Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t8hqh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-03T19:22:59.779Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

“Make Your Voice Heard”: Communism in the High School Curriculum, 1958–1968

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Campbell F. Scribner*
Affiliation:
History and Educational Policy at the University of Wisconsin
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Extract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

The launch of Sputnik in 1957 sparked a crisis in American education. Suddenly threatened by superior Soviet technology, progressive educators' concern for children's preferences, health, and adjustment in school yielded to public demands for more basic learning and academic skills. Congress soon passed the National Defense Education Act, providing millions of dollars for math, science, and foreign language instruction. By the early 1960s, educators and academics began to reexamine other aspects of the curriculum as well. Their efforts prompted two changes in the social studies: one was a shift from worksheets and memorization to the investigative approach of the “new social studies,” the other a requirement that schools teach about the specter of international Communism. Much has been written about the first of these reforms, surprisingly little about the second. Yet, insofar as the new social studies grew out of Cold War imperatives, instruction about Communism provides an interesting perspective on its tenure in American schools. In fact, a closer examination of the relationship between the two might force us to reconsider current assumptions about the nature of curriculum reform during the period.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2012 History of Education Society 

References

1 Fenton, Edwin, The New Social Studies (New York: Holt, Reinhart, and Winston, 1967), 13; George Barr Carson Jr., “The Study of Russia in Secondary Education,” in American Teaching About Russia, eds. Black, Cyril and Thompson, John M. (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1959): 158–89.Google Scholar

2 Evans, Ronald W., The Social Studies Wars: What Should We Teach the Children? (New York: Teachers College Press, 2004), 134; Hertzberg, Hazel, Social Studies Reform, 1880–1980 (Boulder, CO: Social Science Education Consortium, 1981), 118; Dow, Peter, Schoolhouse Politics: Lessons From the Sputnik Era (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1991), 178–228; Jenness, David, Making Sense of Social Studies (New York: McMillan, 1990), 135, 143.Google Scholar

3 Hartman, Andrew, Education and the Cold War: The Battle for the American School (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008), 6, 188–96; “Roundtable on Hartman's Education and the Cold War (Part IV),” U.S. Intellectual History (blog), 5 August 2008, accessed 15 January 2011, http://us-intellectual-history.blogspot.com/2008/08/roundtable-on-hartmans-education-and_8592.html.Google Scholar

4 Evans, Ronald, The Hope for American School Reform: The Cold War Pursuit of Inquiry Learning in Social Studies (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011), 2.Google Scholar

5 In addition to Evans's The Hope for American School Reform, brief but evenhanded scholarly treatment can be found in Jonathan Zimmerman, Whose America? Culture Wars in the Public Schools (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2002). For a more critical appraisal see, Riley, Karen L. and Kysilka, Marcella L., “Florida's ‘Americanism versus Communism': Social Studies Curricula and the Politics of Fear,” Internationale Schulbuchforschung 25 (2003): 2740. An Internet search yields numerous references to Florida's AVC curriculum by journalists and memoirists.Google Scholar

6 Although units on Communism went by several names and were incorporated into different programs, their stated purposes, curriculum guides, and reading lists were almost identical. Thus, this paper will use the acronym AVC to reference any course or unit that contrasted Communism with American democracy and capitalism during the period studied.Google Scholar

7 Discussion of the difficulties of generalization can be found, for example, in Kate Rousmaniere, “Losing Patience and Staying Professional: Women Teachers and the Problem of Classroom Discipline in New York City Schools in the 1920s,” History of Education Quarterly, 34, no. 1 (Spring, 1994): 4968; and Cuban, Larry, How Teachers Taught: Constancy and Change in American Classrooms, 1890–1980 (New York: Longman Press, 1984).Google Scholar

8 See Whitfield, Stephen J., The Culture of the Cold War (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996), 5658; or, for greater depth, Wall, Wendy, Inventing the American Way: The Politics of Consensus from the New Deal to the Civil Rights Movement (New York: Oxford University Press, 2008).Google Scholar

9 Evans, , Social Studies Wars, 134, 125.Google Scholar

10 For more on Sputnik and the NDEA, see Barbara Barksdale Clowse, Brainpower for the Cold War: The Sputnik Crisis and the National Defense Education Act of 1958 (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1982); and Urban, Wayne J., More Than Science and Sputnik: The National Defense Education Act of 1958 (Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 2010). On the reform of science education and the role of the National Science Foundation, see John Rudolph, Scientists in the Classroom: The Cold War Reconstruction of American Science Education (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2002).Google Scholar

11 The “new social studies” itself began at a similar conference in the Endicott House at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1962. Dow, Schoolhouse Politics; 41–54.Google Scholar

12 The notion of “two cultures” comes from Conant's contemporary, Snow, C. P., The Two Cultures and the Scientific Revolution (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1959); Dow, Schoolhouse Politics, 34–40.Google Scholar

13 Jenness, David, Making Sense of Social Studies (New York: McMillan, 1990), 686–94.Google Scholar

14 Fenton, , The New Social Studies, 41–42, 60, 63.Google Scholar

15 Jenness, , Making Sense of Social Studies, 131; Evans, , Social Studies Wars, 123; Fenton, , The New Social Studies, 99–103.Google Scholar

16 Mallery, David, Teaching About Communism: A Definition of the Problem and a Description of Some Practices (Boston: National Assn. of Independent Schools, 1962), 14; Zelman, Annette, Teaching About Communism in American Public Schools (New York: Humanities Press, 1965), 31.Google Scholar

17 Sistrunk, Walter, “The Teaching of Americanism versus Communism in Florida Secondary Schools,” (PhD dissertation, University of Florida, 1966), 6; Reed, Calvin H. and Caha, Evelyn, “Teaching About Communism in Nebraska's Junior High Schools,” Social Education, XXII (April, 1958): 178–80.Google Scholar

18 Mansuscript, n.d.; Putnam, Rex, “School Guide: Great Decisions, 1957,” Oregon Department of Public Instruction, Foreign Policy Association Records, Wisconsin Historical Society Archives. Hereafter cited as FPA Records.Google Scholar

19 In 1960, a school board in Cincinnati, under pressure from the John Birch Society, voted to remove the Foreign Policy Association's “Great Decisions” program at one Cincinnati school because “the program ‘subtly and insidiously’ promoted a ‘subversive line of compromise, coexistence and surrender… to world communism.” Welch, Robert, John Birch Society Bulletin (September, 1962): 10.Google Scholar

20 The Legion had conducted “Americanism” classes both in and outside of schools since World War I, when the same, binary structure contrasted democracy with “autocracy” or “kaiserism.” Gruber, Carol S., Mars and Minverva: World War I and the Uses of Higher Learning in America (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1975), 131.Google Scholar

21 Sister Rose Colley et al., Teaching About Communism in Kentucky Schools (Frankfort, KY: Kentucky Department of Education, 1967), I; Zelman, , Teaching About Communism, 7; Rorty, James, “Is Teaching Communism Necessary?” and Richard Rorty, “Second Thoughts on Teaching Communism,” Teachers College Record 63, no. 7 (April 1962): 686–94; Hook, Sidney, “Challenging Study: Challenge of Communism,” New York Times, 13 October 1963.Google Scholar

22 In addition to John Colgrove, Democracy versus Communism (Princeton, NJ: Institute of Fiscal and Political Education, 1957), the most frequently used books were William, J. Miller et al., The Meaning of Communism (Morristown, NJ: Silver Burdett Co., 1963); Rodger Swearingen, The World of Communism: Answers to the 100 Questions Most Often Asked by American High School Students (Boston, MA: Houghton-Mifflin Company, 1961); and J. Edgar Hoover's Masters of Deceit (New York: Holt, 1958). Although these remained somewhat one-sided, in all they were much more accurate than previous texts had been. Berman, Marvin Herschel, “The Treatment of the Soviet Union and Communism in Selected World History Textbooks, 1920–1970” (PhD dissertation, University of Michigan, 1976), 208209, 215–218.Google Scholar

23 Public Law (PL) 233.064, Florida State Statutes, 1961.Google Scholar

24 Evans, , Social Studies Wars, 123, 125; Hook, Sidney, “Challenging Study: Challenge of Communism,” New York Times, 13 October 1963; American Bar Association, Democracy Confronts Communism in World Affairs: Suggested Syllabus, Bibliography, and Guides for Teacher Training (Columbia: University of South Carolina Institute of International Studies, 1965).Google Scholar

25 Mallery, , Teaching About Communism, 5–6.Google Scholar

26 Zelman, , Teaching About Communism, 17; Friedman, Howard Jay to Powell, James O., 21 August 1961, Education in Florida Subject Files (MS Group 149), University of Florida Archives. For more on both Harding College and the Young Americans for Freedom, see Jonathan Schoenwald, A Time for Choosing: The Rise of Modern Conservatism (New York: Oxford University Press, 2001); and Perlstein, Rick, Before the Storm: Barry Goldwater and the Unmaking of American Consensus (New York: Hill and Wang, 2001).Google Scholar

27 Teaching Americanism Program Was Dropped,” St. Petersburg Times, 12 February 1962; Cook, Fred, “The Ultras,” The Nation, 23 June 1962.Google Scholar

28 Sandberg, Bruce LeRoy, “Content Analysis of State Education Department Guidebooks on Teaching about Communism in Terms of a Theory of Teaching,” (PhD dissertation, University of Illinois, 1966), 7; Campbell, Daniel R., “Right-Wing Extremists and the Sarasota Schools, 1960–1966,” Tampa Bay History 6, no. 1 (1984): 16–26.Google Scholar

29 Many school boards nationwide showed propaganda films like Communism on the Map and Operation Abolition of their own volition. Schneider, Gregory L., Cadres for Conservatism: Young Americans for Freedom and the Rise of the Contemporary Right (New York: NYU Press, 1999), 64; Miller, Richard I., Teaching About Communism (New York: McGraw Hill, 1966), 36; Zelman, , Teaching About Communism, 25; Le Roi Eversull, E., “The Americanism versus Communism Unit,” unpublished dissertation, Louisiana State University, 1964, 40; O'Leary, Richard James, “A Comparison of the Opinions of Lay and Professional Groups Concerning Generalizations and Understandings About Communism That Should Be Examined in High School Classes,” unpublished dissertation, Boston University, 1968, 100.Google Scholar

30 Arveson, , “What Is Taught Today on Russia in American Secondary Schools,” National Association of Secondary Schools Principals Bulletin, March 1959, XLIII, Part II, 121–136; Zelman, , Teaching About Communism, 19. Teacher training workshops continued around the country well into the 1970s meeting with mixed reviews. See Margaret Donovan et al., Teaching About Communism and the Communist World (Whitewater, WI: Whitewater Forum, 1963); Portzline, Donnell B., Teaching About Communism: A Resource Book (Wheeling, WV: Boyd Press, 1976); Miller, , Teaching About Communism, 30.Google Scholar

31 Zelman, , Teaching About Communism, 19.Google Scholar

32 Rosen, Christine, My Fundamentalist Education: A Memoir of a Divine Girlhood (New York: PublicAffairs Books, 2005), 119; Gurwitch, Annabelle, “Worst News of the Year,” The Nation, 31 March 2008.Google Scholar

33 Teachers Held Red Course Hitch,” Florida Times-Union, 25 October 1961.Google Scholar

34 Zimmerman, , Whose America?, 105–106.Google Scholar

35 Arveson, Beth, “What Is Taught Today,” 121–136.Google Scholar

36 Delaware Department of Public Instruction, The Challenge of Our Times: Democracy Faces Communism (Dover: State of Delaware, 1963), 1924.Google Scholar

37 Mallery, , Teaching About Communism, 7–9; Zelman, , Teaching About Communism, 24.Google Scholar

38 Janson, Donald, “Eye ‘Americanism’ Plan After McGuffey Victory,” Des Moines Sunday Register, 5 November 1961.Google Scholar

39 Patriotism New Issue at Twin Lakes,” Kenosha News, 2 November 1961; “Real Issue Comes to Light,” Racine Journal, 30 October 1961; Kienitz, Richard C., “US History Stressed at Twin Lakes Rally,” Milwaukee Journal, 8 November 1961.Google Scholar

40 “What Should We Teach About Communism?” Newsletter (Wisconsin: Department of Public Instruction, April 1962).Google Scholar

41 Kaub, Verne to Scott, R.K., 8 September 1958, American Council of Christian Laymen Records, Wisconsin Historical Society Archives.Google Scholar

42 One participant, for example, encouraged his son to gather “evidence” on his history teacher by sneaking a tape recorder into the classroom in a hollow book. Robinson, Donald W., “The Teachers Take a Birching,” Phi Delta Kappan 43, no. 5 (February 1962). Zelman, , Teaching About Communism, 33.Google Scholar

43 Mallery, , Teaching About Communism, 43; Zelman, , Teaching About Communism, 25.Google Scholar

44 A survey of three hundred sixty-eight Midwestern schools in 1962 found that 57 percent of them listed “Communism” as the primary topic of their “Problems” course. O'Leary, Richard James, “A Comparison of the Opinions of Lay and Professional Groups Concerning Generalizations and Understandings About Communism That Should Be Examined in High School Classes,” unpublished dissertation, Boston University, 1968, 87; Mohan, Geoffrey, “Growing Pains,” in “Long Island: Our Story, Levittown at Fifty,” Newsday, 28 September 1997.Google Scholar

45 Zelman, , Teaching About Communism, 7; “This We Teach: Democracy, The American Heritage, and where appropriate about Communism,” Milwaukee Public Schools, 1963, Elisabeth Holmes Papers, Wisconsin Historical Society Archives.Google Scholar

46 Mallery, , Teaching About Communism, 9.Google Scholar

47 Interview with Ed Gollnick, Tape 3, Side 1, Wisconsin Education Association Council Records, Wisconsin Historical Society Archives.Google Scholar

48 Aberg, Sherrill, “Teaching About Socialism in an Introductory History Course,” in Teaching the New Social Studies in Secondary Schools: An Inductive Approach, ed. Fenton, Edwin (New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1966), 201203.Google Scholar

49 O'Leary, Richard James, “A Comparison of the Opinions of Lay and Professional Groups Concerning Generalizations and Understandings About Communism That Should Be Examined in High School Classes,” unpublished dissertation, Boston University, 1968, 80. See also, Remmers, H. H. and Radler, D. H., The American Teenager (New York: Charter, 1957), 125, 133.Google Scholar

50 Zelman, , Teaching About Communism, 35; O'Leary, , “Comparison,” 4.Google Scholar

51 Campus Section,” Los Angeles Examiner, 4 November 1961.Google Scholar

52 Evans, , Social Studies Wars, 134.Google Scholar

53 Mallery, , Teaching About Communism, 22.Google Scholar

54 Mitchell, Paul, interview with author, 20 September 2008. Mitchell's course produced future Russianists Kevin Platt, now a professor of Slavic studies at the University of Pennsylvania, and Jehanne Gheith, a professor of Slavic and Eurasian studies at Duke University.Google Scholar

55 The Communism in American Life Series began with Theodore Draper, The Roots of American Communism (New York: Viking Press, 1957); Iversen, Robert, The Communists and the Schools (New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1959); and Shannon, David A., The Decline of American Communism (New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1959).Google Scholar

56 Mallery, , Teaching About Communism, 37.Google Scholar

57 Memorandum, 8 May 1957; Mansuscript, n.d.; Putnam, Rex, Oregon Supt. Of Public Instruction, “School Guide: Great Decisions, 1957,” FPA Records.Google Scholar

58 Miller, , Teaching About Communism, 158.Google Scholar

59 Conference program, 5 April 1962, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Institute of World Affairs Records, 1952–1994, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Archival Collection.Google Scholar

60 Conference program, 27 April 1963, World Affairs Council of Milwaukee Records, Wisconsin Historical Society Archives. Hereafter cited as WACM Records.Google Scholar

61 Arthur Rumpf to Ralph Rosenbaum, 10 May 1965. “An Invitation to Teachers and Students of Social Studies,” December 1966, WACM Records. See also, Zimmerman, Jonathan, Innocents Abroad: American Teachers in the American Century (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2006), 198205.Google Scholar

62 Rubin, Marjorie, “Old Activity, New Twist,” New York Times, 22 April 1962; Mallery, David, High School Students Speak Out (New York: Harper and Brothers, 1962), 9192; and Wall, , Inventing the American Way, 258–70. See also, Leppert, Glenn Wesley, “Dwight D. Eisenhower and People-to-People as an Experiment in Personal Diplomacy: A Missing Element for Understanding Eisenhower's Second Term as President,” unpublished dissertation, Kansas State University, 2003.Google Scholar

63 Hertzberg, , Social Studies Reform, 118; Evans, , Social Studies Wars, 134; Jessens, , Making Sense of Social Studies, 143.Google Scholar

64 Stevens, William K., “The Social Studies: A Revolution Is On,” New York Times, 30 April 1972.Google Scholar

65 Riley, and Kysilka, , “Florida's ‘Americanism versus Communism,” 27–40.Google Scholar

66 Conference program, 5–7 April 1962, UW-M Institute of World Affairs Records, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Archival Collections; Edward, A. Purcell Jr. The Crisis of Democratic Theory: Scientific Naturalism and the Problem of Value (Lexington: University of Kentucky Press, 1973), 269271.Google Scholar

67 Swearingen, , The World of Communism, 244.Google Scholar