The son of a shopkeeper, Joseph Lancaster (1778 1838) received little formal education himself. In 1798 he set up a school in Southwark, waiving fees for poor children. Originally published in 1803, this work sets out in detail the philosophy and practice of Lancaster's system of education, which relied on peer tutoring. He was always concerned with the education of the underprivileged in industrial cities, lamenting that 'poor children be deprived of even an initiatory share of education, and of almost any attention to their morals'. The early decades of the nineteenth century saw the peak...
The son of a shopkeeper, Joseph Lancaster (1778 1838) received little formal education himself. In 1798 he set up a school in Southwark, waiving fees ...