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Educational Psychology and Social Reform in the Progressive Era
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 February 2017
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This paper seeks to determine, in effect, why educational psychology as it professionalized and assumed the mantle of “science” after 1905 rejected the social point of view that characterized the thought of so many of the period's educational reformers and practicing educators. The principal components of this social point of view were the efforts to broaden the concept of education from training in academic disciplines to education for life in the community; to see education as a part of a larger social process and to shape educational policy accordingly; and to see education in general and schooling in particular as engines for reforming American society. This cluster of attitudes —which I will group under the term socialized education, following Jane Addams, emerged in the progressive era as the foundation underlying both Dewey's efforts to ally the school and society and, to take a single example from the other side of the coin, David Snedden's commitment to using education to promote social efficiency. But the leading educational psychologists of our period did not share this expanded educational point of view; indeed they can be said to have reverted to the view that education was predominantly the teaching of academic disciplines in schools. The questions that occur to me are “why?” and “so what?” I have no sure answers to either question, but I do have some suggestions that I hope will be provocative.
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- Copyright © 1971 History of Education Quarterly
References
Notes
1. The two sides of the coin are described, respectively, in Cremin, Lawrence A., The Transformation of the School: Progressivism in American Education, 1876–1957 (New York, 1962), chs. 1–6, and Krug, Edward, The Shaping of the American High School (New York, 1964). Little work has been published on the history of educational psychology in this period. Most helpful are Geraldine Joncich, The Sane Positivist: A Biography of Edward L. Thorndike (Middletown, Conn., 1968); Watson, Robert I., “A Brief History of Educational Psychology,” Psychological Record 11 (July 1961) : 209–42; and McDonald, Frederick J., “The Influence of Learning Theories on Education (1900–1950)” in Theories of Learning and Instruction, The Sixty-third Yearbook of the National Society for the Study of Education, ed. Hilgard, Ernest R., Part I (Chicago, 1964), pp. 1–26.Google Scholar
2. Dewey, John, “Psychology and Social Practice” (Address of the President before the American Psychological Association, New Haven, 1899), Psychological Review 7 (March 1900): 105–24. The quotations come from pp. 114, 120–21.Google Scholar
3. Ibid., p. 105.Google Scholar
4. See, e.g., besides Krug, Shaping of the American High School: Drost, Walter H., David Snedden and Education for Social Efficiency (Madison, Wisc., 1967); Tyack, David B., “Ellwood P. Cubberley,” DAB, Supplement III, forthcoming; Joel Spring, “Education and Progressivism,” HISTORY OF EDUCATION QUARTERLY 10 (Spring 1970) : 53–71.Google Scholar
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15. Cubberley, Ellwood P., The History of Education: Educational Practice and Progress Considered As a Phase of the Development and Spread of Western Civilization (Boston, 1920), p. 755.Google Scholar
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