Sky News said:'Hitler Dominates Topics'
Updated: 06:16, Thursday December 22, 2005
Schools are teaching too much "Hitler and Henry" and should broaden their pupils' history lessons, according to an education watchdog.
There has been a gradual narrowing and "Hitlerisation" of history taught to over 14s, said the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority.
And it said that lessons for this age group were also dominated by topics like the Tudors and the 20th Century dictatorships, giving "increasing cause for concern".
The report said the trend has been exacerbated by dividing up A-level courses into units, which reduced the time for wider reading and reflection.
The criticism comes ahead of new guidelines on teaching post-war German history, being published next week.
An authority spokesman said: "Britain has a long and rich history and there are many interesting periods that teachers can get their pupils interested in.
"We would encourage them to look at the spectrum of history rather than just focusing on a few periods."
The report follows German ambassador Thomas Matussek complaining in May that British people were still obsessed with Nazism.
"Too often, the teaching of black history is confined to topics about slavery and post-war immigration or to Black History Month," the report said.
"The effect, if inadvertent, is to undervalue the overall contribution of black and minority ethnic people to Britain's past and to ignore their cultural, scientific and many other achievements."
Source - http://www.sky.com/skynews/article/0,,30000-1206894,00.html (and I only look at Sky because I used to work there, honest!).
I'd agree with this - I remember history at school consisting almost entirely of Hitler. It's part of the apparently unending British obsession with the Second World War. I was never taught anything about the Tudors, but I think I'm an exception there as everyone else seems to have done them interminably.