PSWA: NFA’s Pedagogical Philosophy
Phenomenological-Structural Worldview Analysis is the method NFA uses to train learners to read history as structured human action, not isolated biography or slogan.
What PSWA does
PSWA asks learners to notice what historical actors understood, what structures constrained them, what choices were available, what values organized action, and where interpretation must stop because the evidence does not support a stronger claim.
A · Structural Grounding
Identifies the setting, governing structures, historical pressure, and basic terms needed before interpretation begins.
B · Strategy & Mechanism
Examines how actors moved, organized, negotiated, resisted, governed, wrote, taught, or survived.
C · Interpretation Discipline
Separates documented evidence from inference, public memory, disputed claims, and not-found material.
D · Comparative Diagnosis
Compares cases without flattening their context, chronology, geography, or political structure.
E · Transfer Discipline
Transfers a concept to a new context while naming the boundary of the comparison.
F · Structural Synthesis
Synthesizes the case into a larger historical argument without exceeding the evidence.
A guardrail against shallow biography
PSWA prevents NFA pages from becoming hero worship, grievance summary, trivia, or unsupported certainty. It lets the academy teach discipline: what can be said, what cannot be said, what is disputed, and what the learner must prove.
