Skip to main content

Home/ 8-2 Research - Reform Issues/ Group items tagged education

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Tom L

Education Reform in Slavery - 0 views

  • Education for black slaves was forbidden, especially after Nat Turner’s slave insurrection in 1831. The abolitionist movement provided educational opportunities for African Americans. Quakers were in the forefront of this movement, establishing racially integrated schools in cities like New York, Philadelphia, and Boston.
  •  
    Education on African-American
Abeni T

Education in Early America: Birth of Public Schools and Universities - 0 views

  • There used to be a popular bumper sticker out there that said 'If you can read this, thank a teacher.' Ironically, thanks to modern educational developments, you probably aren't reading this lesson at all - you're just watching it. But you are trying to get a college education, which means you are still a product of the same educational movement born 200 years ago. Public schools, as we know them today, were few and far between in the early American republic. The Puritans believed literacy was a religious duty (so that everyone could read the Bible), and most children learned basic math and reading at home. Concerned about children whose parents weren't 'good' church members, a 1642 Massachusetts law required that towns of 50 or more people have a public school in which men taught basic literacy to boys, including Bible instruction. The most education girls typically received was at a Dame School, in which an older lady from the community taught very young children the fundamentals of reading as well as the female graces, usually from her own home - and these were not free. In the 1700s, elite, private, grammar schools opened in New England to prepare boys to enter the Ivy League colleges, many of which are among America's most prestigious college prep schools today. Throughout the Middle Colonies, individual communities sometimes opened schools to instruct boys in their language, religion and traditions. And Southern plantation owners might hire a teacher to educate their children at home. Wealthy families from every region sometimes sent their sons back to England for school. During the Revolution, many Americans (like Thomas Jefferson) believed strongly that education was a necessary component of democracy, but despite their ar
  •  
    87t87t
Abeni T

Timeline of US Education - 1 views

  •  
    a slideshow of education through the years in America!
Nikita P

Henry Barnard Facts, information, pictures | Encyclopedia.com articles about Henry Barnard - 1 views

  • no nineteenth-century figure had such a profound and lasting impact on American education as Henry Barnard. Born in Hartford, Connecticut, on 24 January 1811, Barnard graduated from Yale College in 1835 and spent two years touring Europe, surveying the latest developments in education
  • acquired a reputation as one of the foremost educators in the nation
  • Wisconsin
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • organized teachers’ institutes in twenty counties throughout the state.
  • Forsaking a promising career in law, Barnard committed himself, over the next forty years, to maintaining the common-schools ideal in American national life. Barnard brought energy, commitment, and creativity to his role in establishing public education systems in Connecticut and Rhode Island before midcentury, providing educators outside the Northeast with models that would be widely emulated.
  •  
    Henry Barnard
Nikita P

Internet History Sourcebooks - 2 views

  • most prevailing incentive to labor was to secure the means of education for some male member of the family. To make a gentleman of a brother or a son, to give him a college education, was the dominant thought in the minds of a great many of the better class of mill­girls.
  • get the
  •  
    Lowell Kids Education
Nikita P

The Beecher Tradition : Catherine Beecher - 1 views

  • and it remained an important institution for the education of women for more than sixty years.
  • Catherine Beecher believed that there was a need for a school for girls that would challenge their intellectual abilities. Hartford, Connecticut did not have such a school and Catherine was determined to start one. She opened the Hartford Female Seminary in May 1823
  • believed that women should devote themselves to the moral development and education of their children and to their home, and she felt that to accomplish this, women needed to be well educated.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • spent much of her life writing about and promoting the education of women.
  • The Moral Instructor for Schools and Families: Containing Lessons on the Duties of Life (1838) and A Treatise on Domestic Economy for the Use of Young Ladies at Home and at School (1841)
    • Nikita P
       
      Primary Source Document
  •  
    Catherine Beecher
Immanuel Q

SIRS: Education - 2 views

  •      Throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the family was the most important institution of both socialization and education.
Nikita P

Reform Movements 1820-1860 - 0 views

  • Second Great Awakening sparked an increase in denominational colleges, especially in the western states o             Some of these new schools accepted women
  •  
    Public Education Reform
Nikita P

Children In The 1800s :: History Children Descriptive - 2 views

  • Gender, social status, and the region in which a child lived determined how much schooling a child would receive and where and how they would get it. Children of the upper class were either taught in private schools or by a tutor. They were taught reading, writing, prayers, and simple math ("Education") . They were taught using repetition from the Bible, a religion-based reading supplement called a primer, and/or a paddle-shaped (also religious) horn book ("Schooling"). The upper-class boys were taught more advanced academic subjects, and may have been sent to boarding school in England or another state. The girls were taught to assume the duties of a wife and mother and obtained basic knowledge so they could read the Bible and record expenses ("Education").
Nikita P

The History of Education in America - 0 views

  • .not until the 1840s did an organized system exist
  • Horace Mann
  • Henry Barnard
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • Massachusetts
  • Connecticut
  • helped create statewide common-school systems.
  • argued education could preserve social stability and prevent crime and poverty.
Abeni T

Image detail for -Education in the 1800's - 0 views

  •  
    picture
Nikita P

Reformers of the 1800's - 3 views

  • Led by Horace Mann, the great educational reformer, a movement was led to create mandatory public education in America.
    • Nikita P
       
      Primary Source- Horace Mann
Abeni T

Public Education Reform of The 1800's by Jonathan Torres on Prezi - 2 views

  •  
    oh haiiiii girl!
Abeni T

The 1830s and 40s: Horace Mann, the End of Free-Market Education, and the Rise of Gover... - 0 views

  • Michigan was the first state, upon its entrance into the Union in 1835, to constitutionally prohibit the use of public funds "for the benefit of religious societies or theological seminaries." Horace Mann was born to a family of farmers in Franklin, Mass
  •  
    some good info about horace mann
Corey R

Child Labor in U.S. History - The Child Labor Education Project - 1 views

  • indenture
  • Child Labor Reform and the U.S. Labor Movement
  • ne as the labor and reform movements grew and labor standards in general began improving, increasing the political power of working people and other social reformers to demand legislation regulating child labor. Union organizing and child labor reform were often intertwined, and common initiatives were conducted by organizations led by working women and middle class consumers, such as state Consumers’ Leagues and Working Women’s Societies. These organizations generated the National Consumers’ League in 1899 and the National Child Labor Committee in 1904, which shared goals of challenging child labor, including through anti-sweatshop campaigns and labeling programs. The National Child Labor Committee’s work to end child labor was combined with efforts to provide free, compulsory education for all children, and culminated in the passage of the Fair Labor Standards Act in 1938, which set federal standards for child labor.
  •  
    child labor
Savannah B

Punishment in Factories - 0 views

  •  
    Educational
Abeni T

Image detail for -Shrewsbury Historical Society - 1830 Schoolhouse - 0 views

  •  
    picture
Nikita P

Dr. Henry Barnard - 0 views

  • intoduced the first legislation for free education
  • 1843 to 1849 Barnard served as the state superintendent of schools in Rhode Island.
  •  
    Henry Barnard
1 - 20 of 25 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page