American Decades
Adult Education
In an effort to rectify the problems of increased dropout rates, the importance of adult education increased during the 1950s. The average American worker had not completed high school. In 1950 only 58.2 percent of all fifth-graders would eventually graduate from high school. At a time when science and mathematics were becoming a matter of national defense, improving the quality of the adult population became a priority.
Vocational and life-skills training comprised the most common courses and most effective solutions available. Those courses, offered in home economics, trade and industry, agriculture, and health-related fields, provided Americans with practical training for employment. The students who would have left school or those who had left school could now be educated for the employment they sought. And those students would also increase their annual incomes: skilled workers earned an average of two thousand dollars more per...
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1950's Education
- Overview
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Topics in the News
- Adult Education
- Church vs. State
- Curricula
- Desegregating Education
- John Dewey and Progressive Education
- Drafting College Students
- Federal Funding for Education
- Great Books Program
- Midcentury White House Conference on Children and Youth
- National Defense Education Act of 1958
- Office of Education and Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (Hew)
- President's Committee on Education Beyond the High School
- Quality in Education?
- Funding the Future Through R and D
- The "Red Scare" in Education
- Report Cards
- School Dropouts
- School Shortages
- Teachers
- Television's Effect on Education
- U.S. vs. Soviet Schools
- White House Conference on Education
- Why Johnny Can't Read
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Awards
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Education, 1950–1959
