American Decades
Federal Funding for Education
Federal funding for education was controversial during the 1950s. Social and political events shaped education and how it was financed. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce reported in 1950 that the annual cost of educating a pupil, adjusted for inflation, rose 37 percent over the previous decade (from $92 per pupil per year in 1940 to $232 in 1950 in dollars of the day; by 1960 per pupil expenditure for education rose to $433). The funding from all sources needed for pupil education during the 1950s reached over $15 billion by 1959. However, the percentage of national income spent on education had dropped from 15.31 percent in 1940 to 8.24 percent in 1950 and was predicted to drop more during the 1950s. (In fact, the percentage rose slightly during the decade.) Educators and social observers argued for more federal aid to education as a means of ensuring the ability of the nation to compete in the world economy and to keep pace in the age of...
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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
