American Decades
Great Books Program
The American Dream and Self-Education.
The 1950s was a decade in which middle-class Americans sought to improve themselves through self-education. In this country the path of upward social mobility is clear-cut. First comes prosperity, then respectability, and one of the components of respectability is a liberal arts education. It was too late for newly prosperous adults to return to the classroom to get the knowledge they imagined they had missed the first time through, if they had been lucky enough to receive a college education: only about 6 percent of adults had college degrees in 1950. Self-education was the next best alternative, and it was offered through the highly touted Great Books program.
Bringing the Great Books to the Masses.
The Great Books Foundation was started in 1947 by Robert M. Hutchins, president of the University of Chicago, "to provide the means of general liberal education to all adults."...
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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
