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The Child, the Community, and Clio: The Uses of Cultural History in Elementary School Experiments of the Eighteen-Nineties
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 February 2017
Extract
When American educational reformers surveyed the elementary school in the eighteen-nineties, three problems in particular distressed them. First, too many children exhibited a lack of interest when confronted by the joyless and often meaningless routine of learning the three R's. Second, the curriculum seemed irrelevant to the crisis through which American culture was passing on its way to urbanization and industrialization. The third problem, which grew in part out of attempts to resolve the first two difficulties, was the danger of overloading the curriculum of the common school with a host of new subjects which an explosion of specialized knowledge had made available. Charles McMurry, a leading American Herbartian, rejoiced in 1892 that “the old classical monopoly is finally and completely broken,” but he went on to warn that the common school course had become a “batch of miscellanies.” We are, he said, “in danger of over-loading pupils, as well as of making a superficial hodgepodge of all branches,” Educators who regarded themselves as adherents of the New Education now cast about with some urgency for a new elementary program that would incorporate material more relevant to the modern age and more appealing to children, without at the same time stretching the program of the school to impossible limits.
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- The New Democracy II
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- Copyright © 1967 by New York University
References
Notes
1. McMurry, Charles The Elements of General Method: Based on the Principles of Herbart (Bloomington, Illinois: Public School Publishing Company, 1892), pp. 16–17.Google Scholar
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22. Ibid. In 1897, Miss Scott presented a more elaborate description of the program in Organic Education (Ann Arbor, 1897), passim. Google Scholar
23. I have relied chiefly on the published reports of the school appearing in the University Record, and in The Dewey School (New York: D. Appleton-Century Company, Inc., 1936), prepared by Katharine Camp Mayhew and Anna Camp Edwards, the two first teachers. Since completing the first draft of the paper, however, I came across Arthur G. Wirth's John Dewey as Educator: His Design for Work in Education (1894-1904) (New York: John Wiley and Sons, Inc., 1966), which has compelled some revision. Wirth neglected the difficulties encountered by Dewey and his staff with the use of cultural history, but such events were not, of course, central to the impressive story that Wirth tells. I am grateful to Merle Borrowman for calling my attention to this book.Google Scholar
24. Dewey, “Ethical Principles Underlying Education,” National Herbart Society, Third Yearbook (1897), pp. 7–34; see especially pp. 21-23.Google Scholar
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28. McMurry, “The Culture Epochs,” National Herbart Society, Second Yearbook (1896), pp. 96–97.Google Scholar
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35. “Report of the University Elementary School,” University Record, III (April 1, 1898), 2-3. After 1898, the staff substituted American for Roman history, but still found that the biographical approach aroused most interest among the pupils: Georgia F. Bacon, “History,” Elementary School Record, I (November 1900), 204-8.Google Scholar
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