Title: Notions of Education for Liberation
1Notions of Education for Liberation
- George Counts
- Paulo Freire
- Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.
2George Counts (1889-1974)
- Influenced by John Dewey
- Accused of being a communist
- Writing during the Progressive Era
- Critique of the classical curriculum
- Schools as mirrors of society
- Primary aim of schooling is to help solve
societys problems
3Paulo Freire (1921-1997)
- Brazilian professor and head of the National
Literacy Program - Worked with poor rural adults supporting the
active exercise of democracy
4Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., (1917-2007)
- U.S. historian and author
- Described as a lion of liberalism
- Worried about the disuniting of America
5In three groups
- What is the purpose of education as your author
sees it (both individually and collectively) - What kind of society does your author envision?
- What might the job of a teacher look like? What
role does your author see for the teacher, and
what kind of teacher training would be necessary?
6Your personal reflections
- What do you make of these authors visions of the
purpose of education? - What do you think of the notion of imposition?
- Can you see the tensions between different goals
in schools? What are they? - How should we judge if a person is liberated?
How can you tell? - How should schools create Americans (the unum out
of the pluribus)?
7What does American mean to you?
- Dictionary of or relating to the United States
or its people an inhabitant - Is it also
- A mindset?
- Commitment to a set of principles?
- A set of relationships?
- Does it demand loyalty (however defined?)
8Declaration of Independence
- We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all
men are created equal, that they are endowed by
their Creator with certain unalienable Rights,
that among these are Life, Liberty, and the
pursuit of Happiness.
9Preamble to the Constitution
- We the people of the United States, in order to
form a more perfect union, establish justice,
insure domestic tranquility, provide for the
common defense, promote the general welfare, and
secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and
our prosperity, do ordain and establish this
Constitution.
10First Amendment
- Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press or the right o the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Government for redress of grievances.
11Early Education of Domestic Foreigners
- Native Americans and
- Mexican Americans
12Any idea who said
- We find ourselves threatened by hordes of
immigrants who have already begun to flock into
our country and whose progress we cannot arrest.
13- We find ourselves threatened by hordes of
immigrants who have already begun to flock into
our country and whose progress we cannot arrest.
- Governor of California, Pio Pico in 1846
14Common School Reforms (1830s-1860s)
- Demographic changes and patriotic ambitions
- Ideological shift with regard to the nature of
God - Purpose of education the great equalizer,
assimilation, morals, and citizenship
15Progressive Era 1880s-1930s
- Demographics
- Ideology (rise of the IQ)
- Purpose of education
- Fit schools to childs needs
- Schools help solve societys problems
- Social stability
- Equal educational opportunity
16Native Americans-Conditions
- Manifest Destiny
- Wars and diseases
- Considered domestic foreigners
- Bureau of Indian Affairs
17Native Americans and Education
- White ideas
- Considered educable and salvageable
- Ultimate goal assimilation and training for an
industrial society
18Carlisle Indian School, 1885
19Native Americans and Education
- Native Ideas
- To make/enforce contracts preserve culture
- Choctaw and Cherokee examples
20Chief Sequoyah (1776-1843)
21Mexican Americans-Conditions
- Colonization by Spain
- Mexican Revolution
- Relationship to the United States shifts
- Mexican-American War (1846-1848) Treaty of
Guadalupe Hildalgo
22(No Transcript)
23LULAC founders, _at_1929
24Questions for Discussion
- Is vocational education inherently bad?
- How do LULAC and Pratt compare in their ideas of
education for liberation and assimilation? - How should we judge if a person is liberated?
How can you tell? - How should schools create Americans (the unum out
of the pluribus)?
25Womens Education Gender, Class, and Racial
Implications
26Three groups of thought on womens education
- Conservatives
- Liberals
- Radicals
27Declaration of Sentiments, Seneca Falls
Convention, 1848
- We hold these truths to be self-evident that all
men and women are created equal that they are
endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable
rightsWhenever any form of government becomes
destructive to these ends, it is the right of
those who suffer from it to refuse allegiance to
it, and to insist upon the institution of a new
government. The history of mankind is a history
of repeated injuries toward woman, having in
direct object the establishment of an absolute
tyranny over herNow, in view of this entire
disfranchisement of one-half the people of this
country, their social and religious
degradationand because women do feel themselves
aggrieved, oppressed, and fraudulently deprived
of their most scared rights, we insist that they
have immediate admission to all the rights and
privileges which belong to them as citizens of
these United States.
28Colonial Era/Revolutionary Era
- Colonial Era
- Educated to be better wives and mothers
- Elite received schools curriculum (mostly) in
the polite arts - Revolutionary Era
- Worried about race-suicide
- Revolution brought questions of what a
civilized society was - Cult of domesticity
29Common School Era
- Co-education catches on
- Women as teachers
- Worries about race-suicide remained (though they
were countered) - Edward Clarke
- Anna Brackett
30Women and Higher Education
- Oberlin
- Mount Holyoke (MA) 1837
- Vassar (NY) 1861
- Bennett (NC) 1873
- Wellesley (MA) 1870
- Spelman (GA) 1881
31Womens Education in the Progressive Era
- More girls/women in schools
- Gendered curriculum (and race/class implications)
- 1920 (19th amendment) women get the right to vote
32Questions for Discussion
- (feminism v. womanism)
- How do we understand liberation in the context of
gender? - Should girls/women be educated differently than
boys/men? - What do you think of single-sex education (for
girls OR boys)?
33Religion and Education Jews and Catholics
34Colonial, Revolutionary, and Common School Era
Conditions
- Colonial Era
- Rural Protestants outnumbered others worried
about wilderness of the soul - Revolutionary Era
- Jeffersons bill for religious freedom
- Common School Era
- Loosening of family ties/national loyalty Uncle
Sam created increased Irish immigration
35Religion in Textbooks
- Catholicism
- Catholics need the Pope while Protestants rely on
Bible as guide - A danger to the state
- Sample texts
- Judaism
- A religion or a race?
- Associated with greed (contrast with Franklin)
- College admissions becomes HUGE issue
(progressive era)
36Court cases
- State v. John Scopes (Monkey Trial) (TN), 1925
- Evolution v. Creationism
- Science in the classroom
- Inherit the Wind
- Pierce v. Society of Sisters (OR) 1925
- Compulsory educationpublic education
- Anti-Catholic intentions
37Questions for Discussion
- How do groups get ahead? Inside or outside the
system? - Can we teach morals without religion?
- How do/should groups balance uniqueness against
American-ness? - What do you think of public money for private
education?
38How to Educate New Citizens African Americans
after the Civil War
39(No Transcript)
40Political History
- 13th amendment, 1865 (abolishes slavery)
- 14th amendment, 1868 (equal protection)
- No State shall make or enforce any law which
shall abridge the privileges or immunities of
citizens of the United States nor shall any
State deprive any person of life, liberty, or
property, without due process of law nor deny to
any person within its jurisdiction the equal
protection of the laws. - 15th amendment, 1870 (franchise)
- Reconstruction (Hayes-Tilden Compromise)
- Rise of Jim Crow laws (Birth of a Nation)
- Plessy v. Furguson, 1896
41Black Educational Conditions
- Black education in the North
- Access to grammar schools
- Access to high schools
- Access to college the creation of Historically
Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs)
42Debate in the history of education What to make
of Booker T. Washington
43(No Transcript)
44Questions for Discussion
- How were Washington and DuBois treated in your
history classes? - Separation v. segregation issues
- Differentiated education how much is too much,
and when is it OK? - What do you make of vocational training? Is it
inherently bad?
45Language Issues Does an American Have to Speak
English?
- Ingles
- Englisch
- ??
- Inglese
- ???????
46Bilingual Education in Politics
- Meyer v. Nebraska, 1923
- Lau v. Nichols, 1974
- Question equal or equitable treatment required
by schools? - Critical mass necessary
- Language rights now a civil rights issue
- English Only Movement/US English, 1983
- Proposition 227 (CA)
47Questions for Discussion
- Reflect on the purpose of education as weve
discussed it how does bilingual education fit? - How does bilingual education fit with our
discussion of integration/assimilation/
acculturation/separation/segregation? - How do we reconcile Lau with Brown?
48Achieving Quality Education through Desegregation
49Chinese/Chinese American Conditions
- Population increase during Gold Rush
- Likened to blacks
- Considered an economic threat/ proposal that they
should have permanent laborer status - CA school code
- Chinese Exclusion Act, 1882
- Tape v. Hurley, 1885
50Chinese Canadians
- The only non-British settlers
- Moved north to Canada during/after Gold Rush
- Built Trans-Canada railway
51Oh! Law, they are coming in their own teapots
now!
52Harpers Weekly, March 6, 1886
- A deliberate and determined effort was made to
expel the Chinese from the town of Seattle,
Washington Territory a mob invaded the Chinese
quarter and marched them toward a steamer. The
mob was thoughtful enough to provide wagons to
convey the baggage of its victims. (allowed to
return home, mob tried to persist but were
disbanded by federal troops)
53Japanese/Japanese American Conditions
- Treaty between US and Japan, 1854
- Seen as better than Chinese (more educated)
- Anti-Chinese sentiments spread to Japanese
- CA school board violates treaty President steps
in Gentlemens Agreement reach in 1907
54The Brown Decision, 1954
- Briggs v. Elliot (SC), 1950
- Belton v. Gebhart Bulah v. Gebhart (DE), 1951
- Brown v. Board of Education (KS), 1951
- Davis v. Prince Edward County SB (VA), 1951
- Bowling v. Sharpe (DC), 1952
55Questions for Discussion
- How do the courts/readings define good
education? - How do you define good education? What does
education for liberation look like with regard to
the issues on the table for today? - What do you make of Bells claims of re-writing
Plessy? Are you convinced? - Which comes first, a change of laws or attitudes?
56College Students Defining Education
57Expanding Access
- Civil Rights Act, 1964
- Higher Education Act, 1965
- Campus-based affirmative action programs
- Vietnam veterans and the GI Bill
58Black Student Activism
- The rise of Black Power
- Demands for Black Studies, professors, more black
students - Administrative/police response
59White Student Activism
- Students for a Democratic Society formed 1959
- Attacked university complicity in American social
ills - Free Speech Movement, 1964
- Influenced by work in MS
- Issue politicking on campus
- Called for a strike
- Administrative/police response
60Chicano/a Student Activism
- High school student walk-out in Los Angeles, 1968
- Created college-based organizations
- Conferences organized and manifestos issued
61Questions for Discussion
- What is the purpose of college? How is it
reflected? - How do we reconcile separation with the mission
of the common school? - Can/should SNCCs vision for education be
realized? - Who is qualified to teach Black studies?
Chicano/a studies? Womens studies? Etc?