|
Product Description
The unknown history of American public education.
At a time when Americans are debating the future of public education, Johann N. Neem tells the inspiring story of how and why Americans built a robust public school system in the decades between the Revolution and the Civil War. It’s a story in which ordinary people in towns across the country worked together to form districts and build schoolhouses and reformers sought to expand tax support and give every child a liberal education. By the time of the Civil War, most northern states had made common schools free, and many southern states were heading in the same direction. Americans made schooling a public good.
Yet back then, like today, Americans disagreed over the kind of education needed, who should pay for it, and how schools should be governed. Neem explores the history and meaning of these disagreements. As Americans debated, teachers and students went about the daily work of teaching and learning. Neem takes us into the classrooms of yore so that we may experience public schools from the perspective of the people whose daily lives were most affected by them.
Ultimately, Neem concludes, public schools encouraged a diverse people to see themselves as one nation. By studying the origins of America’s public schools, Neem urges us to focus on the defining features of democratic education: promoting equality, nurturing human beings, preparing citizens, and fostering civic solidarity.
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
- The Freedom Schools: Student Activists in the Mississippi Civil Rights Movement
- Haitian Connections in the Atlantic World: Recognition after Revolution
- School: The Story of American Public Education
- Education for Extinction: American Indians and the Boarding School Experience, 1875-1928
- A Chance for Change: Head Start and Mississippi's Black Freedom Struggle (The John Hope Franklin Series in African American History and Culture)
- They Were Her Property: White Women as Slave Owners in the American South
- Making the Unequal Metropolis: School Desegregation and Its Limits (Historical Studies of Urban America)
- Diploma Mills: How For-Profit Colleges Stiffed Students, Taxpayers, and the American Dream
- The Education of Blacks in the South, 1860-1935
- The One Best System: A History of American Urban Education
*If this is not the "Democracy's Schools: The Rise of Public Education in America (How Things Worked)" product you were looking for, you can check the other results by clicking this link. Details were last updated on Oct 30, 2024 05:37 +08.