Monday, May 9, 2011

Historicizing Education Policy Debates

Education policy has been a hotly debated issue in the public sphere for some time—some would argue, since the very beginning of the formation of the first public schools in the Unites States in the 17th century (for a seminal work in the field of colonial history of education, see Cremin, 1970).

Despite this long history of public education and policy, today’s conversations are particularly one-dimensional and ahistorical, for example:
  • Solutions are proposed as if they are “novel,” despite decades’ worth (or longer) of research into their efficacy.  For example, solutions that link market principles with educational policy have been around since at least the nineteenth century, when district and state controlled “common schools” surfaced as the predominant form of education for most children (versus the religious and locally based schools from previous centuries, Cremin, 1980).  Much discourse from the nineteenth century reveals that the arguments given at the time for centralization and alignment with private industry run parallel with argument given today: for example, industrialists saw education, especially state-funded vocational education, as a perfect solution for creating a skilled workforce to facilitate the creation of the United States into a key player in the global market-place (Kaestle & Smith, 1982). 

  • Ideas that have long been included in educational policy are forgotten and discarded (that, for example, the complex socio-economic ecosystem in which students experience education plays a significant role in educational achievement, Anyon, 1997, 2005a, 2005b, and Apple, 2004).  Today’s educational key policy-makers and leaders, such as President Barak Obama, Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, and various local school district leaders of all political stripes, espouse a rhetoric that solutions to poor educational achievement can come only through better schools and better teachers—thus ignoring hundreds’ of years worth of research from all fields—history, sociology, psychology, education, policy, philosophy—that environmental and contextual factors (economic, social, racial, etc) play a much larger role in student achievement than schools ever could.

  • Overall the atmosphere dictated by the rhetoric of the media and of reformers is one of “crisis.”  Scholars describe “crisis disciplines” as those in which solutions must be chosen before research can be fully completed, such as, for example, conservation science. In conservation science, many solutions may be attempted before much data is acquired because problems often call for immediate action (Soule, 1985).  In education, often situations also demand quick action, however, a lot of data already exists, and research has already been done for centuries from multiple perspectives, so education policy cannot really be said to truly occupy a place of “crisis” (because research exists that can be used to ground and construct solutions).

In his seminal work, Truth and Method, Hans-Georg Gadamer writes that it is important to “recognize that in all understanding, whether we are expressly aware of it or not, the efficacy of history is at work,” and that “on the whole the power of effective history does not depend on its being recognized” (1975, p. 300).  In other words, historical context shapes current worldviews, policies, and events, whether we are conscious of particular histories or not.  Therefore, creating education policy in a vacuum of information, while ignoring the hundreds of years’ worth of research into education from many perspectives and disciplines, is negligently irresponsible, for it facilitates the institutionalization of ideas that are not supported by evidence or research (and thus, ideas that largely derive their power from fiery rhetoric or partisanship, and not scholarship or actual historical record).

A plethora of research into the historical origins of current educational policy exists (a limited list of examples includes Anyon, 1997, 2005a, 2005b; Apple, 2001a, 2001b, 2004; DeBray, McDermott, & Wohlstetter, 2005; Hursh, 2005;  Kaestle & Smith, 1982; Kantor, 1991; Kantor & Lowe, 1995, 2006; Kliebard, 2004; McDonnell, 2005; McNeil, 2000; Meier & Wood, 2004; Oakes, Wells, Jones, & Datnow, 1997; Orfield, 1978; Orfield & Lee, 2005; Price & Peterson, 2009; Spring, 1986; Steffes, 2008; Sunderman & Kim, 2007; Tyack, 1974; and Whitty, 1997)—the critical questions we need to ask include not “what is the research” but “have our policymakers read the research” and, more importantly, “how do we make policy makers and the public aware of the research” and “how can we create research-aligned policy that serves our current needs?”

I am currently working on my PhD Comprehensive Exams, which, for my program, consist of writing three research papers, on (1) education policy, (2) curriculum and pedagogy, and (3) methodology (that I will use in my dissertation). My first question (on policy), written and advised by Professor Robert Croninger, essentially involves historicizing current trends in federal education policy (such as No Child Left Behind, initiatives to link pay to quantified test scores, efforts to standardize and centralize curriculum, and more) in order to assess possibilities for and paths towards “eco-justice” oriented reform.

I will be writing much more on this topic in future days and weeks, but for now it will suffice to say that eco-justice oriented reform is another reform agenda, supported by a significant amount of research, that stands in many ways opposed to current dominant market-oriented reform agendas.  Eco-justice reform is grounded in a perspective that values embodied and holistic individual and communal health and well-being, a view that stands in stark contrast to current mainstream reform movements that value individualistic, rational, intellectual pursuits (see, for example, the work of Barron, 1995; Bowers, 1984, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1993a, 1993b, 2001, 2003a, 2003b, 2004, 2005a, 2005b, 2005c, 2006; Bowers & Aoffel-Marglin, 2005; Fien, 1993; Fromm, 2009; Garrard, 2004, 2010; Gaard & Murphy, 1998; Glotfelty & Fromm, 1996; Gruenewald, 2008; Heise, 2008; Judson, 2010; Mortimer-Sandilands, 1999, 2008; Morton, 2007; Murphy, 1995; Noddings, 2005; Orr, 2002, 2004; Roberts, 2007; Schwartz, 2009; Stables & Scott, 2001, and Warren, 1994).

Before discussing eco-justice reform and its potential in detail, however, as I have discussed above, it is important to first understand the current context of education policy by historicizing its roots and development.  Here is a sketch of a time-line of general trends and specific events I am looking at to help contextualize policy today:

1800s
 Trends towards centralization of schooling begin, manifested in gradual transfer of control of schools from localities to districts and states (see, for example, Kaestle & Smith, 1992) but overall small, rural schools remain celebrated institutions embodying localized democracy (Steffes, 2008).

1867
The federal Department of Education is created; its primary mission is to collect information, not to dictate policy or programs, or to offer funding.

1868
14th Amendment to the Constitution is passed; this Amendment includes the Equal Protections Clause, which stipulates that the state must provide equal protection to all people in its jurisdiction. The Equal Protections Clause would be cited as the decisive text upon which the Supreme Court based its 1954 Brown vs. Board of Education ruling.

Early 1900s
The “rural school problem” comes to the fore of policy debates; rural schools are considered inferior to urban schools, and mostly white rural folk are incensed that large portions of black urbanites receive access to better schools than white children in the country (Steffes, 2008). Trying to solve the rural school problem, states propose a series of steps that increase centralized control over local school districts (in order to supervise them and offer professional development and support)—this finding stands in stark contrast to most perspectives that emphasize urban growth and reform as the defining factor in centralization; in fact, rural school reform also contributed significantly to consolidation and standardization trends.

1910s-1930s
More movement towards centralization occurs as multiple states experiment with “equalization funds,” aimed to help districts with poorly performing schools “equalize” achievement for their students.  These funds are passed partially in response to the “rural school problem.”

1917
The Smith-Hughes Act is passed in response to the 1913 Commission on Vocational Education, whose 1914 report emphasized the importance of schools to creating a productive, internationally competitive and prosperous workforce (Anyon, 2005b, and Kaestle & Smith, 1982).

1930s
The New Deal ushers in a new era in federalization; although the New Deal passed a significant number of social progressive policies such as Social Security, Old Age Assistance, and Aid to Dependent Children (Quadagno, 1998), access to these was limited based on race and class.  The overall effect of the New Deal is that it institutionalized racism in America’s federal social support network (an effect that would partially be undone by legislation passed during the Great Society era of the 1960s).

Late 1930s
Black and civil rights activist groups begin to win “equalization” court cases, thus furthering the legitimacy of federalization.  For several decades, local school districts are able to evade court rulings by creating merit-pay systems that favor white teachers (Kantor & Lowe, 1991).

Late 1930s and Early 1940s
 The “compensatory” (vs. “regulatory”) state wins out political debates in the United States.  A compensatory state attempts to mitigate the social outcomes of market forces by providing social scaffolds to individuals at-risk in the market (for example, by providing insurance for investors), while a regulatory state is one that regulates the market directly and thus ensures that it does not create social inequities.  For many historical reasons, as much of Europe moved towards regulatory states, the United States blazed its own trail (Kantor, 1991 and Kantor & Lowe, 1995).  This has significant consequences for education, as it is now seen as *the* key to social mitigation of the market. Instead of choosing to equalize actual outcomes of market-forces (such as extreme poverty in a large portion of the population), a compensatory state views education as the (for the most part, ONLY) way to provide equalization opportunities for individuals.

1954
Supreme Court decides Brown vs. Board of Education of Topeka, overturning 1896 Plessy vs. Ferguson decision and stated unequivocally that “separate educational facilities are inherently unequal.”

1958
National Defense Education Act prioritizes intellectual achievement, honors and gifted and talented programs, math and science, and conveyed the message that “critical self reflection, the arts, and humanities are luxuries we can hardly afford” (Kaestle & Smith, 1982, p. 395).

1960s
The Great Society is ushered in by Lyndon Johnson’s “War on Poverty” and is considered the “second big bang of welfare state reform” (Quadagno, 1998, p. 4).  However, just as other nations began offering a new tier of benefits, the United States movement “became absorbed with the struggle for civil rights and equal opportunity” and thus did not significantly expand entitlement programs, except for the creation of Medicare and Medicaid by Congress in 1965.

1964
Civil Rights Act is passed, which includes Title VI, prohibiting federal aid to schools practicing discrimination.  This legislation paves the way for the ESEA in 1965.

1965
Elementary & Secondary Education Act (ESEA) is passed; this act is the predecessor of No Child Left Behind (in fact, NCLB is a revision of the original ESEA act and not an original policy, though it does modify several significant implementation details; there have been many revisions of ESEA since 1965).  ESEA is considered by many the beginning of federalization, though a careful historical account shows trends towards centralization had been present for at least a century.  However, ESEA does mark a significant turning point in attempts of the federal government to dictate local education policy (Kantor & Lowe, 1995; Kaestle & Smith, 1982; and Anyon, 2005b).  ESEA is highly influenced by the thesis of “cultural deprivation thesis” prominent at this time, that postulates poverty creates certain psychological conditions that individuals have a difficult time overcoming alone (for example, culture-of-poverty proponents emphasize that poverty creates dependency, and thus a lack of will and capacity to attack source of own problems).

1970s
A move towards “color-blindness” racism is prevalent in the United States; after 1973, courts begin retreating from enforcement of segregation orders, and in general the public begins accepting the notion that “equal education for people of color can be achieved without asking anything of whites” (Kantor & Lowe, 2006, 490).

1972
 Tite IX Amendment to ESEA bans sex discrimination in schools.

1973
Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 protects rights of people with disabilities in schools.

1974
Education of the Handicapped Amendment to the ESEA is passed.

1975
Education of All Handicapped Children Act further protects the rights of students with disabilities.

Early 1980s
A shift occurs in the “culture of poverty” thesis; the rhetoric in the public policy sphere turns from “equity” to “excellence.” No longer primarily concerned with equalizing opportunities, policy makers declare themselves committed to “success” (McDonnell, 2005).

1981
The Education Consolidation and Improvement Act is passed at the behest of President Reagan, and embodies his belief in smaller government by cutting federal spending on education.

1983
The influential report, A Nation at Risk, is published by the National Commission on Excellence in Education, commissioned by President Reagan.  A Nation at Risk bemoans the lacking state of U.S. education and the negative effect on productivity and international competitiveness.  This report has been much criticized since its publication, however it has been immensely influential in defining today’s momentum towards standardization, endless testing, accountability, and quantification (McDonnell, 2005 and Anyon, 2005b).

Late 1980s and Early 1990s
Neo-conservatism ascends in policy rhetoric, and gains influence as it is espoused by an increasing number of private organizations, “think-tanks,” non-profits, and lobbyists (Quadagno, 1998); neo-conservatives are especially concerned with federal welfare provisions impeding the “natural” progression of the free market, and thus attempt to privatize an increasing number of federal programs.  This will have significant consequences for education, as charters, vouchers, “school choice,” and other privatization efforts will come to the forefront in the late 1990s and early 2000s.

1994
Clinton’s Improving America’s Schools Act is passed; this is not a new bill, but a reauthorization of ESEA.  This incarnation of ESEA mandates challenging standards for all students, and for the first time requires states to disaggregate test results by race, gender, ELL status, migrant status, disability, and economic status.  Further, it requires corrective action against schools deemed “failing.”

2001
President W. Bush tries his hand at revamping ESEA and lobbies Congress to pass the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB).  Scholars argue that NCLB “highlights how federal responsibility for social welfare has narrowed over time” (Kantor & Lowe, 2006, p. 476)—whereas previously, the state took some responsibility for segregation, poverty, and socio-economic conditions that affect educational achievement, with NCLB the rhetoric that education is *the* one and only answer to societal problems caused by capitalism (free market forces).  Scholars also argue that NCLB stigmatizes failing schools and children and punishes them (by withholding funds, for example) instead of supporting them (by offering research, professional development, or additional funds).

Early 2000s
Our educational system has institutionalized privileges for those of higher socio-economic status, typically whites and has “consistently exacerbated differences in access and outcome based on race, ethnicity, and class” ( Apple, 2004, p. 24).  Other detrimental effects of policies currently in place have been the decline in overall standards, a shift in emphasis from “what the school does for the student to what the student does for the school,” and the transformation of public education into a marketable commodity.


There is much analysis to be done here, but at 6 pages this post is long enough for today.  What I have attempted to do (through only a broad and brief overview) is show that today’s educational policies have a long and complex history that we must consider before attempting any kind of “reform”; in today’s ahistorical climate of discussion, such historicizing is particularly critical in turning the conversation towards actual time-tested and researched reforms, instead of empty and non-practical ideological propositions.

* For a complete bibliography of the sources used in this post, please see my running Bibliography.

Sunday, May 1, 2011

Welcome to My Dissertation Blog!

Thank you so much for visiting my blog, I truly appreciate your feedback and contributions!

I am currently a doctoral candidate in the School of Education Policy Studies at the University of Maryland, College Park, where I also received degrees in Electrical Engineering (2003) and Mathematics (2004). Besides working on my dissertation, I also teach Precalculus and AP Calculus to 11th and 12th graders at the McKinley Technology High School in NE Washington, DC. For more information about me, including teaching experience, dance background, and prior publications and presentations, please see my profile and University of Maryland terpconnect page.

I have several purposes for starting this blog:

1) Receiving feedback for my thoughts-in-progress as I embark on researching and writing my comprehensive exams and dissertation. I truly appreciate all comments and value your privacy, which is why "anonymous comments" are allowed and no moderation will be made for comments I do not agree with.*  I will also do my best to reflect on and respond to all comments.

2)  Overcoming writer's block and inauthentic voice through continual writing, reflection, and conversation.

3)  "Setting the mood" for writing my comps and dissertation; I find that when I am able to first colloquially explain and discuss something in an informal environment, my academic writing becomes more authentic, articulate, and precise.

*Comments will be removed after-the-fact only if they constitute "spam" or use profanity or threatening or abusive language towards an individual or group of people.


Thank you for visiting! I very much look forward to your comments and suggestions! I also appreciate any feedback on mistakes, oversights, updates, possible additions, or inconsistencies on this website. Please comment here on this blog or email me at ioana.stoica@gmail.com.

~ Ioana

Bibliography - Eco-justice Pedagogy and Education Reform

Adamson, J., Evans, M., & Stein, R. (2002). Environmental justice reader: Politics, poetics, and pedagogy. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.

Barron, D. (1995). Gendering environmental education reform: Identifying the constitutive power of environmental discourses. Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 11, 107-120.

Bowers, C. (1984). The promise of theory: Education and the politics of cultural change. New York: Longman.

Bowers, C. (1993). Against the grain: Critical essays on education, modernity, and the recovery of the ecological imperative. New York: Teachers College Press.

Bowers, C. (2003a). Mindful conservatism: Rethinking the ideological and educational basis of an ecologically sustainable future. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.

Bowers, C. (2003b). Towards an eco-justice pedagogy. Retrieved March 12, 2011, from http://www.cabowers.net/CAbookarticle.php.

Bowers, C. (2004). Revitalizing the commons: Cultural and educational sites of resistance and affirmation. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books.

Bowers, C. (2005a). How the ideas of Paulo Freire contribute to the cultural roots of the ecological crisis. In C. Bowers & F. Aoffel-Marglin (Eds.), Re-thinking Freire: Globalization and the environmental crisis (pp. 133-150). Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.

Bowers, C. (2005b). The false promises of constructivist theories of learning: A global and ecological critique. New York: Peter Lang.

Bowers, C. (2005c). Is transformative learning the Trojan horse of Western globalization? Retrieved March 12, 2011, from http://www.cabowers.net/CAbookarticle.php.

Bowers, C. (2006). Revitalizing the commons: Cultural and educational sites of resistance and affirmation. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.

Bowers, C. & Aoffel-Marglin, F. (Eds.). (2005). Re-thinking Freire: Globalization and the environmental crisis. Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.

Esteva, G., Stuchul, D., & Prakash, M. S. (2005). From a pedagogy for liberation to a liberation from pedagogy. In C. Bowers & F. Aoffel-Marglin (Eds.), Re-thinking Freire: Globalization and the environmental crisis (pp. 13-30). Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.

Fien, J. (1993). Education for the environment: Critical curriculum theorizing and environmental education. Geelong: Deakin University Press.

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Gruenewald, D. (2008). The best of both worlds: A critical pedagogy of place. Environmental Education Research, 14 (3), 308-324.

Heise, U. (2008). Sense of place and sense of planet: The environmental imagination of the global. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Judson, G. (2010). A new approach to ecological education: Engaging students’ imaginations in their world. New York: Peter Lang.

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(for more historical sources on schools and education policy, see http://edpolicy-dissertationjourney.blogspot.com/2011/05/bibliography-educational-context-and.html)

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McLaren, P. (1991). Schooling the postmodern body: Critical pedagogy and the politics of enfleshment. In H. Giroux (Ed.), Postmodernism, feminism, and cultural politics (pp. 144-173). Albany, NY: State University of New York Press.

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McNeil, L. (2000). Contradictions of school reform: Educational costs of standardized testing. New York: Routledge.

Meier, D. & Wood, G. (Eds.). (2004). Many children left behind: How the No Child Left Behind Act is damaging our children and our schools. Boston: Beacon Press.

Namulundah, F. (1998). bell hook’s engaged pedagogy: A transgressive education for critical consciousness. Westport, CT: Bergin & Garvey, 1998.

National Longitudinal Study of No Child Left Behind prepared for the U.S. Department of Education. (2007). State and local implementation of the No Child Left Behind Act: Title I school choice, supplemental educational services, and student achievement. Washington, DC: Zimmerman, R., Gill, B., Razquin, P., Booker, K., & Lockwood, J. R. Retrieved from http://www2.ed.gov/rschstat/eval/choice/implementation/achievementanalysis.pdf.

Noddings, N. (2005). Educating citizens for global awareness. New York: Teachers College Press.

Oakes, J., Wells, a., Jones, M., & Datnow, A. (1997). Detracking: The social construction of ability, cultural politics, and resistance to reform. Teachers College Record, 98, 482-510.

Olssen, M. (1996). In defense of the welfare state and of publicly provided education. Journal of Education Policy, 11, 337-362.

Orfield, G. (1969). The reconstruction of southern education: The schools and the 1964 Civil Rights Act. New York: Wiley.

Orfield, G. (1978). Must we bus: Segregated schools and national policy. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution.

Orfield, G. & Lee, C. (2005). Why poverty matters: Poverty and educational inequality. Cambridge: Harvard Education Publishing Group. (ERIC Document Reproduction Service No. ED 489186)

Pinar, W., Reynolds, W., Slattery, P., & Taubman, P. (2004). Understanding curriculum. New York: Peter Lang.

Price, T. & Peterson, E. (Eds.). (2009). The myth and reality of No Child Left Behind: Public education and high stakes assessment. Lanham, MD: University Press of America.

Purpel, D. (1989). The moral and spiritual crisis in education: A curriculum for justice and compassion in education with an introduction by Henry Giroux and Paulo Freire. New York: Bergin & Garvey.

Purpel, D. & Shapiro, S. (1995). Beyond liberation and excellence: Reconstructing the public discourse on education. Westport, CT: Bergin & Garvey.

Rasmussen, D. (2005). Cease to do evil, then learn to do good… (A pedagogy for the oppressor). In C. Bowers & F. Aoffel-Marglin (Eds.), Re-thinking Freire: Globalization and the environmental crisis (pp. 115-131). Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.

Rosenfeld, S. & Sher, J. (1977). The urbanization of rural schools, 1840-1970. In Sher, J. (Ed.), Education in rural America: A reassessment of conventional wisdom. Boulder, CO: Westview Press.

Ryan, J. (2004). The perverse incentives of the No Child Left Behind Act. New York University Law Review, 79, 932-989.

Soltis, J. (1984). On the nature of educational research. Educational Researcher, 13 (10), 5-10.

Spring, J. (1986). The American school, 1642-1985. New York: Longman.

Stein, S. (2004). The culture of education policy. New York: Teachers College Press.

Steffes, T. (2008). Solving the “Rural School Problem”: New state aid, standards, and supervision of local schools, 1900-1933. History of Education Quarterly, 48 (2), 181-220.

Sunderman, G. & Kim, J. The expansion of federal power and the politics of implementing the No Child Left Behind Act. Teachers College Record, 109 (5), 1057-1085.

Teran, G. (2005). Vernacular education for cultural regeneration: An alternative to Paulo Freire’s vision of emancipation. In C. Bowers & F. Aoffel-Marglin (Eds.), Re-thinking Freire: Globalization and the environmental crisis (pp. 69-82). Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.

Tyack, D. (1972). The tribe and common school: Community control in rural education. American Quarterly, 24, 3-19.

Tyack, D. (1974). The one best system: A history of American urban education. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

Tyack, D. & James, T. (1986). State government and American public education: Exploring the “Primeval Forest.” History of Education Quarterly, 26, 39-69.

Whitty, G. (1997). Creating quasi-markets in education: A review of recent research on parental choice and school autonomy in three countries. Review of Research in Education, 22, 3-47.

Bibliography - Introduction

Welcome and Thank You for Visiting!

This bibliography is a work in progress and reflects works and research I have encountered throughout my past five years as a doctoral student in education history, philosophy, and policy, and that I have found most useful for my own research. Any sources quoted in any blog posts on this website can be found in this bibliography.

For ease of browsing, I have broken down the sources by topic; four bibliographies are currently available: general context and historical sources, educational context and history, current education history and debates, and eco-justice pedagogy and reform research (the list of sources within each is always growing as I currently work to sort over 3GB of information I have collected over the years!)  I am further working on organizing the remainder of my sources into seven more bibliographies on the way (see below for more information).

Bibliographies Available Now:
General Context and Historical Sources
Educational Context and Historical Sources
Current Education History and Policy
Eco-Justice Pedagogy and Reform

More Bibliographies Coming Soon:
Embodied and Holistic Education Research
Critical (including Feminist, Race-based, and Queer) Perspectives
Critical Eco-Justice Oriented Phenomenology as Embodied Method
Philosophical and Sociological Perspectives
Psychological and Rational-Empirical Studies of Education
Dance and Dance Education Research
Mathematics and Mathematics Education Research

Bibliography - Educational Context and Historical Sources

(for historical sources and context not specifically related to education or education policy, please see http://edpolicy-dissertationjourney.blogspot.com/2011/05/bibliography-context-and-historical.html)

Anderson, J. (1988). The education of blacks in the South, 1861-1935. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.

Bailyn, B. (1991). Education in the forming of American society. New York: W. W. Norton & Co.

Ballard, A. (1973). The education of black folk: The Afro-American struggle for knowledge in white America. New York: Harper & Row.

Beadie, N. (2001). Academy students in the mid-nineteenth century: Social geography, demography, and the culture of academy attendance. History of Education Quarterly, 41, 251-262.

Browning, J. (2008). “Bringing light to our land... when she was dark as night”: Northerners, freedpeople, and education during military occupation in North Carolina, 1862-1865. American Nineteenth Century History,  9, 1-17.

Carnoy, M. & Levin, H. (1985). Schooling and work in the democratic state. Stanford: Stanford University Press.

Clifford, G. (1976).  Education: Its history and historiography. Review of Research in Education, 4, 210-267.

Cremin, L. (1970). American education: The colonial experience, 1607—1783. New York: Harper & Row.

Donavan, F. (1938).  The schoolma’am. New York: Frederick Stokes Co.

Duffy, J. (1979). School buildings and the health of American school children in the nineteenth century.  In C. Rosenberg, (Ed.), Healing and History: Essays for George Rosen. New York: Science History Publications.

Duitsman, J. (1991).  “When I can read my title clear”: Literacy, slavery, and religion in the antebellum South. Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Press.

Eelman, B. (2004). An educated and intelligent people cannot be enslaved: The struggle for common schools in antebellum Spartanburg, South Carolina. History of Education Quarterly, 44, 250-270.

Earp, C. (1941). The role of education in the Maryland colonization movement.   The Journal of Negro History, 26 , 365-388.

Farnham, C. (1994).  The education of the southern belle: Higher education and student socialization in the antebellum South.  New York: New York University Press.

Finkelstein, B. (1991). Dollars and dreams: Classrooms as fictitious message systems.  History of Education Quarterly, 31, 463-487.

Finkelstein, B. (1989). Governing the young: Teacher behavior in popular primary schools in nineteenth century United States. New York: Falmer Press.

Fuke, R. (1971).  The Baltimore Association for the Moral and Educational Improvement of the Colored People, 1864-1870. Maryland Historical Magazine, 66, 369-404.

Fuquay, M. (2002). Civil rights and the private school movement in Mississippi.  History of Education Quarterly, 42, 159-180.

Hayden, C. (1971).  Conversion and control: Dilemma of Episcopalians in providing for the religious instruction of slaves in Charleston, South Carolina, 1845-1860. Historical Magazine of the Protestant Episcopal Church, 40, 143-171.

Hoffman, B. (1981). Woman’s "True" Profession: Voices from the History of Teaching. New York: McGraw-Hill.

Johnson, C.  (1904). Old-time schools and school-books. New York: MacMillan Company.

Kaestle, C. (1973). The evolution of an urban school system: New York, 1750—1850. Cambridge, MA.

Kaestle, C. (1983).  Pillars of the republic: Common schools and American society, 1780—1860.  New York: Hill & Wang.

Katz, M. (1968). The irony of early school reform: Educational innovation in mid-nineteenth century Massachusetts. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.

Kelley, M. (2006).  Learning to stand and speak: Women, education, and public life in America’s republic.  Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.

Kliebard, H. (1996). The feminization of teaching on the American frontier: Keeping school in Otsego, Wisconsin, 1867-1880. Journal of Curriculum Studies, 27, 545-561.

Knight, E. (1922).  Public education in the South. Boston: Athenaum Press.

Knight, E. (Ed.). (1949).  A documentary history of education in the South before 1860.  Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.

Knopp Biklen, S.(1995). School work: Gender and the cultural construction of teaching. New York: Teacher’s College Press.

Lepore, J. (2002).  A is for American: Letters and other characters in the newly United States. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.

Maddox, A. (1918). The free school ideal in Virginia before the Civil War.  New York: Teachers College Press.

McCaul, R. (1987). The black struggle for public schooling in nineteenth century Illinois. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press.

Middlekauff, R. (1961).  A persistent tradition: The classical curriculum in eighteenth-century New England. William & Mary Quarterly, 18, 54-67.

Moss, H. (2004). “Opportunity and opposition: African American struggle for education in New Haven, Baltimore, and Boston, 1825-1855." (PhD diss., Brandeis University).

Nash, M. (2005). Women’s education in the United States: 1780-1840. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.

Park, R. (1978). “Embodied selves”: The rise and development of concern for physical education, active games and recreation for American women, 1776-1865.  Journal of Sport History, 5, 5-41.

Pawa, J. (1971). Workingmen and free schools in the nineteenth century: A comment on the labor- education.  History of Education Quarterly, 11, 287-302.

Perillo, J. (2003). Beyond progressive reform: Discipline and construction of the “professional teacher” in interwar America. History of Education Quarterly, 44, 337-63.

Perlmann, J. & Margo, R. (2001). Women’s work? American schoolteachers: 1650—1920. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Preston, J. (1993).  Domestic ideology, school reformers, and female teachers: Schoolteaching becomes women's work in nineteenth-century New England.  The New England Quarterly, 66, 531-551.

Preston, J. (2004). Transformations in organizational structures and the feminization of schoolteaching.  American Sociological Association Annual Meeting, San Francisco.

Rudolph, J. (2005). Epistemology for the masses: The origins of “the scientific method” in American schools. History of Education Quarterly, 45, 341-376.

Rury, J.  (1989). Who became teachers? The social characteristics of teachers in American history.  In D. Warren (Ed.), American Teachers: Histories of a Profession at Work (pp. 9-48).  New York: Macmillan Publishing Co.

Rury, J.  (2006).  The curious status of the history of education: A parallel perspective. History of Education Quarterly, 571-98.

Shannon, W. (1964). “Public education in Maryland (1825-1868) with special emphasis upon the 1860s.” (PhD diss.: University of Maryland, College Park).

Sheller, T. (1982).  The origins of public education in Baltimore, 1825-1829. History of Education Quarterly, 22, 23-44.

Spring, J. (1986). The American school, 1642-1985: Varieties of historical interpretation of the foundations and development of American education. New York: Longman.

Strober, M., & Tyack, D. Why do women teach and men manage? A report on research on schools. Signs, 5, 494-503.

Sugg, R. (1978).  Motherteacher: The feminization of American education. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia.

Sundue, S. (2007).  Confining the poor to ignorance? Eighteenth-century American experiments with charity education.  History of Education Quarterly, 47, 123-148.

Swett, J. (1900).  American public schools: History and pedagogics. New York: American Book Company.

Taylor, W. (1966). Toward a definition of orthodoxy: The patrician South and the common schools.  Harvard Educational Review, 36, 412-426.

Teaford, J. (1970).  The transformation of Massachusetts education, 1670-1780.  History of Education Quarterly, 10, 287-307.

Thomas, B. (1971). Public education and black protest in Baltimore, 1865-1900. Maryland Historical Magazine, 66, 381-391.

Tolley, K. (1996). Science for ladies, classics for gentlemen: A comparative analysis of scientific subjects in the curricula of boys' and girls' secondary schools in the United States, 1794-1850. History of Education Quarterly, 36, 129-153.

Tolley, K., & Beadie, N. (2006).  Socioeconomic incentives to teach in New York and North Carolina: Toward a more complex model of teacher labor markets, 1800-1850. History of Education Quarterly, 46, 36-72.

Tyack, D. (1976). Ways of seeing: An essay on the history of compulsory schooling. Harvard Educational Review, 46, 355-389.

Vinovskis, M. & Bernard, R. Beyond Catharine Beecher: Female education in the antebellum period.  Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 3.

Warren, D. (Ed.). (1989).  American teachers: Histories of a profession at work. New York: Macmillan Publishing Company.

Williams, H. (2005).  Self-taught: African American education in slavery and freedom.  University of North Carolina Press.

Wyman, A. (1995). The earliest early childhood teachers: Women teachers of America's dame schools.  Young Children, 50, 29-32.

Bibliography - Context and Historical Sources

(for historical sources and context specifically related to education and education policy, please see http://edpolicy-dissertationjourney.blogspot.com/2011/05/bibliography-educational-context-and.html)

Badger, A. (1989). The New Deal: The depression years, 1933-1940. Chicago: Ivan R. Dee.

Bailyn, B. (1992). The ideological origins of the American Revolution. New York: Belknap Press.

Berlin, I. (1998). Many thousands gone: The first two centuries of slavery in North America.  Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

Berlin, I. & Hoffman, R. (Eds.). Slavery and freedom in the age of the American revolution.  Charlottesville: The University Press of Virginia.

Betts, J. (1968).  Mind and body in early American thought. The Journal of American History, 54, 787-805.

Blumin, S. (1989). The emergence of the middle class: Social experience in the American city, 1760-1900. Cambridge.

Boyer, P. (2000). Urban masses and moral order in America, 1820-1920. Cambridge, MA.

Brinkley, A. (1989). The New Deal and the idea of the state. In S. Fraser and G. Gerstle (Eds.), The rise and fall of the New Deal Order, 1930-1980 (pp. 85-121). Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Fischer, D. (1970). Historian’s fallacies: Toward a logic of historical thought. New York: Harper Torchbooks.

Forret, J. (2006).  Race relations at the margins: Slaves and poor whites in the antebellum Southern countryside.  Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.

Gilborn, D. (1997). Racism and reform: New ethnicities/old inequalities? British Educational Research Journal, 23 (3), 345-360.

Gomez, M. (1998). Exchanging our county marks: The transformation of African identities in the colonial and antebellum South. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.

Goodman, D. (1992). Public sphere and private life: Toward a synthesis of current historiographical approaches to the Old Regime. History and Theory, 31, 1-20.

Goodman, P. (1993). The Manual Labor Movement and the Origins of Abolitionism. Journal of the Early Republic, 13, 355-388.

Habermas, J. (1991). The structural transformation of the public sphere: An inquiry into a category of bourgeois society. Cambridge: MIT Press.

Harrington, M. (1983). The politics at God’s funeral: The spiritual crisis of Western civilization. New York: Holt, Rineheart & Winston.

Hofstadter, R. (1972). The age of reform. New York: Alfred Knopf.

Horton, L. (1997).  In hope of liberty: Culture, community, and protest among northern free blacks, 1700-1860. New York: Oxford University Press.

Hudson, N. (1996). From “nation” to “race”: The origin of racial classification in eighteenth-century thought. Eighteenth-Century Studies, 29 (3), 247-264.

Iggers, G. (2004). Historiography in the twentieth century: From scientific objectivity to the postmodern challenge. Wesleyan University Press.

Katz, M. (2008). The price of citizenship: Redefining the American welfare state. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.

Katz, M. (Ed.) (1993). The “Underclass” debate: Views from history. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Katz, M., Stern, M., & J. Fader. (2005). The new African American inequality. Journal of American History, 92 (1), 75-108.

Katznelson, I. (1989). Was the Great Society a lost opportunity? In S. Fraser and G. Gerstle (Eds.), The rise and fall of the New Deal Order, 1930-1980 (pp. 185-211). Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Kincheloe, J. & Steinberg, S. (1993). A tentative description of postformal thinking: The critical confrontation with cognitive theory. Harvard Educational Review, 63 (3), 296-320.

Lieberman, R. (1998). Shifting the color line: Race and the American welfare state. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

Massey, D. (1993). American apartheid: Segregation and the making of the underclass. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

Pope Melish, J. (1998).  Disowning slavery: Gradual emancipation and “race” in New England, 1780-1860.  Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.

Quadagno, J. (1994). The color of welfare: How racism undermined the war on poverty. New York: Oxford University Press.


Quadagno, J. (1999). Creating a capital investment welfare state: The new American exceptionalism. American Sociological Review, 64 (1), 1-11.

Scott, D. (1997). Contempt and pity: Social policy and the image of the damaged black psyche. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.

Sugrue, T. (1995). The origins of the urban crisis: Race and inequality in postwar Detroit. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Tyler, A. (1944).  Freedom’s ferment: Phases of American social history to 1860. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

Wilentz, S. (2004).  Chants democratic: New York and the rise of the American working class, 1788-1850. New York: Oxford University Press.