Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 February 2017
Commenting primarily on American and German educational historiography, Konrad H. Jarausch lamented that the “initial excitement” of the “new history of education” had abated and that education was no longer in the forefront of discussion in social or cultural history. Was this perception based upon an assumed coherence of the various trends which he described? Characteristic of the “new history,” according to Jarausch, had been, first, a radical criticism of the prevailing Whig tradition; secondly, a shift of focus from pedagogical ideas to social context; and thirdly, the adoption of social scientific techniques and quantification. All three features have contributed significantly to the development of research in British educational history, yet it would be artificial to postulate a unitary movement. Rather, various trends are visible, which reflect the institutional infrastructure within which history of education is produced in Britain. Changing priorities in and approaches to research in the history of education cannot be understood apart from the ties between the study of educational history and the institutional and research environments in which British historians and educationists work, as well as the wider context of contemporary educational politics.
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2 The need to take account of the institutional context of research has been mentioned in passing in Herbst, Jurgen, “The New History of Education in Europe,“ History of Education Quarterly 27 (Spring 1987): 55–61.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
3 Recent examples include the official History of the University of Oxford, a planned series of eight volumes, which began publication in 1984; Bush, Sargent Jr., and Rasmussen, Carl J., The Library of Emmanuel College, Cambridge, 1584–1637 (Cambridge, 1986); and for education beyond the formal institutions of learning, Nicholas Orme, From Childhood to Chivalry: The Education of the English Kings and Aristocracy, 1066–1530 (London, 1967); Morgan, John, Godly Learning: Puritan Attitudes towards Reason, Learning, and Education, 1560–1640 (Cambridge, 1986); and Chaney, Edward, “Quo Vadis? Travel as Education and the Impact of Italy in the Sixteenth Century,“ in International Currents in Educational Ideas and Practices: History of Education Society Conference Papers, 1987 (Leicester, 1988).Google Scholar
4 Of course, John Best's excellent collection indicates the diversity of the American enterprise in educational history, by no means all of which is geared to the progressivist/revisionist debate. Best, John H., ed., Historical Enquiry in Education: A Research Agenda (Washington, D.C., 1983).Google Scholar
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9 This conference attended to the relationship of a structural functionalist sociology to history in the study of education, and the use of quantification and social science concepts of class in educational history; later developments in sociological method have not received a great deal of attention within the orbit of the History of Education Society.Google Scholar
10 The conference proceedings are published annually by the Society. For details of availability and cost, write to: Starkey, Mrs. B. J., 4 Marydene Drive, Leicester LE5 6HD, United Kingdom.Google Scholar
11 The term most commonly used in Britain to mean education of physically and mentally handicapped, or “exceptional children.” A substantial study recently produced by a historian of considerable repute is: John Hurt, Outside the Mainstream: A History of Special Education (Batsford, 1988).Google Scholar
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34 One of the papers delivered was published: Grosvenor, Ian, “A Different Reality: Education and the Racialization of the Black Child,“ History of Education 16 (Dec. 1987): 299–308.Google Scholar
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