American Decades
School and Society in Chicago
Nonfiction work
By: George S. Counts
Date: 1928
Source: Counts, George S. School and Society in Chicago. New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1928, 3–12.
About the Author: George S. Counts (1889–1974) earned a B.A. from Baker University and a Ph.D. from the University of Chicago. He taught at several universities before joining the faculty at Teachers College, Columbia University in 1927, where he remained until 1955. Counts was concerned with American democracy and education in the context of social and technological change. He was also a noted scholar in comparative education.
Introduction
The progressive education movement was characterized by a diversity of aims and viewpoints and evolved over the course of its existence from the late nineteenth century through the 1950s. Prior to World War I (1914–1918), progressives focused on social reform within...
[The entire page is 3535 words long]
1920's Education Primary Sources
- "Memoranda Accompanying the Vetoes of the Lusk Laws"
- Education on the Dalton Plan
- "Educational Determinism; Or Democracy and the I.Q."
- Meyer v. Nebraska
- "Children of Loneliness"
- "A Statement of the Principles of Progressive Education"
- Scopes v. Tennessee
- "The Teacher Goes Job-Hunting"
- Gong Lum v. Rice
- "Progressive Education and the Science of Education"
- School and Society in Chicago
- "Some 'Defects and Excesses of Present-Day Athletic Contests,' 1929"
- The Heart Is the Teacher
- Copyright Page
- Acknowledgments
