
Learning for Work
How Industrial Education Fostered Democratic Opportunity
- 312 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
Rooting her account in John Dewey's ideas, Goddard moves from early nineteenth century supporters of the union of learning and labor to the interconnected histories of CMTS, New Jersey's Manual Training and Industrial School for Colored Youth, North Dakota's Normal and Industrial School, and related programs elsewhere. Goddard analyzes the work of movement figures like abolitionist Theodore Weld, educators Calvin Woodward and Booker T. Washington, social critic W.E.B. Du Bois, Dewey himself, and his influential Chicago colleague Ella Flagg Young. The book contrasts ideas about manual training held by advocate Nicholas Murray Butler with those of opponent William Torrey Harris and considers overlooked connections between industrial education and the Arts and Crafts Movement.
An absorbing merger of history and storytelling, Learning for Work looks at the people who shaped industrial education while offering a provocative vision of realizing its potential today.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Preface: Learning How the Work of the World Is Done
- 1. Through Mind and Hand to Manhood
- 2. Learning and Doing Arrives in Chicago
- 3. Joining Hands and Heads on the Midway
- 4. A “Star of Hope” Defines Industrial Education
- 5. The People’s School on the Prairie and How It Grew
- 6. Agency and Efficiency: Manual Training Becomes Vocational Education
- Epilogue: Lessons on Education and Work from Bordentown and Ellendale
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Credits
- Index