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THE DEVELOPMENT OF TEACHING AS A PROFESSION FOR WOMEN BEFORE 1870

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 February 2002

CHRISTINA DE BELLAIGUE
Affiliation:
Clare Hall, Cambridge

Abstract

This article argues that the development of teaching as a profession for women in England has often been written using an anachronistic and gendered conception of the term ‘profession’. A closer examination of the work of middle-class schoolmistresses in the first part of the nineteenth century reveals that the image of the amateurish governess was in part a fiction, which concealed the commitment and expertise of many women teachers. The mid-century reformers drew on this earlier tradition of feminine pedagogy and did not simply adopt the standards of boys’ education and their male peers. On the contrary, they contributed to the ongoing process by which teachers of both sexes sought to claim the status and authority of the ‘learned professions’. However, by the 1870s, the pressure to conform to the dominant model in boys’ education meant that this independent strand in education had largely been eclipsed.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2001 Cambridge University Press

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Footnotes

I wish to thank my supervisor, Gillian Sutherland, for her continued encouragement and particularly for her comments on this article. I have also benefited from the discussion of an earlier version given to the Cambridge Modern British History graduate workshop. My research has been generously supported by a postgraduate studentship from the Arts and Humanities Research Board.