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Showing 151 to 165 of 682 results
Robinson, Wendy – History of Education, 2011
Each summer between 1922 and 1938, up to 500 elementary school teachers from across Britain, and some from overseas, joined together in London for a two-week residential vacation course. Organised by Evans' Brothers Publishers and patronised by leading educationists, politicians and policy-makers, the City of London Vacation Course came to be…
Descriptors: Vacations, Elementary School Teachers, Professional Development, Educational Experiments
Leppanen, Katarina – History of Education, 2011
Internationalism in the interwar era carried different meaning for different groups. A Nordic school for adult education, with the aim of raising the "international citizenship proficiency" of the Nordic peoples, was established in Geneva in 1931, through cooperation between representatives of international organisations and adult educationists.…
Descriptors: Adult Education, International Education, Educational History, International Organizations
Curtis, Bruce – History of Education, 2011
A public debate over the market provision of schooling and the possibilities of monitorial pedagogy raged in the city of Quebec during the second decade of the nineteenth century. Debate intensified when a group of small merchant manufacturers organised a school association in 1818. The group was denounced by private venture schoolmasters as…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Urban Areas, Equal Education, Educational History
Takeda, Reiko – History of Education, 2011
This article considers the education and literacy practices of Bristol merchants involved in overseas trade in the sixteenth century by focusing on their business concerns. It argues that these demanded complex literacy skills and the discussion explores why writing was so central to their work. The merchants required specific training in order to…
Descriptors: Literacy, Foreign Countries, International Trade, Writing (Composition)
Ainley, Patrick – History of Education, 2011
How the dominance of the two medieval universities, namely, (1) The University of Oxford; and (2) The University of Cambridge, was gained and maintained is the subject of the institutional histories by Gillian Evans. She has long been a thorn in the side of successive Cambridge Vice-Chancellors' aspirations to turn that institution--at which she…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Medieval History, Higher Education, Educational History
Goodman, Joyce – History of Education, 2011
This article explores discursive languages through which leading women in the International Federation of University Women (IFUW) articulated their understandings of world citizenship and looks at what Caroline Spurgeon, the first President of the IFUW, called the "organised training of women to be citizens of the world." The central section…
Descriptors: Marital Status, Citizenship, Females, International Organizations
Pietsch, Tamson – History of Education, 2011
Since its Foundation in 1901, the Rhodes Scholarships scheme has been held up as the archetype of a programme designed to foster imperial citizens. However, though impressive in scale, Cecil Rhodes's foundation was not the first to bring colonial students to Britain. Over the course of the previous half-century, governments, universities and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Citizenship, Educational History, Males
Rogers, Rebecca – History of Education, 2011
Historians have long presented France's "civilizing mission" within its colonies in secular terms ignoring women's presence as both actors and subjects. This is particularly true in Algeria where the colonial government's explicitly prohibited proselytism. This article emphasizes women's roles pursuing both secular and religious goals in Algeria.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Foreign Policy, Ethical Instruction, Religious Education
Keating, Jenny – History of Education, 2011
This article looks at the way in which patriotism and citizenship were used almost interchangeably in educational circles during the first half of the twentieth century. It traces the development of patriotism, citizenship and civics teaching during this period by discussing the way in which the London County Council approached these areas in the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Citizenship, Citizenship Education, Patriotism
Myers, Kevin – History of Education, 2011
This article employs a broad concept of memory in order to examine the reconstruction of the past in various migrant religious and educational settings in the period after 1970. In educational projects designed to promote good community relations, and in attempts to develop non-dogmatic forms of religious belief, British history became the subject…
Descriptors: Religious Cultural Groups, Religion, Cultural Pluralism, Memory
Durst, Anne – History of Education, 2010
In 1896, John Dewey opened the Laboratory School at the University of Chicago. While much is known about this legendary school and its founder, the teachers whose daily work brought the school to life remain mostly anonymous. This essay attempts to remedy this historical invisibility by investigating four of the Laboratory School teachers--Anna…
Descriptors: Laboratory Schools, Experimental Schools, Educational History, Letters (Correspondence)
Lovheim, Daniel – History of Education, 2010
This article analyses the introduction and, later on, reconstruction of compulsory school technology in Sweden 1975-1995. It focuses on two curricular reforms and different attempts to increase the legitimacy of technology as a school subject. The article builds upon theories from science studies and the term boundary-work is used to analyse the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Epistemology, Technology Education, Intellectual Disciplines
McCulloch, Gary – History of Education, 2010
Brian Simon's "Studies in the History of Education", 1780-1870, published in 1960, set out to counter nearly all work previously produced on the history of education in Britain in this period, and to direct the field towards a new course. It provided a Marxist perspective that drew upon Simon's involvement in campaigns for educational reform over…
Descriptors: Educational History, Educational Change, Foreign Countries, Political Attitudes
Whitehead, Kay – History of Education, 2010
This article explores teacher educator Lillian de Lissa's working life in the first half of the twentieth century. In 1944 the McNair report criticised residential colleges and their female staff as isolated and intellectually impoverished. However, in Australia and then as the foundation Principal of Gipsy Hill Training College, de Lissa was not…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Academic Education, Foreign Countries, Teacher Educators
Middleton, Sue – History of Education, 2010
Henri Lefebvre suggested that social researchers engage in "the concrete analysis of rhythms" in order to reveal the "pedagogy of appropriation (the appropriation of the body, as of spatial practice)". Lefebvre's spatial analysis has influenced educational researchers, while the idea of "pedagogy" has travelled beyond education. This…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Research, Agricultural Laborers, Phenomenology

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