Education in United States of America
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SMAN MODAL BANGSA ACEH
United States Location
Development of education In The united
state
Education In USA
United States Location
Development Of Education In The
United States
The public school movement in the middle of the 19th century
The progressive nature in the early 20th century
The last generation fermentasomovement
Colonial America
• European immigrants to Colonial Americabrought their culture, traditions andphilosophy about education.
• The English were the predominant settlers in the new world and as a result education in colonial america was patterned on the englishmodel.
• As the American colonies continued to growand prosper, the european tradition that hadpreviously guided the development of schooland education began to lose some of theirinfluence.
• A standard curriculum was difficult to achievein a country as large and sparsely populated asthe new United States of America
Education in the Revolutionary Era
• As mentioned earlier, the Native Americanpopulation had little or no influence on thedevelopment of educational practice in theUnited States and very little effort was extendedto formally educate them during the 18th andearly 19th centuries
Education for African and Native Americans
The Rise of Common School
• The first public secondary school was established
in Boston in 1821 and marked the beginning of
this long and slow struggle to achieve public
funding.
• Horace Mann (1796-1859) was the one of the
strongest proponents for public education and the
common school.
• As the common school movement continued togrow, the settlement of the territory in what isnow the western United States encouraged thedevelopment of higher education to bettermeet the needs of a growing and more diversepopulation.
Compulsory Education
• Compulsory school attendance laws were first passed in Massachusetts in 1852 and invariably spread to other sections of the country.
• By 1900, thirty-two states had passed compulsory education laws and by 1930 all the states had some form of this law in place. Subsequently the numbers of children receiving an education increased dramatically.
• As the number of students grew, the need alsoincreased for a more efficient method ofadministration, school leaders turned to bigbusiness to provide a model of scientificmanagement to effectively manage theseresources.
Native and African Americans were not allowedaccess to most public schools and institutions ofhigher learning
The newly assimilated children
Educating the Culturally Diverse
Early childhood education
Froebel’s opinion
The Progressive Era of Education
• John Dewey (1859-1952) was the most prominent of the progressive educators. He wrote extensively about the need for teachers to understand the child.
• Maria Montessori (1870-1952) learned to appreciate the quality of human potential. She was the first Italian woman who graduated from medical school. Montessori, believed that children should be instructed according to where they were developmentally.
• Following World War II, the population of the United States increased dramatically.
• As the numbers of school children grew, the demand for facilities and teachers also increased.
• The reform movement in education was also characterized by a new curricular emphasis.
• The educational focus for the nineties has been primarily directed at school reform. For the most part teachers have risen to the occasion, taking on roles of leadership and leading the way into the 21st century.