NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Showing 1 to 15 of 35 results Save | Export
Ferrell, Jno A. – United States Bureau of Education, Department of the Interior, 1914
In the Southern States one of the most common forms of disease, especially among children, is hookworm disease. The campaign for its eradication conducted by the Rockefeller Sanitary Commission for the Eradication of Hookworm Disease is one of the most remarkable health campaigns ever waged in this country. It has shown conclusively the important…
Descriptors: Communicable Diseases, Rural Schools, State Departments of Education, Child Health
Woofter, Thomas Jackson – 1917
Published in 1917, this book overviews rural schooling during the early 1900s and was written to address the problems of rural teaching and to serve as an introductory guide for rural teachers. Specifically, the book aimed to bring attention to the needs of rural life and the possible contributions of the rural school, to describe effective…
Descriptors: Child Development, Discipline, Educational Change, Educational History
Dunn, Fannie W., Ed. – 1942
This book is a 1942 compilation of solicited information on rural education trends and guidance programs in the United States. Chapter 1 emphasizes the necessity of good educational guidance for rural children and discusses factors which determine child development, including the rural environment and standards of living. Chapter 2 discusses…
Descriptors: Dropouts, Elementary Secondary Education, Guidance Objectives, Guidance Programs
Gulliford, Andrew; And Others – 1981
The country school legacy of Wyoming is rich in history, folklore, and tradition. Materials (many anecdotal) gathered from school records, oral histories, autobiographies, and memoirs provide glimpses into the diverse and demanding role of frontier teachers (who were mostly female and, by contract requirement, usually single) and the work and…
Descriptors: Community Centers, Educational History, Elementary Secondary Education, One Teacher Schools
Hatton, Caroline – 1981
As revealed in personal interviews, periodicals, published and unpublished manuscripts, and school records, the teachers were the key factor in bringing education and culture to the frontier that was western South Dakota. Many teachers were girls of 16 or 17, inexperienced, hired from states to the east (Minnesota and Iowa), sight unseen.…
Descriptors: Community Schools, Curriculum, Educational History, Elementary Secondary Education
Fuller, Wayne E. – 1994
This illustrated book chronicles the history of the one-room school in the Midwest and its vital influence on American education from the pioneer era through consolidation after World War II. The Midwest's one-room schools were the most democratic in the nation. Located in small independent school districts, they were sustained with the barest of…
Descriptors: Community Involvement, Community Support, Consolidated Schools, Democratic Values
Judge, Sara E. – 1981
Country schools in eastern and central Kansas are explored from six different aspects: country schools as historic sites; teachers (their roles, rules, and restrictions); reading, writing, arithmetic, and recitation (a day in a rural school); country schools and the Americanization of ethnic groups; country schools as community centers; and…
Descriptors: Acculturation, American Indian Education, Community Centers, Consolidated Schools
Vaughan, Mary Kay – 1997
In the 1930s, Mexican rural schools became arenas for cultural politics--the process of articulating and disputing definitions of culture, from national identity to the broader sense of social behavior and meaning. Created in 1921, the Secretaria de Educacion Publica (SEP) set up federal rural schools to nationalize and modernize rural peasants.…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, Educational History, Educational Policy, Elementary Secondary Education
Carney, Mabel – 1912
Written in 1912, this book addresses the role of teachers in improving rural farm life. Rural-to-urban migration had resulted in the loss of leadership from rural localities and the decline of agriculture, and country life had lost its prestige both socially and economically. This book suggests that the country school is the key to achieving…
Descriptors: Agriculture, Community Development, Consolidated Schools, Educational Administration
Henke, Warren A. – 1981
Teacher duties and curriculum developed by North Dakota, in deciding what role teachers would play in the community and what standards of conformity and propriety would be applied to teachers, mirrored certain aspects of the local culture and reflected a wider national culture. The inclusion of health studies reflected the local majority concern…
Descriptors: Alcohol Education, Drug Education, Educational History, Elementary Secondary Education
Embry, Jessie L. – 1981
This part of the Country School Legacy: Humanities on the Frontier Project, funded by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities and sponsored by the Mountain Plains Library Association, traces the biases faced by female school teachers in Utah from the nineteenth century to the present. First, there is a description of the early…
Descriptors: Bias, Educational Background, Educational History, Elementary Secondary Education
Slacks, John R. – 1938
This textbook was written in 1938 to acquaint beginning teachers with practices related to teaching in one-room schools and with the values and expectations of rural communities. The book points out the differences between the work of rural teachers and that of teachers in a town school. For example, teachers in one-room schools are required to…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Educational History, Educational Practices, Elementary Secondary Education
Lowth, Frank James – 1936
Written in 1936, this book overviews the guiding objectives, essential principles of school practices, and general teaching procedures of rural education. The book served not only as a reference concerning the many problems of rural teaching, but also was used as a textbook for preparing rural school teachers. Part 1 overviews problems of rural…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Educational Facilities, Educational History, Educational Objectives
Johnson, Charlie H., Jr. – 1981
A study of historical background of the frontier and rural schools in Colorado describes education in the United State in general and the development of the educational process and school facilities during five phases of Colorado's economic and political development. "The Nation" discusses philosophies generally held during the middle…
Descriptors: Centralization, Consolidated Schools, Educational History, Educational Legislation
PDF pending restoration PDF pending restoration
Kirkpatrick, Marion G. – 1918
Written in 1917, this book relates the author's experience as a beginning teacher in rural Kansas. The purpose of the book was to provide preservice teachers an overview of educational practices in rural schools at that time. In addition, educational policies are proposed that specifically aim to improve rural schools. The author was barely 20…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Boards of Education, Classroom Techniques, Curriculum
Previous Page | Next Page ยป
Pages: 1  |  2  |  3