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“The Children and the Instruments of a Militant Labor Progressivism:” Brookwood Labor College and the American Labor College Movement of the 1920s and 1930s
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 February 2017
Extract
When labor strikes, it says to its master: I shall no longer work at your command. When it votes for a party of its own, it says: I shall no longer vote at your command. When it creates its own classes and colleges, it says: I shall no longer think at your command. Labor's challenge to education is the most fundamental of the three.
Henry de Man (1921)
A growing body of literature is calling for the historical study of educational experiences outside of the realm of the established school system. Lawrence Cremin has recommended that educational historians move beyond the traditional analysis of schools and colleges. In Traditions of American Education, he broadly defines education “as the deliberate, systematic, and sustained effort to transmit, evoke, or acquire knowledge, values, skills, or sensibilities, as well as any outcomes of that effort.“ Herbert Gutman similarly urges that educational historians transcend the exclusive study of institutional history by exploring such untouched areas as the “selfactivity” of workers and its relationship to class development and class formation. Rolland Paulston delineates a theoretical framework to ascertain the social and economic conditions, ideological bases, programmatic characteristics, and contributions of “nonformal education” in social movements. He posits that nonformal education functions as structured, systematic, nonschool education that relies upon training activities of relatively short duration and involves a fairly distinct target population. “It is, in sum, education that does not advance to a higher level of the hierarchical formal school system.”
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References
Notes
1. Cremin, Lawrence, Traditions of American Education (New York, 1977), p. 134. Also, see the “Preface” to Cremin, Lawrence, American Education: The Colonial Experience, 1607–1783 (New York, 1970). A prototype of this paper was presented to the “Beyond the System: New Research on the History of Urban Education Conference,” Teachers College, Columbia University, December 12–13, 1980.Google Scholar
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25. “Brookwood Students Out on Strike—But Not Against Brookwood,” Brookwood Review, Apr. 1923, p. 3. Also, see “Students Help Win New York Garment Strike,” Brookwood Review, Mar. 1926, p. 1.Google Scholar
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31. Twelfth Anniversary Review, p. 10.Google Scholar
32. Muste, , The Essays of A. J. Muste, p. 102; Brookwood Fifteenth Anniversary Review (Katonah, New York, 1936), contains many photographs of graduating classes which attests to the diversity of the student body. Thomas, Ben, “The Negro Problem,” Brookwood Review, May 1925, p. 2; “Negroes Can Organize Is Conference Feature,” Brookwood Review, Oct.-Nov. 1927, p. 4; “Negro Workers' Problems, Conference Subject,” Brookwood Review, Feb. 1931, p. 2; “Drive Planned to Aid Negroes in Industry,” The New York Times, 2 Jan. 1931, p. 6, col. 7. Grubbs, Donald, Cry From the Cotton: The Southern Tenant Farmers' Union and the New Deal (Chapel Hill, 1971); Raymond, and Koch, Charlotte, Educational Commune: The Story of Commonwealth College (New York, 1972); “United Front Formed at Commonwealth,” Fortnightly, 15 Feb. 1935, p. 3, “Sharecroppers' Union Greets Commonwealth,” Fortnightly, 15 Jan. 1936, p. 1.Google Scholar
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35. Smith, Tucker P., “Workers Prepare for Power,” Progressive Education, 11 (1934): 303–306; “Are Commonwealth Teachers ‘Good’ Teachers?” Fortnightly, 1 July 1932, p. 2.Google Scholar
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41. Dewey asked Muste to examine a draft of his speech to the Teachers Union in New York City. A draft of the speech as well as correspondence between Dewey and Muste appears in AFL Correspondence, 1928–29, Brookwood Collection, Box 17, Folder 16, Wayne State University: “Denounced Action on Brookwood,” The New York Times, 10 Nov. 1928, p. 7, col. 2; “New York Teachers Protest AFL Action,” Brookwood Review, Oct.-Nov. 1938, p. 4.Google Scholar
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