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The media is full of reference to failing schools, troublesome
pupils, underperforming boys, disappearing childhood and a teaching
profession in crisis as more and more teachers contemplate
abandoning their careers. Key Questions in Education looks at the
current and historical debates of each of these issues, examining
how a multitude of stakeholders have viewed, and still view,
childhood and schooling. In highlighting how these same or similar
issues have persistently been debated throughout time, John T.
Smith shows something of their complexity and the need to break
apart these key enduring questions in education. Each chapter
covers a key question such as: How far should the state interfere
in education? Should schools feed their pupils? and Why do children
misbehave? Analysing each key question, chapters discuss how such
issues were viewed or defined in the past, what solutions and
outcomes were envisaged and compare and contrast how this relates
to where we are now. Clear links are made throughout between
historical sources and current ideology, policy, practice and
research. In opening up these debates through case studies and
vignettes, students are encouraged to reflect on how these
contentious issues might be resolved and how this affects them as
future educators.
This book has three interlocking themes. It is concerned first with
the advance and subsequent decline of the Wesleyan Methodist
efforts in education during the nineteenth century. Secondly, it is
about Dr James Harrison Rigg, an irascible and self-opinionated
Victorian minister who became Principal of Westminster Methodist
Training College and President of the Methodist Conference. He had
a dominant influence over his church for many years and dictated
its education policy. He also gained the ear of many in government
who were formulating educational legislation, and the book assesses
his influence on government ideas. The final and overriding theme
of the book is the anti-Catholicism within the Methodist church
throughout the nineteenth century, which influenced Wesleyan
attitudes towards government education policy in general and
towards Anglican `Tractarian' schools in particular. The book is
invaluable for students of nineteenth century religious history and
is worthwhile for others interested in ecclesiastical history.
The media is full of reference to failing schools, troublesome
pupils, underperforming boys, disappearing childhood and a teaching
profession in crisis as more and more teachers contemplate
abandoning their careers. Key Questions in Education looks at the
current and historical debates of each of these issues, examining
how a multitude of stakeholders have viewed, and still view,
childhood and schooling. In highlighting how these same or similar
issues have persistently been debated throughout time, John T.
Smith shows something of their complexity and the need to break
apart these key enduring questions in education. Each chapter
covers a key question such as: How far should the state interfere
in education? Should schools feed their pupils? and Why do children
misbehave? Analysing each key question, chapters discuss how such
issues were viewed or defined in the past, what solutions and
outcomes were envisaged and compare and contrast how this relates
to where we are now. Clear links are made throughout between
historical sources and current ideology, policy, practice and
research. In opening up these debates through case studies and
vignettes, students are encouraged to reflect on how these
contentious issues might be resolved and how this affects them as
future educators.
Villages and towns in the Victorian era saw a great expansion in
educational provision, and witnessed the rise of the elementary
teaching profession, often provided and supported by local
clergymen. This book investigates the social and economic
relationships of such clergymen and teachers who worked
co-operatively and at times in competition with each other, their
relative positions typified by the comment of one contemporary
clergyman as 'those of master and servant'. The inevitable result
was a complex of movements in society in the final third of the
nineteenth century that led to increasing clashes in villages, as
one group (the clergy) sought to preserve its hold on its status
and power, while the other (male and female teachers) attempted to
secure their new role in society.
Villages and towns in the Victorian era saw a great expansion in
educational provision, and witnessed the rise of the elementary
teaching profession, often provided and supported by local
clergymen. This book investigates the social and economic
relationships of such clergymen and teachers who worked
co-operatively and at times in competition with each other, their
relative positions typified by the comment of one contemporary
clergyman as 'those of master and servant'. The inevitable result
was a complex of movements in society in the final third of the
nineteenth century that led to increasing clashes in villages, as
one group (the clergy) sought to preserve its hold on its status
and power, while the other (male and female teachers) attempted to
secure their new role in society. The research presented is based
on previously unused, original sources -- church documents, HMI
reports, newspapers and journals and private papers. It is not
confined, as is the case with so much recent research, to the
Church of England, but breaks new ground in providing a comparative
analysis of the social position and educational work of Roman
Catholic and Wesleyan clergy, and their collaboration with their
elementary school teachers. This book is essential reading for all
those interested in Victorian Education.
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