Evidence Versus Interpretation
Distinguish between historical evidence and historical interpretation — evidence is what survived, interpretation is the argument a historian builds from it, and the same evidence can support different arguments
Typical age: 10–11 years
“Does your child understand that two historians can look at the same evidence and reach different conclusions — and that history involves argument and judgment, not just facts?”
0 / 2 mastered
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Needs first
- Understanding People in Their Own Time
Recognising that interpretation is shaped by context — including the historian's own time and perspective — builds on the contextualisation habit
- Learning from Mistakes
Distinguishing evidence from interpretation requires analysing where claims come from and what might be wrong with them — the universal error-analysis habit applied to historical argument
- Questioning Historical SourcesREQUIRED
Distinguishing evidence from interpretation requires sourcing skill — you must understand who made the evidence and why before you can see that interpretations are layered on top
- Vocabulary: historical thinkingREQUIRED
Distinguishing evidence from interpretation requires both these terms as precise vocabulary
- Checking Sources Against Each OtherREQUIRED
Understanding that the same evidence supports different interpretations requires first having practised comparing sources through corroboration
- Evidence-Based Writing
Distinguishing historical evidence from interpretation requires careful reading of informational sources — a skill developed through English non-fiction comprehension
Unlocks next
- Modern Archaeology and Egyptian Ethics
Recognising that colonial-era collecting shapes how we present ancient Egypt is a direct application of the evidence-vs-interpretation distinction
- Historical Sources on Ancient Egypt
Understanding that Champollion's decipherment transformed interpretations illustrates directly how evidence and interpretation interact
- Who Really Built the Pyramids
Evaluating evidence against the alien-builder and slave-labour myths is the evidence-vs-interpretation distinction applied to a specific historical controversy