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Jurgen Herbst traces the debates, discussions, pronouncements and
reports through which Americans have sought to clarify their
conceptions of the goals and purposes of education beyond the
common school.
The Once and Future School argues that to make sense of the
current trials of secondary educational system and to maintain any
sense of direction and vision for its future, we need a clear
understanding of its path in the past and of its setting in a
multi-national world. From their beginnings in colonial America to
the present day, Jurgen Herbst traces the debates, discussions,
pronouncements and reports through which Americans have sought to
hammer out and clarify their conceptions of the goals and purposes
of education beyond the common school.
This book represents the result of recent historical research by
German and American scholars on German influences on education in
the United States during the nineteenth century. The authors deal
with all aspects of education, from kindergarten through primary
and secondary education to universities. In analyzing German
educational influences on the United States, the essays are
concerned with reports of American visitors to Germany, as well as
with accounts and activities of German educators in the United
States. The book shows that in the context of an immigrant culture,
the question of influence needs to be considered in an
interdisciplinary setting. At the same time, the account recognizes
that both Germany and the United States were mutually affected by
the development and progress of their relevant educational theories
and practices.
This book represents the result of recent historical research by
German and American scholars on German influences on education in
the United States during the nineteenth century. The authors deal
with all aspects of education, from kindergarten through primary
and secondary education to universities. In analyzing German
educational influences on the United States, the essays are
concerned with reports of American visitors to Germany, as well as
with accounts and activities of German educators in the United
States. The book shows that in the context of an immigrant culture,
the question of influence needs to be considered in an
interdisciplinary setting. At the same time, the account recognizes
that both Germany and the United States were mutually affected by
the development and progress of their relevant educational theories
and practices.
To lend weight to his charge that the public school teacher has
been betrayed and gravity to his indictment of the educational
establishment for that betrayal, Jurgen Herbst goes back to the
beginnings of teacher education in America in the 1830s and traces
its evolution up to the 1920s, by which time the essential damage
had been done. Initially, attempts were made to upgrade public
school teaching to a genuine profession, but that ideal was
gradually abandoned. In its stead, with the advent of newly
emerging graduate schools of education in the early decades of the
twentieth century, came the so-called professionalization of public
education. At the expense of the training of elementary school
teachers (mostly women), teacher educators shifted their attention
to the turning out of educational "specialists" (mostly
men)-administrators, faculty members at normal schools and teachers
colleges, adult education teachers, and educational researchers.
Ultimately a history of the neglect of the American public school
teacher, And Sadly Teach ends with a plea and a message that ring
loud and clear. The plea: that the current reform proposals for
American teacher education-the Carnegie and the Holmes reports-be
heeded. The message: that the key to successful school reform lies
in educating teacher's true professionals and in acknowledging them
as such in their classrooms.
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