Elements of Historical Personal Identity Construction of Finnish-Speaking Students
Abstract
:1. Introduction
The formation of identity is one of the most important, if not the most important, function of historical thinking in the way of life of any given time [1].(p. 203)
2. Theoretical Framework: Identity, Historical Social and Personal Narratives
3. Research Questions and Methodology
3.1. Participants and Context of the Study
3.2. Data Collection
3.3. Data Analysis and Findings in Overview
4. Sofia’s Narrative Representation
5. Laura’s Conceptual Representation
6. What Identity-Forming History Comes Up in the Drawings
‘Probably the stories of individual people. In a way, often when we talk about some historical event we talk about countries. In wars there are countries, and maybe some captain will stand out, but nothing else. In a way it would be nice to hear the stories of ordinary civilians, how they have acted in those situations and how they have managed.’
‘Right now, in history lessons we go through that they lost this and they won that. It is cool but I could take a break now. It’s not terribly interesting. But if you could focus on one person it could have a bigger impact. Especially at young age, hearing about all the important and inspiring people in history could give more self-confidence and self-esteem.’
7. Conclusions: History, Personal Identity Construction, and Stories of Individual People
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | https://www.eursc.eu/en/European-Schools/mission (accessed on 19 June 2024). |
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School 1 | School 2 | School 3 | |
---|---|---|---|
Number of students | 22 (10 boys, 12 girls) | 19 (12 boys, 7 girls) | 20 (11 boys, 11 girls) |
Age | 15–16 | 15–16 | 14–17 |
Geographical location | Pirkanmaa region, in Finland | Central Finland region, in Finland | European country outside Finland |
Description of the location | Town with less than 25,000 inhabitants | Town with over 100,000 inhabitants | City with c. 1 million inhabitants |
School type | Finnish comprehensive school | Finnish comprehensive school | European School |
Class | 9th Grade | 9th Grade | Secondary 5th in the Finnish language section |
Context the study was conducted in | Social studies lessons | Social studies lessons | Finnish and Science lessons |
Curriculum/Syllabus used in the school | Core Curriculum for Basic Education 2014 | Core Curriculum for Basic Education 2014 | Schola Europaea, History Syllabus—S4–S5 |
Questionnaire to Gain Background Information |
---|
1. Name |
2. Gender |
3. Age |
4. School |
5. What are your parents’ occupations? |
6. Have you always lived in Finland? |
7. If you have lived somewhere else, where and for how long? |
8. What language or languages do you speak at home with your parents and siblings? |
9. What language or languages do you speak with your friends? |
10. Do you have a passport? |
11. Which country/countries do you have a passport for? |
12. Define your own nationality as you experience it. |
13. Do you feel that nationality is an important thing for you? Why? |
14. Do you feel yourself… (select 1–6 valuable options for you) |
Finnish, Nordic, As a resident of home community, European, Foreigner, As a resident of your village or neighbourhood, World citizen, Multicultural, As a resident of your province, Expatriate Finn, Migrant, Immigrant, None of the above |
Writing assignment 1 |
Write your own biography. For example, you can answer these questions: Who are you? What things are important to you? Where do you feel you belong? |
Writing assignment 2 |
Earlier in the questionnaire you defined your nationality and in another task you selected the groups you felt you belonged to. Now please write the history of the most important group or nationality as you see it. Be prepared to tell us more about what you wrote. |
Drawing assignment |
Draw a diagram or picture that illustrates how the past helps explain who you are and the life you are living or hope to live. |
Narrative Structure | Conceptual Structure | Others | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Personal history and wider official history | 8 | 5 | 13 | |
Only personal history | 13 | 13 | 26 | |
Only official wider history | 1 | 1 | ||
Others (Picture of meaningful matter, for example family or hobby) | 13 | 13 | ||
Total | 22 | 18 | 13 | 53 |
In Finnish | In English |
---|---|
Timeline on top | |
I and II Maailmansota | World war I and II |
Kylmä sota | Cold war |
Lähi-idän kriisit | Middle East crises |
Sota | War |
Ilmastonmuutos | Climate change |
Teollistuminen | Industrialisation |
Tms. | etc. |
Huolia | Worries |
Huoli tulevasta! | Worry about the future! |
The family tree in the lower left corner | |
|
|
EX-AATELISSUKUA
| EX-NOBLE FAMILY
|
SODASSA
| IN WAR
|
MERIKAPTEENI
| A SEA CAPTAIN
|
The thought bubble in the lower right corner | |
TOIVE NYKYISESTÄ
| WISH IN THE PRESENT
|
In Finnish | In English |
---|---|
Translations sequentially in a clockwise | |
MENNEISYYDEN TAPAHTUMAT JOTKA VAIKUTTAA | PAST EVENTS WHICH INFLUENCE |
Aleksis Kivi
| Aleksis Kivi
|
2. Maailman sota
| World War II
|
EI ORJUUTA
| NO SLAVERY
|
Corona
| Corona
|
Justuksen syntymä
| Birth of Justus
|
Ranskan revolution
| The French Revolution
|
Euroopan luominen
| The creation of Europe
|
vanhemmat tapas
| parents met
|
SUOMI
| FINLAND
|
Luxemburg
| Luxembourg
|
EEB2
| EEB2
|
ESTER
| ESTER
|
Nalle Puh kootut kertomukset
| The Complete Tales of Winnie-The-Pooh
|
Pulla
| Pulla
|
Kesä 2018
| Summer 2018
|
Pariisi
| Paris
|
PERHE
| FAMILY
|
The box in lower left corner | |
TULEVAISUUS
| FUTURE
|
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Taivalantti, T.; Norppa, J.; Löfström, J. Elements of Historical Personal Identity Construction of Finnish-Speaking Students. Societies 2024, 14, 113. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc14070113
Taivalantti T, Norppa J, Löfström J. Elements of Historical Personal Identity Construction of Finnish-Speaking Students. Societies. 2024; 14(7):113. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc14070113
Chicago/Turabian StyleTaivalantti, Tanja, Johanna Norppa, and Jan Löfström. 2024. "Elements of Historical Personal Identity Construction of Finnish-Speaking Students" Societies 14, no. 7: 113. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc14070113
APA StyleTaivalantti, T., Norppa, J., & Löfström, J. (2024). Elements of Historical Personal Identity Construction of Finnish-Speaking Students. Societies, 14(7), 113. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc14070113