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Who Should Control Education: The Common School Era

Who Should Control Education: The Common School Era. Colonial Era. Demographics Attitude toward children Education (grammar schooling) Education (college). Drawing of Harvard College, circa 1767. Revolutionary Era. Ideology Faith in reason Natural law (deism) Nationalism.

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Who Should Control Education: The Common School Era

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  1. Who Should Control Education: The Common School Era

  2. Colonial Era • Demographics • Attitude toward children • Education (grammar schooling) • Education (college)

  3. Drawing of Harvard College, circa 1767

  4. Revolutionary Era • Ideology • Faith in reason • Natural law (deism) • Nationalism

  5. Revolutionary Era Education • Jeffersonian ideals • Meritocracy • Plan for popular education-4 tiers • His legacy

  6. Common School Era • Demographics • Ideology

  7. One Room School House (KS)

  8. One Room School House (MD)

  9. Common School Movement • School structure • Teaching • Overarching goals: moral training, discipline, patriotism, mutual understanding, formal equality, and cultural assimilation • (development of high schools)

  10. Questions for Discussion • By which secondary source-Kaestle or Bowles and Gintis-are you persuaded? • What do you think of the arguments for localism or centralization? Where do you stand? • What do you think about the notion of the “common school?” What would it look like? • Where do you stand: are children property of the state or of their parents? (Kaestle 158-159) • What is the hidden curriculum and how is it transmitted to students in today’s schools?

  11. The Progressive Era I:Pedagogical Progressivism

  12. Characterization of the Era • Urbanization • Immigration • Ideology • Education

  13. General Characterization of Progressive Education • Built on the “new” psychology • Traditional classical curriculum should be replaced with a varied curriculum • Learning should be based on activities not rote memorization • Primary aim of schooling is to help solve society’s problems

  14. New Educational Goals • Social stability • Employable skills • Equal educational opportunity • Meritocracy

  15. George Counts (1889-1974) • Influenced by Dewey • Envisioned a ‘political’ role for teachers • Accused of being a communist • Critical of Progressive Education

  16. John Dewey (1859-1952) • The ‘father’ of pedagogical progressivism • Disagreed with Counts; believed that schools should produce reformers not reform society directly

  17. Dewey’s ideas • Schools kill curiosity and social interaction • Schools should be laboratories for democracy • Education THROUGH the vocations not FOR the vocations

  18. Questions for Discussion • What do you think the role of the school should be in society? Should they lead or follow? • What of the role of the teacher? • What do you think of the concept of indoctrination (a la Counts)? • Do you have a prescription for achieving the “good” society?

  19. The Progressive Era II: Administrative Progressivism/Social Efficiency

  20. Alfred Binet • Paper and pencil test • Series of short tasks according to child’s age • Related to everyday problems • Didn’t rely on learned skills like math or reading

  21. Binet’s cautions • Scores are a practical device; they do not buttress any theory of intellect • Scale is a rough empirical guide for identifying learning disabled kids NOT for ranking normal children • Low scores shall not be used to mark children as innately incapable

  22. Enter Lewis Terman • Adopts Binet’s test but alters it to sort, classify, and test all American school children • Intelligence Quotient born in 1916

  23. Impact of the IQ • What began as a way to identify individual children with special needs became a means for ordering groups • Said to test inherent/innate ability • Immigration policy took cues from results

  24. Progressive Education (review) • Replace classical curriculum with a varied curriculum based on kids’ interests • Learning should be based on activities not rote memorization • Schools should help solve society’s problems • Seeking social stability, employable skills, and equal educational opportunity

  25. Consequences for Course Taking

  26. Questions for Discussion • Should we have a core curriculum? What should it be? • What are the merits of a differentiated curriculum? • How much differentiation is too much?

  27. Language Issues:Does an American Have to Speak English? Ingles Englisch 英語 Inglese إنجليزي

  28. 1930s Court Cases • Salvatieera v. Independent School District (TX), 1930 • Court Oks separation on the basis of English language handicaps • Alvarez v. Lemon Grove School District (CA), 1931 • classifying Mexicans as Indian • School board: separate education best for learning language and assimilation (and gender fears) • San Diego court: school board can’t separate ALL kids

  29. 1940s Court Cases • Mendez v. Westminster (CA), 1947 • School board says MA kids happier in separate classrooms/schools • Federal District court disagrees (they were separated for wrong reasons: race) • Delgado v. Bastrop (TX), 1948 • Parents continued Salvatierra fight

  30. 1970s Court Cases • Cisneros v. Corpus Christi District (TX), 1970 • Mexican Americans classified as such (brown not white) • Lau v. Nichols, 1974 • Question: equal or equitable treatment required by schools? • (critical mass necessary) • Made language a civil rights issue

  31. Questions for Discussion • How do we reconcile American-ness with diversity? (umum and pluribus) • How do we reconcile ethnicity with American-ness? • What do you make of the relationship between language and citizenship? • Is it the school’s role to teach/help maintain culture?

  32. Religion and Education

  33. Colonial/Revolutionary/Common School Eras and Religion • Protestants outnumbered other immigrants • Jefferson’s Bill for Religious Freedom • Demographic changes with increases in Irish Catholic immigration

  34. Catholicism Catholics need the pope while Protestants rely on bible as guide A danger to the state Sample texts Judaism A religion or a race? Associated with greed (contrast with Franklin) College admissions becomes HUGE issue Religion in Textbooks

  35. Court cases • State v. John Scopes (Monkey Trial) (TN), 1925 • Evolution v. creationism • Science in the classroom • Inherit the Wind, 1960 • Pierce v. Society of Sisters (OR), 1925 • Compulsory education=public education • Anti-Catholic intentions

  36. Questions for Discussion • How does religion fit in today’s public schools? • What do you think of the use of school property for religious purposes? • How should science classes be handled (evolution/creationism/ punctuated equilibrium)?

  37. Education for Liberation

  38. Paulo Freire • Worked with rural poor adults • Professor, government employee, and community worker • Wanted to extend literacy and democracy

  39. Highlander Folk School, Miles Horton • Founded as adult education center; aim was to build a progressive labor movement • Changed focus in 1953 to Civil Rights Movement and voting rights

  40. Early Desegregation Decisions • Gaines v. Canada (MO), 1938 • Sipuel v. Board of Regents (OK), 1948 • McLaurin v. Board of Regents (OK), 1950 • Sweatt v. Painter (TX), 1950

  41. The Brown Decision, 1954 • Briggs v. Elliott (SC), 1950 • Belton v. Gebhart; Bulah v. Gebhart (DE), 1951 • Brown v. Board (KS), 1951 • Davis v. Prince Edward County SB (VA), 1951 • Bowling v. Sharpe (DC), 1952

  42. Brief Mississippi History • Black statistics • White reaction to Brown decision • (SNCC and sit-ins) • Summer 1964: Freedom Summer

  43. Questions for Discussion • What do you make of Freire and SNCC in light of previous authors with regard to the purpose of education? • Would working within the system or outside the system be best? • Does this influence your opinion on who is “qualified” to teach?

  44. Who Should Control Education Revisited: The 1960s and 1970s

  45. What is Black Power • The launching of a movement (1966) • Carmichael and Hamilton, Black Power: The Politics of Liberation in America

  46. Black Access to Higher Ed • Civil Rights Act of 1964 • Higher Education Act of 1965 • Campus-based affirmative action • Numbers in colleges

  47. Curricular Changes • Black Studies • Community control • Multicultural/Afro-centric Education

  48. Questions for Discussion • How much control should a community have? • Hiring teachers? • Curriculum? • Educational policy? • What is a ‘qualified’ teacher?

  49. Contemporary Debates over the Curriculum in a Multicultural Society

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