means some study of other national traditions and civilizations.
The key to developing historical habits of mind, however, is having repeated
experience in historical inquiry. Such experience should involve a variety of materials
and a diversity of analytical problems. Facts are essential in this process, for historical
analysis depends on data, but it does not matter whether these facts come from local,
national, or world history—although it's most useful to study a range of settings. What
matters is learning how to assess different magnitudes of historical change, different
examples of conflicting interpretations, and multiple kinds of evidence. Developing the
ability to repeat fundamental thinking habits through increasingly complex exercises is
essential. Historical processes and institutions that are deemed especially important to
specific curriculums can, of course, be used to teach historical inquiry. Appropriate
balance is the obvious goal, with an insistence on factual knowledge not allowed to
overshadow the need to develop historical habits of mind.
Exposure to certain essential historical episodes and experience in historical inquiry
are crucial to any program of historical study, but they require supplement. No
program can be fully functional if it does not allow for whimsy and individual taste.
Pursuing particular stories or types of problems, simply because they tickle the fancy,
contributes to a rounded intellectual life. Similarly, no program in history is complete
unless it provides some understanding of the ongoing role of historical inquiry in
expanding our knowledge of the past and, with it, of human and social behavior. The
past two decades have seen a genuine explosion of historical information and analysis,
as additional facets of human behavior have been subjected to research and
interpretation. And there is every sign that historians are continuing to expand our
understanding of the past. It's clear that the discipline of history is a source of
innovation and not merely a framework for repeated renderings of established data
and familiar stories.
Why study history? The answer is because we virtually must, to gain access to the
laboratory of human experience. When we study it reasonably well, and so acquire
some usable habits of mind, as well as some basic data about the forces that affect our
own lives, we emerge with relevant skills and an enhanced capacity for informed
citizenship, critical thinking, and simple awareness. The uses of history are varied.
Studying history can help us develop some literally "salable" skills, but its study must
not be pinned down to the narrowest utilitarianism. Some history—that confined to
personal recollections about changes and continuities in the immediate environment—