American Decades
Overview
Transition.
The 1940s were a decade of profound change at all levels of American education. Primary and secondary education, for the most part underfunded, poorly organized, and inefficient, became more standardized, better organized, and properly funded. Higher education, divided between progressive educational advances and the lingering traditions of nineteenth-century "gentleman's" education, became definitively modern. The new university offered students unprecedented social and academic freedom, restructured its pedagogy to emphasize the sciences, professionalized its humanities curriculum, and integrated its activities with government and industry. American education was in a decade of transition, well on its way to becoming standardized, professional, scientific, and national.
World War II.
The major catalyst for these changes was World War II. The war exposed the deficiencies of American education. Millions...
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1940's Education
- Overview
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Topics in the News
- Academic Freedom
- American Education Abroad
- The Core Curriculum and the Great Books Project
- Federal Aid
- Gi Bill of Rights
- High-School Curriculum
- Problems in Higher Education
- Research and Educational Sociology
- Secularization of Public Education
- Segregation in the Schools
- Teacher Shortages and Strikes
- Women in Education
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Education, 1940–1949
