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Rose, Jonathan – History of Education, 2007
This paper surveys recent studies in the history of reading that historians of education will find useful, given that all education involves some form of reading. It describes the sources that historians of reading use, the models they employ (such as the "Reading Revolution" of the eighteenth century), and the questions they address…
Descriptors: Historians, Educational History, Semiotics, Feminism
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Reinarz, Jonathan – History of Education, 2008
This article deals with transformations in eighteenth-century medical education. Its focus is the work of an individual surgeon, Thomas Tomlinson, who delivered one of the earliest anatomical courses in provincial England. It examines methods of medical education between 1760 and 1825, when apprenticeship was being transformed into a more learned…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Medical Schools, Educational History, Educational Change
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Pineau, Pablo – History of Education, 2008
This paper examines the historical relationship between education and globalisation in Latin America. This is no straightforward task. Hegel's vision of a continent without history and the rapacious expansion of Western culture from the sixteenth century profoundly transformed Latin America, and in turn stimulated a search for a distinctive…
Descriptors: Historiography, Interdisciplinary Approach, Foreign Countries, Latin Americans
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Smith, John T. – History of Education, 2009
This paper seeks to ascertain the attitudes to, and work on, English school boards of clergymen from the three main Churches which had taken an active interest in education in England in the nineteenth century--the Church of England, the Roman Catholic Church and the Wesleyan Methodist Church. Were the clergy "the enemy within",…
Descriptors: Clergy, Churches, Rural Areas, Foreign Countries
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Simon, Joan – History of Education, 2007
This article is posthumously published as the late Joan Simon's most recent contribution to ongoing debates in historiography of education. Joan remained an active writer and a contributor to this journal and submitted the present article only months before her death, with characteristic determination to engage in historiographical debate, and to…
Descriptors: Politics of Education, Historians, Historical Interpretation, Historiography
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Silver, Harold – History of Education, 2007
The article explores historical issues concerning the relationships between higher education and institutions and their local and regional communities. The primary focus is on the ways in which institutions are influenced by social change and have partnership roles in economic and social development. Their role from the nineteenth century and in…
Descriptors: Social Development, Higher Education, Social Change, Educational History
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Bloomfield, Anne; Watts, Ruth – History of Education, 2008
The educational impact of the dancing master is examined within social and cultural contexts including patronage and artistic style. The nature of the dancing master's peripatetic role and lesson content in domestic and private locations is analysed with reference to notational scores, dance treatises and archival sources. The impact on…
Descriptors: Experimental Schools, Dance, Educational Philosophy, Cultural Context
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Olden, Anthony – History of Education, 2008
British Somaliland, a protectorate from which Christian missionaries were excluded, opened its first government-run school in 1938. The intention of the new director of education, Randall Ellison, was to use written Somali in preference to Arabic. This drew intense criticism from local religious leaders, and had to be abandoned. Accused of being a…
Descriptors: Afro Asiatic Languages, Foreign Countries, Semitic Languages, Religion
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Burke, Catherine; de Castro, Helena Ribeiro – History of Education, 2007
This article explores the possible uses of school photographs for developing new histories of education. Two different types of school photographs are discussed with particular relevance to the significance of the representation of the body of the schoolchild. The authors consider how the school photograph, produced within the school for internal…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Photography, Gender Issues, Educational History
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Hendrick, Harry – History of Education, 2007
This article seeks to raise a number of issues concerning children's well-being in late modernity. In order to provide historical contrasts, the first part of the article considers three "optimistic" periods: the Liberal Reform Programme, 1906-1911; interwar developments in New Psychology, progressive education and child guidance; the post-1945…
Descriptors: Behavior Modification, Anxiety, Progressive Education, Well Being
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Sweeting, Anthony – History of Education, 2007
This article analyses the varied characteristics of histories of education in Hong Kong and discusses the perspectives that an acquaintance with them can provide. Such a focus encourages consideration of the use of incomplete sources by historians of education, as well as attempts to make sense of past educational developments through…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational History, Educational Change, Politics of Education
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Lohmann, Ingrid; Mayer, Christine – History of Education, 2008
The development of pedagogical science in eighteenth-century Germany unfolded in close connection with the emergence of the modern bourgeoisie and its emancipation from a still absolutist society. While social and political structures in Britain and France were changed by revolutions, the relative weakness of the German bourgeoisie led to the…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Anthropology, Foreign Countries, English Instruction
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Vernon, Keith – History of Education, 2008
Throughout the interwar period, there was considerable discussion concerning the health and welfare of university students in Britain, involving university officials, student organizations and government departments. In the light of these debates, there was a significant expansion of amenities for students, which included halls of residence,…
Descriptors: Health Services, Higher Education, Student Organizations, Health Facilities
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Limond, David – History of Education, 2007
In 1964-65 a teacher at London's Kidbrooke School gave a speech that appeared critical of the Labour government's nascent comprehensivization policy. A "Times" editorial based on her comments influenced the tone and content of the crucial parliamentary debate of January 1965, which continues to have implications for the organization of…
Descriptors: Politics of Education, Comprehensive Programs, Educational History, Secondary Education
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Thyssen, Geert – History of Education, 2007
This article considers how historians might use imagery in the context of an open-air school in Germany, Senne I-Bielefeld (1922-1939). In considering the "nature" of such images, issues and problems associated with their interpretation are illuminated and discussed. First, two images selected from the pre-Nazi period of the school are…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Outdoor Education, Nontraditional Education, Historians
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