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The Origins of Public Education: A Reassessment

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 February 2017

Michael B. Katz*
Affiliation:
York University, Toronto

Extract

During the last fifteen years a modest revolution took place in the historiography of education. Historians rejected both the metaphor and the method which had characterized the record of the educational past. The method had divorced inquiry into the development of educational practices and institutions from the mainstream of historical scholarship and left it narrow, antiquated, and uninteresting. The metaphor portrayed education as a flower of democracy planted in a rich and liberating loam which its seeds continually replenished.

Type
Article I
Copyright
Copyright © 1976 by New York University 

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References

Notes

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31. See note 22.Google Scholar

32. Katz, and Davey, , “Youth and Early Industrialization”.Google Scholar

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37. Davey, , “Educational Reform”.Google Scholar

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39. Davis, , ibid; Kraditor, Aileen S., “American Radical Historians on their Heritage” Past and Present, no. 56 (August 1972): 141–142.Google Scholar

40. Thernstrom, , Poverty and Progress, p. 58.Google Scholar

41. Kraditor, , ibid; Gutman, , “Work, Culture and Society”.Google Scholar

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44. Jencks, Christopher et. al., Inequality: A Reassessment of the Effects of Family and Schooling in America (New York, 1974); Bowles, and Gintis, , Schooling ; Katz, , Irony, pp. 39–40; Davey, , “Educational Reform”.Google Scholar