The combined effort of 19 feminist educators and theorists from four continents, this collection of essays is designed to be as wide-ranging as it is geographically. Probing the abilities (and dis-abilities) of women in education from the mid-19th century to the present, it brings historical analysis, classroom research, and theoretical reflection to bear on gender issues in schooling and higher education. What about the boys? cry alarmists who fear a feminist takeover in schools. What about them indeed?, say students of women's education who wonder it it is now time to engage more explicitly...
The combined effort of 19 feminist educators and theorists from four continents, this collection of essays is designed to be as wide-ranging as it is ...
The combined effort of 19 feminist educators and theorists from four continents, this collection of essays is designed to be as wide-ranging as it is geographically. Probing the abilities (and dis-abilities) of women in education from the mid-19th century to the present, it brings historical analysis, classroom research, and theoretical reflection to bear on gender issues in schooling and higher education. What about the boys? cry alarmists who fear a feminist takeover in schools. What about them indeed?, say students of women's education who wonder it it is now time to engage more explicitly...
The combined effort of 19 feminist educators and theorists from four continents, this collection of essays is designed to be as wide-ranging as it is ...
Nineteenth-century educational reformers were fond of an agricultural metaphor when it came to the provision of more and better schooling: even good land, they argued, had to be cultiated; othersie noxious weeds sprang up. In this study of education in Ontario from the establishment of Upper Canada to the end of Egerton Ryerson's career as chief superintendent of schools in 1876, Susan Houston and Alison Prentice explore the roots of the provincial public school system, set up to instill a work ethic and moral discipline appropriate to the new society, as well as the beginnings of separate...
Nineteenth-century educational reformers were fond of an agricultural metaphor when it came to the provision of more and better schooling: even goo...
We tend to think of contemporary concern for reform in education as unprecedented in its intensity and scope. But as this book about mid-nineteenth century educational ideology shows, the urge to improve society through its schools has been with us a long time. The author examines the attitudes that shaped the Ontario public school system during its formative years, when Upper Canadians first explored and the provincial government finally adopted the principle of compulsory mass schooling under the auspices and control of the state.
We tend to think of contemporary concern for reform in education as unprecedented in its intensity and scope. But as this book about mid-nineteenth...