Some Ideas about Teaching
History is important
... for getting a job
‘Everybody loves History. At the cinema,
blockbuster films are set in History. Millions tune in to historical TV
dramas. Catherine Cookson is one of hundreds of popular authors who write
historical novels. And on holiday, we abandon sea and shopping to see
Castles and Cathedrals.
History is vital because we can only
understand who we are – as individuals or as a nation – if we understand
where we have come from. We live as finite specks in an infinite universe;
we fill in the future with hopes of heaven, and the past with our study of
History. A life that knows only the ‘here and now’ is mundane and trivial.
History is the difference between a trained
hand and an educated mind. It deals with those matters which turn us from
people who watch events, to people who understand and can influence events.
Most of what we term ‘culture’ is either from the past (e.g. Shakespeare) or
a development of it (e.g. Rock and Roll). History contains examples of
almost everything that is interesting or important to us – Science,
Engineering, Medicine, Economics, Art – and if you would understand them,
you must understand History.
All those issues which define our role as
citizens – politics, religion, morality, philanthropy, the environment, even
the education system – can only be properly understood in their historical
context.
At its basest, History also contains every
scandal, crime and gruesome act of horror and violence imaginable, and is
fascinating on that account alone.’
Key Stage 3 Flyer,
Greenfield History Department, 1997
THE PROBLEM
In the July 1997 edition of Teaching History,
I shared with readers the rapid decline in ‘options’ choices in year 9 at my
school, and how the department was seeking a cure. To make
pupils aware of the importance of History, we subjected them for a
year to a poster campaign, bombarding them with quotes from famous people
saying how important History was. At the end of the year, however, we had
to admit, options choices were little better.
THE ANALYSIS
I talked to the pupils. Why had they chosen
Business Studies (which they had never done) rather than History? The
answer was clear; it was the word ‘business’! All the pupils felt that
they would be going into business when they left school, so they had better
learn about it. Other pupils echoed the sentiments. ALL liked
History and the History teachers. But History, they said, is simply no use
when it comes to getting a job. Their thinking was elementary and crass:
‘I want to be an air stewardess, so I chose Geography because I’ll need to
know where I’m flying, and German because I’ll need to be able to speak it
when I land there.’
It seemed to the Greenfield History department
that the young lady needed re-educating (though I sound like a Bolshevik!).
She needed to be told something which would convince HER that doing
History would be of use to her in later life; and by ‘later life’, she
meant in her chosen career.
Too many of the standard arguments as to how
History is useful for a job offer only general and abstract advantages –
indeed Heads of Department are warned against a narrow vocationalism,
on the grounds that other disciplines offer similar skills. They emphasise
the abstract advantages of History – awareness of the adult world,
information about cultural heritage and democratic values, and the
development of moral sensitivity.
It seemed to the department that these
arguments would have little influence on our wannabee air stewardess at a
state comprehensive in a new town. What she needed to be told was WHAT
jobs History helps you to do, and HOW and WHY it helps you to
do them. If we were talking about propaganda, then it needed to be
SPECIFIC and CONCRETE.
Now I believe that, if History teaches you
anything at all – its KEY benefit – it teaches you to argue persuasively.
Both in its content (e.g. studying the propaganda of the past) and in its
nature (extended logical, deductive, fact-supported debate in writing) it
teaches its students to manipulate a case. It was, we decided, time to put
that intellectual creativity to use.
THE METHOD
The study of people is at
the heart of History – their feelings, attitudes, prejudices and motivation.
This understanding is very useful in the ‘people professions’, from
receptionists, hairdressers and beauticians, to teachers,
the Health Service, Social Work and Personnel.
History teaches interviewing
and enquiry skills, which fit an historian for jobs which find out
information – TV researcher, investigative reporter, market
research, police etc.
Historians know how to read
documents, ignore irrelevancies, separate propaganda from the truth, and
circumstantial from hard evidence. This is essential for people such as
lawyers, administrators and politicians.
History requires extended,
logical, reasoned debate in writing. It is essential for any job which
requires writing reports, the Civil Service, Law,
Journalism etc.
Historical knowledge is
essential for certain jobs, such as Artist, Architect,
Designer, Librarian, Archaeologist, Archivist,
Tourist Guide etc.
Historical skills such as
cause and consequence, change and continuity etc., are essential in any
job which requires analysis and strategy – which includes jobs such
as the Army, Teaching, Advertising, Medicine, Banking
and Accountancy.
A pupil who has studied the
Industrial Revolution will go into Industry aware of its structures
and parameters – for instance, accounts, markets, wages and working
conditions, health, safety and trade unions.
The study of History teaches
information handling, communicating ideas, flexibility and tolerance –
skills now regarded as essential in Industry. Historians solve
problems and evaluate solutions. often by doing
problem-solving group-work; skills essential in management in
Industry and the Public Services, and in research and development
teams in Science and Engineering.
Did you know that . . .
Famous history graduates
include:
●
HRH Prince Charles,
●
Gordon Brown, Chancellor of the Exchequer,
●
Neil Kinnoch, EEC Transport Commissioner,
●
Robert Gunn, Chairman of Boots,
●
Lord Sainsbury, President of the supermarket
chain,
●
Marmaduke
Hussey, BBC Chairman of Governors,
●
John Tusa, Managing Director of BBC Worldwide,
●
Brian Walden, TV interviewer,
and that:
34% of History Graduates went
into:
Administration, Management,
Marketing or Finance.
Key Stage 3 Flyer, Greenfield
History Department, 1997
First, we conducted a survey of what jobs the
pupils in Years 8 and 9 wanted to do. Then, taking this as a
starting point, we worked out HOW History would be useful in those jobs.
Then we added others, using a Careers Department book of ‘Job Ideas’; we
had no difficulty in finding dozens of jobs for which we could argue that
History would be valuable. Where a job had an historical element, that was
pointed out as well.
The results of that exercise – for 50-or-so
jobs – are listed below. They formed the basis of a ‘History will get you a
Job’ poster-campaign. They come with a health warning; they are
just my ideas, and they are neither comprehensive nor infallible. They are
all arguable; they were aimed at the pupils – more specifically, at the
pupils who might be interested in that kind of job. They are offered here
in case you want to use them in your own school. I am sure that
you will be able to correct, add to and improve them, and make them more
relevant to your own situation, from your own knowledge and experience.
Almost any word-processor package will allow
you to print them out, large, in an attractive font, on a sheet of paper.
Each poster needs to be headed with the sentence: ‘History is [essential/important/useful
– as appropriate] if you want to be [a(n)]:’.
Then the job title is printed very large to attract the eye, and this is
followed, underneath, by a short explanation.
From the beginning of the September term, in
each History room, every week, a new job was stuck on the classroom door.
As old ones were taken down, they were put on the walls round the room.
Pupils DID notice them, although they caused less comment than the
‘History is important’ quotes did.
The department was aware that some of the
arguments used in the posters might appear over-drawn or over-simplified.
But they had to communicate their message to children, so they had to
communicate at a child’s level. We had to make the pupils aware that
History is relevant to hundreds of jobs, and pertains to the world of work
in many ways. Only when we have made this breakthrough into the pupils’
attitudes will we be able to cultivate a more sophisticated, more abstract
appreciation of the value of History.
THE RESULT
The high-point of the next options week came
when one young lady, a pupil who finds History quite difficult, came to me
and asked, very nicely, if I would please allow her to choose History
because she wanted to be a Tourist Guide, and that she would need History to
do that job! Now at this point, obligation intervened, and I felt duty
bound to tell her that Geography would be just as useful. But the episode
encouraged me that the conceptual barrier had been overcome. We had
already established that History is FUN. We had advertised that many
famous people considered History IMPORTANT. Pupils were beginning to
accept that History is USEFUL – in specific, arguable ways – for their
future careers.
History is essential/
important/useful if you want to be a(n):
Accountant/ Bank Manager/ Auditor
Historians spend much of their time analysing figures,
looking for significant statistics. Economic historians have to understand
business accounts. And, of course, you will have to spend much of your time
with clients, so the historians’ enquiry skills (knowing just what to ask to
get the relevant information) are vital.
Actor
Most of the roles you will be playing will be
historical roles, so it is vital that you understand the period of the play.
And to ‘get into character’, you will need all the empathy/character
understanding that History teaches you. You cannot be a good actor without
being a good historian too.
Advertising Executive
Advertising is about thinking up good ideas, and
historians have a much wider field of experience to draw on than someone who
knows only the modern world – the historian can sift through innumerable
civilisations looking for inspiration. The historians’ interview skills will
be vital when you talk to your clients, and your historians’ skills of
argument and presentation will help you ‘sell’ your ideas to them.
Air Steward/ Stewardess
‘Where are we flying over at the moment?’ ‘What is it
famous for?’ ‘Where are we going?’ ‘Is there anything worth seeing there?’
‘Are we safe in this kind of aircraft?’ ‘Where does this food come from?’
All these questions, which you are bound to be asked, will be better
answered if you have a good knowledge of History. And the understanding of
people you learned in your History lessons will help you deal with
passengers who will be, at different times, scared, angry, bored and
excited. Whatever the crisis, it has happened sometime in History, and you
will be able to cope.
Air Traffic Controller
How do you organise the flight paths of twenty planes
when you have to deal with a problem, listen to instructions from your
controller and talk with a pilot about his landing gear? The historian is
used to dealing with a mass of facts and information, sorting out the
important from the unimportant, working under pressure to organise it all
efficiently.
Animal Breeder/ Stud Assistant
It is said that all English race horses are descended
from three Arab stallions which were brought into this country in the 17th
century. Breeding animals such as dogs and horses is one area
where history and pedigree is especially important, and you will need your
historians’ skills of research and organisation to authenticate the
pedigrees of your animals.
Announcer/ Presenter/ DJ
As an historian, you will have been used to taking
large amounts of information, selecting the important and interesting bits,
organising it to make sense, and presenting it in an attractive and clear
way. Your historian’s skills of explaining, communicating and presenting
information will be very valuable.
Antiques Dealer
To go into the antiques business, you will need to be
able to recognise old things. You will need all your historians’ skills to
recognise a fake. And – in order to interest your customers and sell the
article – you will need an understanding, not only of the historical item
you are selling, but of how it was used, and of the period it comes from.
You cannot be an antiques dealer unless you are a good historian.
Archaeologist
Strangely, an archaeologist needs to be a good
scientist nowadays; you will need to submit the things you dig up to an
array of scientific tests! But, of course, you won’t have a clue how to
interpret the information you find unless you are a good historian also.
History is essential if you want to be an archaeologist.
Architect/ Civil Engineer
Architecture isn’t just about girders and stress
levels! It’s about design. And to design buildings properly, it is essential
that you have a good knowledge of the history of architecture, and of how
the buildings related to the life-style of the people who used them. Only
then will you be able to design a building which meets the needs of today’s
users. And you will need your historians’ understanding of continuity and
change to know how your buildings must be the same, and how they can be
different, to ones already built. Also, all the architecture of history will
give you a vast bank of ideas to inspire your designs. And, of course, your
historians’ interview skills will help you find out your clients’ needs and
expectations.
Archivist
This is a fascinating job, which involves all kinds of
skills. You will need to be a good scientist, for you will need to properly
preserve the old documents in your care. You will need to be a linguist,
because many old documents are written in Latin and French. You will need to
be a handwriting expert just to read them! But most of all, you will need to
be an historian. Your historians’ recording and cataloguing skills will be
essential, and you will need to have a good knowledge of history to
understand and correctly catalogue these fascinating old records of
humanity’s past.
Army Officer
If you want to be anything more than a ‘grunt’ in the
army, you will need to understand history. Soldiers who want to make their
way through the ranks are now attending training courses where they are
asked to understand the troubles and crises they have to work in (Bosnia,
Cyprus, Northern Ireland), and to make recommendations about how they might
best police the situation. There is more to being a soldier nowadays than
pointing a gun; you will need all your historians’ understanding of cause
and consequence, and of how different people in different societies think
and feel, so you will be able to react properly in a life or death
situation.
Artist
You cannot be an artist unless you have studied the
History of Art. You cannot understand any painting unless you understand the
civilisation which produced it. Also – particularly if you are asked to
restore a particular painting – you will need a thorough knowledge of the
techniques and materials of artists in the past. And to find out these
essential things, you will need the historian’s ability to investigate and
understand the past.
Auctioneer
This seems an unlikely job for an historian, but the
Careers Information Database lists it as a job for which historians are
well-suited.
Historians are good at putting a huge muddle of
facts into a proper order. They understand people. In the bustle and chaos
of an auction ring, a confident historian will be able to sort out the
muddle of people and bids, and to conduct affairs in good order.
If you work at an auction house like Sotheby’s,
through your hands will pass some of the most beautiful and valuable
historical treasures in the world.
Author/ Journalist
People usually think that English is the most important
subject for this, but many historians end up as writers. History is
applied literacy – historians use language to explain a case, or to
debate a question, or to narrate a story. They have also studied propaganda,
and know all the tricks to make their writing powerful and persuasive.
CS Lewis, the writer of the children’s Christian
Narnia Chronicles, and JRR Tolkein, author of the classic fantasy
novels The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings, were both
historians of medieval literature at Oxford University. The famous comedian,
author, traveller and TV personality Michael Palin studied History at Oxford
University.
Barperson
Do you need History to serve drinks in a bar? It will
help. A barperson needs to understand how people feel and react – the very
thing that you learned in History. Have you studied the causes of wars? –
maybe you can nip that fight in the bud. You will be able to chat to
tourists who want to talk about the area as they have a drink. Few customers
are brainless drunks; many will be thinking people who want to chat about
the latest news. Only people who have studied history can properly
understand current affairs, because every event is a product of its history.
Barrister/ Solicitor/ Lawyer
To be a lawyer, a knowledge of the History of Law is a
requirement. But more important still will be the ability you learned in
History to argue a case – to assemble the relevant facts and ideas, to
organise them into a logical argument, and to present and explain them. It
was the Ancient Greeks who invented the lawyer’s question: ‘What if?’ and
historians’ ability to defer judgement while they investigate ideas and
facts is essential in a courtroom. At the same time, you are working with
people, and the understanding of motivation, attitudes and feelings that you
learned in History will help you win your courtroom battles.
Beautician/ Hairdresser
Do you need History to be a hairdresser? It will help.
Hairdressers have to chat to people as they work. They are
‘people-engineers’, and they will find very useful the knowledge about how
people think and feel that they learned in their History lessons. Hair
salons are wonderful places for gossip, and all your customers will want to
hear about the scandals of the past. Most of them will want to chat about
the historical drama they watched on the telly last night, and they’ll all
be interested when you can tell them what the programme got wrong!
Blacksmith/ Baker/ Potter/ Mason/ Wheelwright (Traditional
Crafts Demonstrator)
There is an increasing call nowadays in the Leisure
industry for traditional crafts workers who give demonstrations/ displays at
heritage centres such as Beamish Museum. These workers do not just do the
craft work, they explain it in its historical context. They have to know the
history of the period they are demonstrating in great depth, to be able to
be interesting and informative, and to answer questions that the tourists
ask.
Bookseller/ Librarian
History books and historical fiction make up a huge
proportion of the book market. You will also be asked to find out hundreds
of weird and wonderful questions – you will need a good general knowledge
(including the whole range of History), and the research skills you learned
in your History lessons. Library work is another of those ‘people jobs’, in
which you will be greatly helped by the understanding you gained in History
about how people think and feel.
Brewery Worker/ Distiller
Wine, spirits and beer-making are highly skilled jobs
where the workers have to be experts. They are often people who have
researched into the history of their craft and know everything about it
since the times of the Egyptians! In addition, more and more breweries and
distilleries are opening up to the public, and you may at any time be
required to show visitors round the works. To find out these things, you
will need the historians’ ability to investigate and understand the past.
Buyer/ Purchasing Officer
A ‘Buyer’ buys in the products which retail stores sell
in their shops. You will need to understand the world of commerce, but your
historians’ understanding of past civilisations will help you to understand
and analyse the society of today. Purchasing never stands still; people’s
tastes change all the time, and a buyer has to try to buy the things people
will want tomorrow. In History, you study how society changes, and why it
changes, and these skills will help you to forecast people’s wants.
Cabinet-maker/ French Polisher/ Art Restorer/ Watch and
Clock Repairer
History is mainly about ‘thinking’ and ‘writing’, but
there are some jobs which need a practical knowledge of the processes
and methods that craftsmen used in the past.
To be an art restorer, for instance, you will
need encyclopaedic knowledge of the materials and techniques used by artists
in the past.
Care Assistant
You will be working with old people – so you ought to
know about the world in which they grew up. Different parts of the brain die
at different rates; old people often cannot remember what happened this
morning, but they can – with a little prompting – talk for hours about their
youth. Carers working with geriatrics/ Alzheimer’s sufferers etc., often
take a set of old photographs, which they use to stimulate conversation.
Here, also, is a situation where your historians’ interview skills will be
invaluable.
Chancellor of the Exchequer
This is not quite as silly as it seems. The Chancellor
of the Exchequer – Gordon Brown – is a History graduate! Historians are good
at analysing information and looking for significant statistics. They are
open-minded, independent thinkers who are good at problem-solving.
Perhaps you won’t be Chancellor of the Exchequer,
but you could become an Economist/ Financial Adviser. Finance is a
popular career choice for History graduates.
Childminder/ Mother/ Nursery Nurse
How a child is treated in the first four years of its
life determines how intelligent it is for the rest of it. Small children are
always asking the two historians’ questions – ‘How?’ and ‘Why’ – and an
historian mother will be able to answer their questions properly. ‘Because I
say so’ is not a good enough answer to those ‘Why must I . . . ?’ questions;
your training in History lessons always to explain your answers will help
you to reason with your children (instead of smacking them). When you go on
holiday, you will be able to point out and explain all the things you go to
see; and at bedtime, won’t you be able to tell them some wonderful stories!
Civil Service/ Local Government Officer
Many History graduates go to work for the government.
Good government is about knowing people – how they think and feel, and what
they want and will do. Historians have studied how people react in different
situations, and this fits them well for responsible jobs in the civil
service and local government.
Computer Programmer/ Analyst
Big computer companies have recently started employing
History graduates, because they have found that their historians’ training
in logical thinking and problem-solving suits them perfectly to track down
and solve hardware and software problems in the computer industry.
The greatest problem now facing
computer-using firms is the predicted meltdown in the year 2000, which will
cause millions of computers to crash all over the world; how interesting it
is that historians should be at the forefront of the work to stop a
dates-disaster!
Courier/ Tourist Guide/ Travel Agent
As an historian, you will be able to present
information in an attractive and clear way. An understanding of History is
vital for a tour guide, for it will be your job to explain the places and
events you are visiting, and you can only do that properly if you know their
history. The more you know, the more interesting and informative you will
be.
Customer Service Agent/ Receptionist/ Complaints
Your historians’ skills of argument will help to
placate the angriest customer, and your historians’ understanding of people
will help you to deal with them appropriately. Also, as an historian, you
will have been used to sorting and analysing vast amounts of information;
now you will be well-equipped to sort through all the records for the
information you need to help this important customer.
Dancer
Most dancers have a limited career as dancers –
what will you do when you are injured, or too old to dance? You will want to
go into teaching dance, or choreography.
The History of Dance is fascinating, and a
knowledge of it will be essential in both these jobs. A thorough knowledge
of history will be essential if you are asked to choreograph a period piece
or historical musical. History may also provide you with the subject matter
for some of the dances you direct.
Every dancer is an historian at heart; what is
dance but a series of steps through time to communicate a story?
Dentist
My dentist and I recently had a long talk about
pain-killers; he had just written a detailed account of anaesthetics, and
was amazed to realise that I knew things about their history that he didn’t.
Dentistry has a long and bloody history, going
back to the beginnings of civilisation; the mummy of one of the Pharaohs
shows us that he died from an abscess! And when historians discover an old
skeleton, they take it to forensic dentists to find out the age at death –
from a study of its teeth.
As a dentist, as we all know too well from our
own experience, you will need your historian’s understanding of people to
help you deal with patients who will be scared and in pain.
Designer/ Graphic Designer/ Draughtsman
‘What has this to do with History?’ you may ask – ‘I
want to design things for the future!’ But how can you re-design
things for the future, unless you have studied what was wrong in the designs
of the past? And what about those clients who want your design to have an
historical ‘feel’ to it – a medieval design for Strongbow cider, or a
Napoleonic motif for Scottish Widows, for instance?
Diplomatic Service
For years, many History graduates left university and
went into the Diplomatic Service. They had to have deep knowledge about
international affairs. They had to know intimately about the culture and
attitudes of other countries. They had to be able to analyse political
situations, to understand causes and possible consequences, attitudes and
motivations. And it was taken for granted that a History degree was the best
training for this job.
It wasn’t easy to get into the Diplomatic
Service. But History trains the mind in logic and deduction, and this helped
graduates to pass the exacting tests they were required to take.
Display Dresser/ Visual Merchandiser
We have come a long way from the days of the ‘window
dresser’, who set up a pretty scene in the shop window. Nowadays, many
display designs are created at head office. Researchers conduct surveys of
how people react to various themes and images. Then a team of designers
creates an idea which will have just the right psychological impact to
attract people into the shop. Your historians’ skills of research, analysis
and presentation of results, together with your deep historians’
understanding of how people react, will make you perfect for this job.
Doctor/ Nurse/ Paramedic/ Ambulance Person
A key principle of diagnosis is to understand the
Natural History of the illness, and your historians’ skills of investigating
and analysing conflicting information, to sort out the important from the
irrelevant, will be essential. The understanding of people you learned in
your History lessons will help you deal with patients who will be scared,
worried and in pain. And, as a doctor, you will take an oath to treat your
patients properly which dates from the time of Ancient Greece.
Dressmaker/ Fashion Designer
The history of fashion is one of the most interesting
topics of History. It will provide a vast bank of ideas when you come to
create your costumes. And you will be able to design truly appropriate
dresses for the client who is attending the opening of Parliament, or giving
a party in the ancestral home. Like everything else, the best designs grow
out of the past, and draw inspiration from it.
Economic Development Officer
Your first task will be to do a survey of existing
industry; so you will need to understand the economic history of the region.
You will need to know the historic skills of the workforce, and to analyse
the area’s advantages for industry.
Then you will need all your historian’s ‘people
skills’ to convince businessmen from different countries, backgrounds and
cultures (all of which you will be able to understand) that YOUR area is the
place they want to set up business. A History degree, particularly in
Economic History, will be very useful.
Education Welfare Officer/ Field Social Worker
Education became compulsory in 1870, but certain areas
and certain classes have never understood the importance of education, and
the British lag behind most European countries in their attitude to
education. Understanding how these attitudes developed in history will be
important if you are to overcome these deep-rooted societal attitudes and
get the children into school.
In particular, you will find yourself
investigating the history of individual families and children to see if you
can understand why they are doing what they are doing. A History degree
would be most useful for these tasks!
Employment Agency/ Careers Officer
What do historians do? They investigate about a
person’s character and abilities, find out the facts, and then piece
everything together to try to suggest what that person did. How similar this
is to the work of a good Careers Officer, who finds out about your character
and abilities, then investigates the job opportunities available, and then
tries to suggest what might be best for you to do. Both jobs require an
understanding of people and an ability to do the paperwork.
Entertainments Manager/ Entertainer/ Comedian
In the TV series Hi-de-Hi, the incompetant
Maplins Entertainments Officer, Jeffrey Fairbrother, had an Archaeology
degree. If he had had a History degree, perhaps he would have been better at
the job! Where Jeffrey Fairbrother couldn’t cope with the programme, or
relate to the coarseness of camp life, an historian would have been trained
to understand people from different classes and cultures; and he would have
been used to organising schedules and presentations!
Many entertainers – for example Billy
Connolly – make their living by telling stories from their past, and Eddie
Izzard’s recent show, Glorious, tells the story of history from the
Creation to the end of the world! The comedian Ben Elton says: ‘I love
British History, I read it a lot.’ These comedians have an historian’s
ability to observe common feelings and actions – and then they make us laugh
about them.
Environmental Health Officer
Anybody who has studied the conditions in towns in the
Industrial Revolution will realise just how IMPORTANT this job is! A lot of
an Environmental Health Officer’s work involves the collection and analysis
of scientific data, but your historians’ skills of handling and analysing
information will help you do this well. And, in the meantime, you will need
your historians’ understanding of people and society to explain to that man
why he can’t leave that pile of manure on the pavement in front of
his house.
Environmental Ranger/ Forest Ranger
History is essential to the work of an Environmental
Ranger.
Great Aycliffe Town Council has just appointed an
Environmental Ranger. He will have to do a habitat survey of the town, but
first, he writes: ‘I intend to research the history of our area through maps
and consultation with residents’ – he knows he can only restore the land to
its natural state when he has done an historical investigation to find out
what it used to be like.
As he implements his plan, he will have to write
reports and consult with local groups – tasks for which an historian’s
skills of communicating and presenting things in writing would be very
useful!
Estate Agent
A thorough working knowledge of History is essential
for this job. You will need to know enough History to describe everything
from the type of brickwork to the style of the fireplace. History is a
selling point, and you will need to talk to potential buyers about the age
of the house, the history of the area and any other points of historical
interest you can find. A good history will give a better price!
Farm Manager
For most of history, people were farmers. Slowly, over
the years, they developed new crops, crop rotations, fertilisers, selective
breeding, machinery and buildings. Current best farm management practice is
built upon millennia of history – and experimental farms preserve all the
old crops and practices, just in case some disaster destroys all our modern
farming strains and methods.
A good farm manager learns as much about the
history of his farm as about its current practices; he builds his plans for
the future firmly on its history.
Floor Manager (TV and film)
History is a MASS of facts. Historians have to be
clear-thinking. They have to learn how to sort out the important from the
unimportant and the urgent from the unnecessary. They have to be able to
work out chronologies. They have to organise and deploy the relevant facts
to meet the needs and deadlines of a presentation.
TV floor managers have a MASS of information to
sort out. They need to be able to concentrate on the important matters and
ignore the irrelevant. They need to work out a timetable and work to
deadlines. They need to handle people efficiently and gently.
Historians would make excellent floor managers.
Florist
‘We wish you to create a flower display, appropriate to
the place and the occasion.’ This will be your task as a florist – it isn’t
just about shoving flowers in a vase! But what kind of flowers and display
would be appropriate for:
• a bi-centenary anniversary service in St Andrew’s
church;
• a miner’s golden wedding celebration in the Mechanics’
Institute;
• a prize-giving at King Edward VI School;
• a ‘medieval feast’ at the local castle?
Unless you know your history, you won’t get very far as
a florist.
Funeral Director
Historians are not scared of death; they spend their
life studying dead people!
You will need all the understanding of people
that your study of History has given you to comfort and deal with people who
have been bereaved. And you will need all your understanding of different
cultures and beliefs to cope with the different kinds of families and
funerals you will have to look after.
Gardener/ Landscape gardener/ Horticultural Worker
There was a time when this involved nothing more than a
knowledge of flowers. No longer. Garden design has become a sophisticated
skill, and landscape gardeners are studying old books and creating authentic
historical landscapes such as medieval meadows and Victorian walled gardens.
Gardening is a form of presentation; it takes it
materials and arranges them to make a statement – in this, it is rather like
a history essay, which arranges its facts to make a point. Plants grow, and
a good gardener needs to plan a garden which will mature over time. These
are subtle advantages, but a gardener who understands history will be a
better gardener.
Geologist
This is another job recommended for historians in the
Careers Information Database.
Geology, of course, needs scientific and
practical skills, but it also involves historians’ concepts such as
chronology and development through time. History teaches you the ability to
deduce, from incomplete evidence, how things developed – a skill which is
essential for the geologist.
Herbalist
We are learning to appreciate that modern civilisation
has lost some of the skills and knowledge that enriched the lives of people
in the past.
Now, experts are trying to see if they can
rediscover ‘the world we have lost’. As a herbalist, you will spend your
time reading ancient and medieval Latin herbals, growing plants which are no
longer used, researching historic methods and materials – and using your
skills to help people who are ill or distressed (which is where your
historian’s ‘people skills’ will be needed).
Mechanic/ Fitter/ Mechanical Engineer
Your historians’ skills of asking and answering will
help you find out the fault from the customer. A knowledge of how the
particular machine or engine has developed through time will help you locate
the problem. And your historians’ skills of analysing and testing will help
you tweak that engine so that it’s purrfect!
Prince of Wales
Well – not really! The job of Prince of Wales doesn’t
need many new recruits, and the current holder doesn’t look like losing his
position!
But it is interesting that the Royal Family
regard History as so important to do their job properly that both Prince
Charles and Prince Edward studied History at university.
Therapist/ Psychiatrist/ Physiotherapist/ Osteopath
Therapy is nine-tenths understanding the patient’s
mind. You have to know who you are working with and how far you can push
them. They will be scared, worried and in pain. Your historians’
understanding of people and their feelings will be essential for you to do
the job properly.
An understanding of the history of psychology –
how we have developed our understanding of the human personality and how it
works – is vital for all these jobs.
Written
in c.1998 for Teaching History BUT - it is only fair to warn
you - not published.
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