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By combining history with sociology, Rothstein presents a new way of looking at state-supported schools. He describes the pauper schools of the early 1800s and shows how they became the foundation for the common schools that followed. Compulsory education sought to alleviate urban crime while assimilating the immigrants who flocked to our shores in each generation. In the late 19th century, the militaristic schools became more bureaucratic and set in their ways in spite of the new thinking in education represented by John Dewey. Rothstein shows how Dewey was taught in college but that Thorndike was followed in the public schools. The high school was an attempt to meet the changing needs of the Industrial Revolution. After recapitulating the foundational history of American public schools, Rothstein examines the psychological effects of martinet teaching methods on students' self-perception and performance. A stunning new (old) perspective on American education.
STANLEY WILLIAM ROTHSTEIN is Professor of Education and Social Foundations at California State University, Fullerton. He is the author of Identity and Ideology (Greenwood, 1991), The Voice of the Other (Praeger, 1992), and Handbook of Schooling in Urban America (Greenwood, 1993).
Preface Pauper Schools Houses of Confinement Schooling the Poor Organizational Perspectives The Birth of Modern Schools New Divisions: The Emergence of the High School Agents of the State: Ambivalence in the Teacher's Position The Other Side of Segregation: Ethnographic Glimpses of an Inner City Junior High School Language and Pedagogy Selected Bibliography Index