This was originally published in 1971.Recent years have seen a renewal of interest in the field of curriculum development. Until now, however, relatively little account has been taken of the historical aspects of curriculum change. Topics covered include: The relationship between Renaissance achievements and humanist education The contribution made by educationists of the Civil War period who drew their inspiration from science rather than the classics. The formation in the eighteenth century of "academic honeycombs" – groups of scholars concerned with the growth of science and technology. Nineteenth century developments on art education and an assessment of the work of the scientific innovators.
Chapter 1 Humanist education and its contribution to the Renaissance, R. R. Bolgar; Chapter 2 Science and the challenge to the scholastic curriculum 1640–1660, Charles Webster; Chapter 3 Augustan academic honeycombs: some eighteenth-century conventicles of science, W. H. G. Armytage; Chapter 4 The Curriculum of training in the fine arts in the nineteenth century, H. C. Morgan; Chapter 5 Prologue to heurism, W. H. Brock; Chapter 6 The need for a history of higher education, E. G. Edwards;