QUOTE (Dan Lyndon @ Nov 13 2005, 09:00 PM)

I don't anticipate this being a detailed piece of work - approx 15-20 mins in an INSET, I was just interested to see if there was some common skill areas across Humanities which would allow a bit more cross-curricular work. You make a great point about starting with Blooms, that is where I was planning to start. With no disrespect to the non-historians I believe they may have a lot to learn from the way things are done in History re skills acquisition.
What is the attitude about cross-curricular work in today’s National Curriculum. I was a member of an advisory committee that was involved in negotiating with the team who drew up the history section of the National Curriculum. We were told that the history group were told not to talk to other subject teams because they did not want any cross-curricular work to take place. It is true that those instructions came from Margaret Thatcher and she has long gone. However, Tony Blair appears to want to reinforce Thatcher’s original ideas. For example, his recent speech on how classes in comprehensive schools should be streamed etc. What does our great leader say about cross-curricular work? I imagine he does not like it. After all, it is not often a feature of public school lessons.