Annual Report

Annual Report
Author: Saint Louis (Mo.). Board of Education
Publisher:
Total Pages: 238
Release: 1891
Genre: Education
ISBN:

Circular

Circular
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 334
Release: 1930
Genre: Education
ISBN:

History, Education, and the Schools

History, Education, and the Schools
Author: William J. Reese
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 229
Release: 2010-01-04
Genre: Education
ISBN: 0230104827

Please note this is a 'Palgrave to Order' title. Stock of this book requires shipment from an overseas supplier. It will be delivered to you within 12 weeks. This book grapples with two basic questions. What is history? And How can history help illuminate contemporary concerns about the nature and character of America's schools? From antiquity to the postmodern present, history has served multiple purposes, including a basic human need to learn from what came before. Americans have long invested considerable time, energy, and emotion in their schools, both private and public, and a knowledge of history helps explain why.

Schooling the Freed People

Schooling the Freed People
Author: Ronald E. Butchart
Publisher: Univ of North Carolina Press
Total Pages: 338
Release: 2010
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0807834203

Conventional Wisdom Holds that freedmen's education was largely the work of privileged, single white northern women motivated by evangelical beliefs and abolitionism. Schooling the Freed People shatters this notion entirely. For the most comprehensive study of the origins of black education in freedom ever undertaken, Ronald Butchart combed the archives of all of the freedmen's aid organizations as well as the archives of every southern state to compile a vast database of over 11,600 individuals who taught in southern black schools between 1861 and 1876. Based on this pathbreaking research, he reaches some surprising conclusions: one-third of the teachers were African Americans; black teachers taught longer than white teachers; half of the teachers were southerners; and even the northern teachers were more diverse than previously imagined. His evidence demonstrates that evangelicalism contributed much less than previously belived to white teachers' commitment to black students, that abolitionism was a relatively small factor in motivating the teachers, and that, on the whole, the teachers' ideas and aspirations about their work often ran counter to the aspirations of the freed people for Schooling. The crowning achievement of a veteran scholar, this is the definitive book on freedmen's teachers in the South as well as an outstanding contribution to social history and our understanding of African American education.

Girl's Schooling During The Progressive Era

Girl's Schooling During The Progressive Era
Author: Karen Graves
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 348
Release: 2014-06-03
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1135606900

This work traces the impact of a differentiated curriculum on girls' education in St. Louis public schools from 1870 to 1930. Its central argument is that the premise upon which a differentiated curriculum is founded, that schooling ought to differ among students in order prepare each for his or her place in the social order, actually led to academic decline. The attention given to the intersection of gender, race, and social class and its combined effect on girls' schooling, places this text in the new wave of critical historical scholarship in the field of educational research.