American Decades
The Changing Curriculum
A Different Look at Language.
During the 1960s, students at all levels not only studied newly offered subjects, they also found many familiar disciplines taught in such a different way as to be almost unrecognizable. The National Defense Education Act, which had been extended from its original 1958 version, had introduced foreign-language education into hundreds of schools that had not previously offered it. By 1966 more than three thousand undergraduates were getting intensive training in thirty-six languages during summer programs at more than twenty-two institutions through provisions in that act. Many of these students were later employed in secondary schools, so that more high-school students than ever had a chance to learn a second language. For elementary and secondary students studying their native language, some dramatic changes were in store. Advances in the study of English by linguists Paul Postal and Noam Chomsky at...
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1960's Education
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Expansion of the Federal Role in Education
- The Changing Curriculum
- College Officials and the Morals Revolution
- How Student Unrest Changed Higher Education
- The Origins of Bilingual Education
- Progressive Education Versus Basic Education
- Shortages of Teachers, Professors
- The Military Goes to School
- Technology and Education
- Public-School Integration
- Montessori Schools
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Education, 1960–1969
