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Schools are influenced by political economy and ideology

of the time period. School reform is influenced by a few

powerful forces or by “crisis” of need.



EPS 210/202 Timeline--Development of Public Schooling Unit 1

 1776-1830 Post-Revolution Jefferson

 No system of public schools



 Identified need to educate for a stable republic



 1830-1890 Common School Model Horace Mann

 Common curriculum, six to eight years of basic education, character



training was crucial, seeking social stability.

 1890s a small # of high schools had an academic classical curriculum





 1890-1950 Progressive Era-- 2 perspectives > students, K-12, > diversity

 1.Social Efficiency (Elliot and Cubberly) Dominant view, what is its



legacy? SORTING MACHINE MODEL

 2.Developmental Democracy (Dewey) Experimental schools

 Dewey’s Planned School Reform

Horace Mann (1837-1848) SOCIAL REFORMER

By the 1830s, the time was ripe for public support of

elementary education in Massachusetts

Purpose of School:

 Can schools help with these kinds To improve society

of social problems? How?

 Crime



 Corruption



 Drunkenness



 Delinquency



 Political violence



 Class violence

How? MORAL TRAINING

and DISCIPLINE

HORACE MANN‟S COMMON SCHOOL

4 MEANINGS OF COMMON

“EDUCATE ALL IN COMMON”



1. PUBLIC Free, tax-supported education

2. COMMON CURRICULUM Standardization of subject

matter and teaching methods. Teach a curriculum not

so different from schools in the 1820s and 1830s

Basic Skills -Reading, „Riting, „Rithmetic (3 Rs),

spelling, history, geography, music. 4th and 5TH R??

Religion and Republicanism

3. OPEN TO ALL Common experience for diverse

students (exception: segregated schools for free blacks

in Boston)

4. COMMON IDEOLOGY Teach ideology of the Republic

COMMON SCHOOLS HORACE MANN

–TO SOLVE SOCIAL PROBLEMS

WHAT WAS TAUGHT AND HOW?



 Basic Skills -Reading, writing, numbers,

spelling, history, geography, music.



 Moral training--linked to religion but

tried to “secularize” moral training, but

local control allowed for sectarianism to

operate.



 Elementary Level Six years for all

students, a longer school year.



 State made attendance compulsory

MANN-- COMMON SCHOOL

GOAL: TO PROMOTE SOCIAL STABILITY

PROTESTANTISM



 PROTESTANTISM



 MORAL LESSONS







 Mann devised a set of virtues called the

“COMMON ELEMENTS”

Opposition to Prayers, Bible, how the

common elements were taught. Not just

on secular grounds, some conservatives

wanted more religion.





Supported by moderate Protestants

OPPOSITION Alienates almost

everyone else:

 Conservative Protestants



 Nonbelievers, Jews, and Irish

Catholics who leave the public

school and establish parochial

schools (on the Irish, see

Urban,Wagoner, 115)

Horace Mann

Teaching moral values



 Moral lessons taught

through Protestant

materials (prayers,

stories of virtue and vice,

and study of bible).



 Mann was supported by

moderate Protestants.

Mann supports Bible readings and “appropriate" set of

moral values known as the common elements

(in Mann‟s 12th Report)



 What are the common elements? Piety, justice, sacred

regard for truth, love of country, humanity, universal

benevolence, sobriety, industry, frugality, chastity,

moderation, and temperance.



Mann believed

that human nature

can be formed.

Common School Advocates Like Mann Were

MORALISTS Moral training was as

important as teaching basic skills.



Mann was driven by a

compelling need for moral

consensus due to social

STRIFE:

 Religious struggles



 Economic strife between



rich and poor, labor

unrest

 Tensions between Irish



immigrants and locals

MANN--COMMON SCHOOL

TO PROMOTE SOCIAL STABILITY

REPUBLICANISM



REPUBLICANISM

 Some political roles for



some citizens

 All members of society



needed virtue

What kinds of books were used in the

schools of the new Republic?

Noah Webster‟s American Spelling Book**



http://www.merrycoz.org/books/spelling/SP

ELLING.HTM





Webster American Spelling

Book Contained:

 Protestant Catechism



 Moral lessons in stories



 Politics



 Americanization of spelling



English words

Noah Webster‟s Political Training

LIMITS of Liberalism

American Spelling Book

on Voting





 Q. Can every an [sic “man”] in the states vote for

delegates to Congress?

 A. By no mans [sic]. In almost every state some

property is necessary to give a man a right to vote.

In general, men who have no estate, pay no taxes,

and who have no settled habitation, are not

permitted to vote for rulers, because they have no

interest to secure, they may be vagabonds or

dishonest men, and may be bribed by the rich.

Noah Webster‟s

American Spelling Book Politics

Representative Government is best.

 Q. Is there another and better form of government

than any of these?



 A. There is. A REPRESENTATIVE REPUBLIC[,]

in which the people freely choose deputies to make

laws for them, is much the best form of government

hitherto invented.



Raises questions about role of citizen

PROGRESSIVE ERA

Dramatic Changes in the Political Economy 20th Century

SOCIAL CONDITIONS 1900 (Tozer, Chapter 5)

Pressures of 1893 Depression, the rise of modern

industrial society, urbanization and immigration.

Social problems:

Immigration Industrialization Low Wages

Labor Unrest (Strikes, Riots)

Poverty in Cities Child Labor Discrimination

What does “progressive” mean?

It emerged out of 1893 Depression, spurred interest in all

kinds of social and economic reform. Handout



 Progressive refers to “a movement to organize 20th century

American society into an efficiently functioning unit that would

be in HARMONY with the needs of a MODERN

INDUSTRIAL society.”



 Progressive means moving towards a more ORDERLY,

MORAL, DEMOCRATIC society. (Depending upon how

these goals are defined--can create conflicts.)



“Efficiently functioning society…[needs to] operate on principles

of non-partisan politics, scientific and professional expertise.”

In 1900 the question was how to reform public schools to

accommodate the large, new student populations---new

immigrants, working class, and racial ethnic minorities.



TWO VERY DIFFERENT VIEWS OF

Elliot

PROGRESSIVE EDUCATION

SCHOOL REFORM



Based on the forces in the Political Economy and

Ideology what should be done to reform schools?

Dewey

 2 Views emerged which differed on

 Ideology and Social Goals

What is one of the most important outcomes

of the social efficiency movement?

One of the most important outcomes of the Social

Efficiency Progressive Education Movement was the

differentiated curriculum-college, general, and

vocational courses.



Today, we differentiate the curriculum with tracks,

some career training, and some study/work

programs. Some schools provide only limited

academic training.



Today, the goal for the nation and for Illinois is to

prepare all students for post-secondary education.

Why study this period? **Developed the Modern School Model--

Sorting Machine Model begins

Kindergarten--12th grade More students attend

Rapid expansion of new schools Added high school

Differentiated curriculum-college, general, vocational



14-17 year olds--high school aged students. Dramatic increase of

14-17 year olds who attend school between 1890 and 1940.



 1890 7% attended high schools, and half of these students were

in private schools



 1920 32% attended high school, most in public schools, but only

one third graduate.



 1940 70% attended high school, but only half graduate



 Today, almost universal attendance-- 75% graduate HS with a

diploma, many of those who dropout later get a GED.

What schooling should you expect

for your children?

If your family worked in a factory, what kind of

education could you expect in 1910?____________



This legacy continues until 1980s when scholars raise

questions about curriculum and tracking of students.



If your family works in a factory or another low

income job today, what kind of education should you

expect? My expectation would be….

In 1910 how did the differentiated curriculum

serve different students? Intended to fit children

equally well for their particular life’s work.

“Harmony with an industrial society.”



How could social efficiency progressives believe they were acting

in the name of democracy? (Tozer, 145) They were responding

to new social, economic and political conditions, changing

ideology, and the “failure” of traditional schools.



Today, we question any practice where the structure reproduces

class differences.



Key question for schools today is: What kind of core preparation

(political, social, economic) is needed for a successful life in

today‟s world?

A second important outcome of the social

efficiency movement is the widespread use of

testing in the schools to place students in

different curricular tracks.

IQ Testing Movement Aided Social Efficiency

Tozer, Chapter 5, 148-159, 160

IQ Tests in World War I was biased against

various nationalities, and minority groups



Group Testing (paper and pencil tests) for those

with limited English, limited school experience,

living in poverty



Resulted in low IQ Test Scores for those with

limited English and limited schooling.



Low test scores were thought to mean limited

academic ability.

Administrative Progressive

Professor and Dean Ellwood Cubberly,

Stanford University, School of Education

1919 stated in his book:



“Largely illiterate, docile, often lacking in initiative, and

almost wholly without the Anglo-Saxon conceptions of

righteousness, liberty, law, order, public decency, and

government, their coming has served to dilute

tremendously our national stock and to weaken and

corrupt our political life.”







Who is Cubberly referring to?

The views by Social Efficiency Progressive

Educators dominated 20th century schooling.

This era began the Sorting Machine Model.

 Schools should prepare students for their future life

 Class, gender, and race/ethnicity determined FUNCTION in society--



curricular differentiation –college preparation, vocational, and general

curriculum.

 Schools had to run more efficiently



 Schools should be run by experts



 Rise of centralization and bureaucracy (large school districts, teachers at



the bottom of the hierarchy, less parental input on school boards, large

schools)

 Knowledge as static, could just be “learned”, training for skills



 Some groups not capable of learning academic subjects



 Testing assisted in proper placement



 Racial/ethic, gender, and class discrimination

IDEOLOGY SHIFT –The Modern Liberal State

Classical Liberalism evolved into Modern Liberalism

See Tozer 145-150



 Reason-- became defined as Scientific Rationality--Greater influence by science

and the use of scientific rationality

 Reason--New Psychology--Genetic Theories of Intelligence, scientific evidence

of capacity through IQ testing, concluded that many were limited in their

capacity to reason, targeted certain ethnic groups, behaviorism (learn by

stimulus-response, not reason), Freud’s notions of the subconscious and power of

emotions over personality and behaviors.

 Individualism—person is a cell in a larger social organism

 Virtue—good person replaced with good citizen

 Progress--via expert planning and management, progress is not inevitable.

 Natural Law--Darwin’s theory of evolution “universe not fixed” “social

Darwinist claimed not all races as fully evolved” “some not fit to survive”

 Nationalism--Increased nationalism (2 World Wars)

 Freedom--Laissez-faire government (negative freedom--freedom from

interference) replaced by government intervention (to preserve freedom you need

an active government and government regulations)

 Power centered more with EXPERTS.

Philosopher John Dewey

One of the main leaders

Disagreed with Social Efficiency about:



Developmental Democracy Progressives disagreed with

social efficiency progressives‟ views about school

reform.



 Dewey did not support:

 Differentiated curriculum (supported a unified

curriculum)

 Vocational training in schools (manual training,

occupations of life, but not training for specific jobs)

 Limited view of human capacity (tremendous potential if

proper education provided)



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