American Decades
The Eight-Year Study and Other School Surveys
Studies and Tracking.
The practice of long-term empirical study of curriculum and education, begun in the 1920s, was expanded in the 1930s. Educators framed many new "surveys" to determine the success or failure of curricular innovation and new teaching techniques. These surveys were closely tied to controversies over educational philosophy and the political power and economic strength of certain communities. Their results were accordingly mixed and undermined by charges of partisanship. Despite their inconclusive nature, such surveys thrived in the 1930s.
The Eight-Year Study.
The most prominent curricular survey of the decade was the Eight-Year Study. The Commission on the Relation of School and College of the Progressive Education Association ran the study from 1933 to 1941 to evaluate the success of progressive education in placing students in traditional colleges and how well those individuals competed with...
[The entire page is 1209 words long]
1930's Education
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- The Depression and Education
- Education for African Americans
- The Eight-Year Study and Other School Surveys
- Folk Schools, Labor Colleges, and Other Experiments
- Loyalty Oaths, Red-Baiting, and Academic Freedom
- Management and Labor in Education
- The New Deal in Education
- Progressive Education and Social Reconstructions
- Rural Schools
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Education, 1930–1939
