American Decades
People in the News
From 1905 to 1909 the world-famous leader of the settlement house movement, Jane Addams, served as a member of the Chicago Board of Education. Ap-pointed by a reform mayor, Addams was nevertheless unsuccessful in her efforts to change the type of curriculum offered to students in the public schools or the pedagogical practices of the schools' teachers.
In 1904 Edwin A. Alderman, after serving as president of the University of North Carolina and Tulane University, started his twenty-seven-year tenure as president of the University of Virginia. As university president, Alderman pushed for educational reform in the elementary and secondary schools of the South.
In 1907 William C. Bagley published his popular text-book Classroom Management, in which he argued that teachers should run classrooms like a business enterprise. The book went through more than thirty printings during the next two decades and...
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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
