American Decades
Overview
The State of Education.
In the first decade of the twentieth century most American children attended schools for no more than a few years, and from their limited education they and their parents were often content if they acquired only the most rudimentary literacy and numeracy skills. During this time American public education suffered from the fact that more than two-thirds of the nation's schools were rural, one-room schoolhouses—the educational equivalent of the horse and buggy; in these rural schoolhouses teachers who usu-ally had little formal education themselves faced the daunting task of instructing students who ranged in age from five to twenty years old. In the typical classroom, memorization, drill, and recitation were the standard teaching methods. Urban schools, by contrast, were usu-ally age-graded and had a longer school year, and urban schoolchildren sat in classrooms with desks bolted to the floor; but here,...
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1900's Education
- Overview
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Topics in the News
- The American University
- The Americanization Crusade and the Schools
- Changing Conceptions of Learning and Teaching
- College Life
- Curriculum for African Americans
- Efficiency and the Schools
- Hull House and Progressive Education
- Northeastern Prep Schools
- School Reform in the South
- Vocational Education
- Wealth, Philanthropy, and Educational Policy
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Education, 1900–1909
