Soc/EDS 126; Topic #2, (4/6 and 4/8/10): Education for Democracy in the Common School Era (1840s—1920s) Revised 4/7/10.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Diversity of Americans
Advertisements

History of Education: After the Civil War Chapter 5B - Foundations.
Reasons for Increased Immigration
Soc/EDS 126: Topic #1 The Democratic Conception of Education.
EDN 200 The Common School Era and the Progressive Era September 18, 2006.
Education, Jim Crow, and Women in the Progressive Era Ch 9, Sec 1, 3, 4.
The student will identify major efforts to reform American society and politics in the Progressive Era. Standard 13.
Brown v. Board of Education 60 th Anniversary. Post Civil War - Racial Tensions Still High Voting rights were restricted through polling taxes, literacy.
Race Relations s.
Education is concerned with the formal transmission of knowledge.
History of Public Education. Colonial Period 1 ( ) Education was reserved for wealthy White male landowners usually. Religion often had some role.
Chapter 5 Education in the United States: Its Historical Roots
Chapter 14 The Civil Rights Movement 1945– 1975 Who is this woman ? Why is this man impt ?
IMMIGRATION COMING TO AMERICA. WHY IMMIGRANTS CAME In the late 19 th century, Europeans flooded American cities in search of work and homes “PUSH” FACTORS.
Unit 6 Review: “Living with Great Turmoil” ( ) Boemer.
The AA Ethnic Lens Ethnogerocounseling Counseling Ethnic Elders and Their Families.
1 Historical Roots of Education in the United States ED 1010 Oct 5,
Urban, American Education “Organizing the Modern School System”
AN URBAN SOCIETY
Aim: What is Political Culture? Do Now: Who are you? What are you?
Reconstruction and Westward Expansion
Historical Foundation
CHAPTER 7 THE TRANSFORMATION OF AMERICAN SOCIETY
 I. What is freedom of expression  A. What basic rights are listed in this portion of the First Amendment?  B. Why do you think these particular rights.
The Common School Era Massachusetts in the 1830’s Demographics Politics Economics Ideology.
Plessy v. Ferguson Big Papi Vinny. In 1892, Homer Plessy took a seat in the “whites only” car of a train and refused to move. He was arrested, and convicted.
$1 Million $500,000 $250,000 $125,000 $64,000 $32,000 $16,000 $8,000 $4,000 $2,000 $1,000 $500 $300 $200 $100 Welcome.
EDU 103 Fall 2009 December. EDU 103 Chapter 5 Education in the United States – Its Historical Roots.
Immigration What positive and negative effects did immigration have on America and the immigrants themselves?
TIANJIN FOREIGN STUDIES UNIVERSITY American Culture Unit Five UNIT 5 Education in America.
Early Civil Rights Amendments and Court Cases. Reconstruction Era 13 th Amendment: Ended slavery 14 th Amendment: Extended citizenship to African-Americans,
MULTIETHNIC AMERICA Exam 2 Review. Chapters 5 and 6 Three early periods of immigration and their characteristics The colonial Period, Early National Period,
Segregation and Discrimination Poll Tax Jim Crow Laws Plessey vs. Ferguson Women’s Suffrage Susan B. Anthony.
ISSUES OF RECONSTRUCTION THE ECONOMY DRIVES IT ALL.
What does this cartoon mean?
IRISH IMMIGRATION AT THE TURN OF THE CENTURY (EARLY 1900s)
Expansion and Reform The Progressive Era and Imperialism.
a phrase referring to the period in United States history from the end of Reconstruction through the early 20th century when racism was deemed to be worse.
Daily Dig 2010 high school drop out rates in America: White students: 5.1% African American students: 8% Hispanic students: 15.1% Asian/Pacific Islander.
By: Samuel, Mamud, and Regine’. Supreme Court case that upheld the ‘separate but equal’ provision. Preceded by Homer Adolph Plessy V. The State of Louisiana.
IMMIGRATION AND URBANIZATION CHANGES IN AMERICA. A FLOOD OF IMMIGRANTS Old Immigrants Before 1865, people who came to America, excluding African Americans,
REVIEW 1. List 3 advancements in Science and Technology during the Progressive Era (late 1800’s – early 1900’s). 2. Why was there a rise in newspaper sales.
Reconstruction and Westward Expansion
Struggle for Rights in the Progressive Era
Civil Rights Movement.
Civil Rights Movement 1950’s-1960’s.
Warm-up: What did the 18th Amendment do?
HSA Review: Civil Rights.
Urbanization 4.5: Explain the causes and effects of urbanization in late 19th century America, including the movement from the farm to the city, the changing.
Reconstruction and Westward Expansion
Origins of the Civil Rights Movement
JEOPARDY Chapters 3-5.
Segregation / Discrimination / Expanding Education
Semester 1 Final Exam Review
Unit 5: Emergence of the Modern United States (1890 – 1920)
Origins of the Civil Rights Movement
Reconstruction and Westward Expansion
Origins of the Civil Rights Movement
Post WW2 Civil Rights US History.
Social and Cultural Changes
Reconstruction and Westward Expansion
Reconstruction and Westward Expansion
The Civil Rights Movement
New South Summary Quiz Review.
Reconstruction and Westward Expansion
Section 3 Suffrage and Civil Rights
The other side of Progress…ive
Immigration in the Gilded Age
Political Beliefs and Behaviors
Reconstruction and Westward Expansion
Presentation transcript:

Soc/EDS 126; Topic #2, (4/6 and 4/8/10): Education for Democracy in the Common School Era (1840s—1920s) Revised 4/7/10

Announcements Reflection #1: due 4/13/10 New people need to be assigned to groups to write reflections; turn in group list Sections: Thursdays, 1:00-2:00 or 3:30-4:30, Pepper Canyon 304 Read Dewey on pedagogy in packet; title left off syllabus by mistake Syllabus and Powerpoints at create.ucsd.edu

Political Economic Context s 1. Urbanization: by 1850: % urban; %+ urban 2. Industrialization—especially in Eastern Cities 3. New Immigration: Internal -- from Northeast to Midwest and -- from South to North—especially Blacks after Civil War From Europe –Ireland, Italy (Mediterranean countries) –poor, uneducated, unskilled, Catholic –competed for low-skill jobs

Horace Mann & the Development of the Common School (1840s-1920s) A. Goals of Early Common (Public School) Movement – 1. To provide equal educational opportunity – 2. To provide free [tax-based] education – 3. To close the economic gap and social antagonisms between rich and poor B. Curriculum and Instruction Strategies— Moral lessons for industrial society taught through reading

Common School took on new “Social Integration" or Assimilation function 1. “Americanize” new immigrants who were a threat to social order because they had different language, cultural conventions, and religion 2. Why? Society in decline because of rural--urban shift (Durkheim, Weber, Marx) 3. School (and church): formal institutions needed to replace family which because of alienation and anomie caused by urbanization, industrialization, immigration

Depictions of the Irish

Announcements Reflection #1: due 4/13/10 New people need to be assigned to groups to write reflections; turn in group list Sections: Thursdays, 1:00-2:00 or 3:30-4:30, Pepper Canyon 304 Read Dewey on pedagogy in packet; title left off syllabus by mistake Syllabus and Powerpoints at create.ucsd.edu

Black-White Tensions in Common School Era Before Civil War, Blacks in North were “free,” but not accorded civil liberties: –Denied housing, voting, schooling Even after “Emancipation Proclimation” schools were segregated –1896 Supreme Court decision (Plessy v. Ferguson reaffirmed “separate but equal” –1954: Brown v. Board: segregation not constitutional; Warren Court invoked “equal protection clause”

The Contribution of Curriculum to Contradictions within Common Schools ( ) Professed Goal of Common School--reduce antagonisms between rich and poor; But McGuffey Readers interpreted this charge as: Rich: learn sympathy for the poor; learn that ranking of rich and poor is “God’s will;” is a “Natural” condition; Poor: poverty is their natural condition; but can the poor work out of poverty? Therefore, helped to legitimate and rationalize the segregation of sons and daughters of "old” wealthy families and sons and daughters of poor families Protestant messages within McGuffey Readers reinforced capitalism: -- hard work as key to success -- honesty --gender roles

Contradictions Between Democratic Impulse and Actualization in Practice Stratified Schooling --The development of tracking --Segregation of rich and poor, blacks and whites, Catholics and Protestants Lessons: --Drill & practice/recitation inconsistent with call for thoughtful citizens --Reading and writing in the service of religious/moral training defined in explicitly Protestant terms

Some Contradictions of Assimilation Impulse Goal: Impart common values to unite peoples from different cultures who spoke different languages (Italian, Polish, Greek, Irish.) of new immigrants But school used overtly religious (Protestant) materials: McGuffey Readers & St James Bible Contributed to segregation of Protestants and Catholics in separate schools

Common School and Progressivism The “Progressive Movement” --“child saving” --protective social services --child labor laws --universal education

Dewey’s View of Education and Democracy Schooling to serve democratic ends: Critical thinking Prepare students for college and career: Bring outside world in Devolved into vocational education “College prep” separated from “voc ed”