American Decades
Vocational Education
Vocationalism.
As American schools underwent intense transformation in the decade of 1900-1909, probably no aspect of their transformation was more fundamental than the introduction of vocational education into the classroom. Increasingly in these years, the nation's schools assumed the task of training workers who could operate productively in the changing economy. This development happened at a time when many Americans thought it appropriate that the public schools should help enhance the nation's economic growth, and the wide-spread acceptance of vocationalism by the schools meant they were becoming closely aligned with economic concerns. In fact, the philosophical basis for schooling in the United States increasingly changed as vocationalism became more prevalent in the schools. In earlier times workers learned vocational skills from the family, from apprenticeships, or from other less formal arrangements. In the new...
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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
