Learning Outcomes
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We want you to learn how to read, how to write, how to research and most importantly how to think like a historian. With a focus on the Middle Ages, this course will generally answer the questions, "What is History?" and "What is the purpose of History?".
As your professor, I want to be clear about what you will learn (or what I want you to learn if all goes well) by the end of the year. I think a lot about what I want my students to learn so that they (i.e. you) can make progress in becoming a historian.
Generally...
You will learn about how to navigate Carleton university and its resources
You will learn how to be a university student, including key study skills, etiquette for interacting with your fellow students and the professor ...
Specifically ....
You will learn how to read and interpret medieval evidence and learn the advantages and difficulties of working with them.
You will learn the limitations of evidence (and thus our knowledge) of the Middle Ages. Being a medieval historian means that you have to come to terms with ambiguity and that you will not always have a clear answer.
You will learn terminology (i.e. the language used by professional historians) and different ways (i.e. methodologies) to describe the medieval past.
You will learn about about how people in the past and today represent the Middle Ages. A key part of thinking critically about the past (which is what methodologies can help you do) is understanding how modern myths about the time period arose and why they are reproduced uncritically in modern culture.
You will learn how to work independently and as a group, using digital "enterprise" tools to plan and execute written assignments. You will learn ways to manage your time and your work flow, with apps like or .
By working in a digital environment, you can begin to craft a digital identity which reflects a professional you – its a good way to make the University-You rise up the google rankings (to hide those embarrassing posts on someone's tumblr feed...).
I don't think many people study history because they worry, as George Santayana put it, "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it". When I've asked students over the years, "why did you take this or that course" they have tended to say they decided to take history (or medieval studies) because of a book, movie or video game that they played – maybe when they were kids, maybe what they were playing at the time. That "something" kindled an interest in the period and a desire to learn more.
So, once you're ready, go save the world with History.
Everyone has their own reason to study history and if you're in this class, you likely already have a sense why it appeals to you. The AHA (American Historical Association) will tell you about the that await you after graduation (it was written before the pandemic, mind you...). This practical advice supersedes the previous explanations from and . Read these explanations and you'll see that even the reasons to study history, have a history.
That's why I study and teach the Middle Ages. Long long ago (the 1990s) in a land far, far away (i.e. Winnipeg), I fell in love with the period by reading novels about the Middle Ages - especially Arthuriana like T.H. White's or Thomas Berger's . So I studied history because I fell in love with the subject and then, during university, became passionate about how exciting the world of the past showed people to be. The past was a wonderful refuge for me to explore its complexity and to see a world so different (but related) to our own. It suggested ways in which our world could be different (for better or worse). It revealed how people who say that the world "has always been this way" are usually lying. So I saw the study of history as liberating. And this, I deeply believe, is the value of History. It liberates us by showing us how we (as individuals or as a society) could be different and better.