I agree with Lemongrove there needs to be a lack of bias when teaching such a subject. If I examine my own education, although I didn't realise it at the time, history was taught from a catholic viewpoint, certain people were vilified, Elizabeth I for example, conversely we were taught that Mary Tudor was a wonderful queen
it was only later on that I realised the former was regarded as one of our most illustrious monarchs and the latter wasn't. My granddaughter is enthusiastically learning about the Romans at the moment but I'm not sure she understands just how far back 2000 years is. In retrospect I realise that for me that going to a religious school where the birth of Jesus was hammered into us did a least prove a very good historical reference point. From an early age, particularly as we had a lot of history books at home, I had a mental picture of a timeline knowing pre BC civilisations such as Egyptians, Greeks, Romans, the latter straddling a pre Christian period and overlapping into AD by 400 years. Followed by Anglo Saxons and Vikings After that. 1066 was another reference point and similarly the Reformation which of course loomed large in the convent school I went to. Although we barely touched on modern history. My own children did loads, particularly the two world wars and the Weimar Republic, the latter which I had little knowledge of and found myself learning about vicariously through them. I think history and politics are relevant subjects to understand something of the world we live in, the past shapes the present of course. Nevertheless whoever is teaching it needs to remember it is not their prerogative to imbue the pupil with their ideologies.