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Groen, Mark – American Educational History Journal, 2013
This paper examines why so many northern teachers ventured into the South in the 1860s, and the reasons southerners first sought them out, and later wanted the teachers "put to rout." Changing attitudes toward teaching and learning, textbooks and teachers, were part of the emerging national identity of the antebellum South.
Descriptors: United States History, Geographic Regions, Attitude Change, Teaching Methods
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Groen, Mark – American Educational History Journal, 2009
The 1960s was a tumultuous decade in American public education. It was a time of transition and change. To many Americans in the early 1960s, Max Rafferty appeared to be a reactionary conservative harking back to an educational past. The longer perspective of history may instead see Rafferty as a harbinger of the educational policies of the 1990s.…
Descriptors: United States History, War, Activism, Young Adults
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Groen, Mark – American Educational History Journal, 2007
Congressman George Frisbie Hoar of Massachusetts introduced a bill "to establish a system of national education" on February 25, 1870. This bill, and others that followed, opened an acrimonious political debate that lasted for twenty years. The opening salvos of that debate, and the regional issues of ethnicity and religion that framed…
Descriptors: Educational History, War, Slavery, Politics of Education
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Groen, Mark – American Educational History Journal, 2005
The American Civil War transformed societies' beliefs about education, as well as state policy regarding schools. The common schools of the 1850s tended to be locally funded, selective, and voluntary institutions. The Civil War, and the widespread belief, especially in the North, that a national system of common schools might have averted that…
Descriptors: United States History, War, Public Education, Social Change