How Schools Worked: Public Education in English Canada, 1900-1940

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McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP, Feb 21, 2012 - Education - 512 pages
Between the 1880s and the 1940s, children in English Canada encountered schools and school systems profoundly different from today's. In How Schools Worked, R.D. Gidney and W.P.J. Millar map the contours of that world, retrieving it from the obscurity created not only by the passage of time but by fundamental shifts in organization, pedagogical values, and beliefs about the role of public education. Moving beyond the rhetoric on school reform that marked the period, How Schools Worked focuses squarely on schooling itself. How many children went to elementary or secondary school, how often, and for how long? What was the range of their educational attainments? How were their patterns of attendance influenced by social class, gender, and where they lived? What and how were they taught? How were they assessed and promoted from grade to grade? What were their teachers' qualifications and experience? What were their school buildings like? Who paid the bills and how much did they pay? How well or badly were children and young people served by their schools? And how did answers to these questions change over time? A sympathetic yet critical analysis, How Schools Worked is a portrait of a complex enterprise at work. Gidney and Millar offer a rich understanding of the period, a reappraisal of some major debates, and insights into educational issues that perplex us still.
 

Contents

1 Essential Contexts
3
2 Patterns of Attendance
12
3 Explaining the Patterns
51
4 Schools
80
5 Teachers
124
6 Money
151
19301939
179
8 The Organization of Instruction
197
11 The Teachers Work
271
12 Supervisors and Their Work
300
13 Questions of Quality
340
Epitaph
361
Notes
365
Bibliography
487
Index
513
Appendices for How Schools Worked
519

9 The Examination System and Its Fate
223
10 The Secondary School Program at Work
244

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About the author (2012)

R.D. Gidney is professor emeritus, The University of Western Ontario, and with W.P.J. Millar, author of the award-winning Professional Gentlemen: The Professions in Nineteenth Century.

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