1 / 0

As American as Public Schools

As American as Public Schools. 1900 - 1950. Education at the Turn of the Century. 80% of 500 students said they would rather work than attend school 6% of students graduated in 1900 50% of children were in school Schools were scary due to inappropriate medical care

berke
Télécharger la présentation

As American as Public Schools

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. As American as Public Schools

    1900 - 1950
  2. Education at the Turn of the Century 80% of 500 students said they would rather work than attend school 6% of students graduated in 1900 50% of children were in school Schools were scary due to inappropriate medical care 1910 - 2 million children were in school
  3. The Gary Plan A new way of running public schools, including social, emotional, and physical content. The school’s goal was to make “every scholar a working man, and every working man a scholar.” Involved students switching classes many times a day. Students took part in running the school, (preparing materials, preparing lunch, etc.) Children were taught animal husbandry, art, and nature in addition to regular classroom work.
  4. School teaches American Way of Life Immigrants arrived in America and signed their children up for public school the very next day. With such high percentages of students being immigrants, the education system was seen as a way to socialize citizens to the “American” way of life. All subjects were taught in english Goal - Americanizing immigrants, including students and parents.
  5. WW1 Burned books written in German Began testing soldiers as a way to identify potential leaders
  6. Expansion of the School As the schools expanded and added new programs, new bureaucratic issues arose. High schools were being added at the rate of one per day
  7. Education as a Career Path Students stopped going to school because they wanted to be wise, they went in order to get a job. The IQ (Intelligence Quotient) test was introduced into the school system. This was originally used on US Army Recruits. Those who embraced the IQ scale, believed it should be used to push those with high IQ scores to be the leaders of the country. IQ scores were believed by some to determine the quality of a person and predict academic ability. IQ testing, which was very subjective, resulted in different scores for people of different ethnicities.
  8. IQ Continued The school system went really far with the “aptitude” tests. Tests showed what areas you were likely to be gifted in, and were very subjective. The problem with IQ testing was that it wrote off anyone without a high IQ score. Heavily reliant on analogy questions. This is a problem because these types of questions were very language/culture dependent. High school courses were determined by IQ scores.
  9. Industrial Training Schools Students who were judged incapable of handling challenging academic courses were forced into industrial training schools, training them for work in factories. Eventually, students were forced into separate schools based on their ethnicity. This is because it was assumed that non-anglo-American students were not likely to achieve academically.
  10. Life Adjustment Education Since the 60% of students that were not determined to be high achievers weren’t getting much out of school, “life adjustment education” was created. This taught average students about the basic skills of life: Dating etiquette, making fishing lures, grooming, how to choose a dentist, etc. Eventually, this was removed, because it became obvious about how silly it is to think that an average American needs help to do basic life tasks. Academics were soon returned to the classroom.
  11. Cold War Politics Socialism and collectivism were evil words during this time period. Schools threw out textbooks that mentioned anything resembling these concepts. After the USSR launched Sputnik, the US was very interested in advancing the education system to keep up with Russia. Funding was poured into the public school system, but with a defined interest in math and science.
More Related