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Avoiding a “Hothouse System of Education”: Nineteenth-Century Early Childhood Education from the Infant Schools to the Kindergartens

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 February 2017

Caroline Winterer*
Affiliation:
Department of History at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

Extract

Histories of education in the United States have often focused upon the role of nineteenth-century urbanization and industrialization in accelerating educational innovation. In keeping with this trend, historians of the kindergarten have attributed the success of this institution to several factors. The kindergarten, based on the pedagogy of the German educator Friedrich Froebel, was first introduced in the United States from Germany in 1860 and by 1914 was entrenched in most American urban public school systems. By then, over nine hundred cities operated nearly 6,500 kindergarten classes with an enrollment of 312,000 children. In accounting for this movement's rapid success, some historians have emphasized the role of kindergartens in assimilating the immigrants that poured into American cities after the Civil War. Others have argued persuasively that the kindergarten's emphasis on “the Child, the Home, Family, and Motherhood,” as well as faith in the perfectibility of children, meshed nicely with nineteenth-century evangelical concerns over the conflict between private and public spheres, and therefore found an enthusiastic following among female reformers, philanthropists, and educators.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 1992 by the History of Education Society 

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References

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6 Over the last fifteen years, historians have begun to look more closely at the infant schools. See Tank, Robert Melvin, “Young Children, Families, and Society in America since the 1820s: The Evolution of Health, Education, and Child Care Programs for Preschool Children” (Ph.D. diss., University of Michigan, 1980); Jenkins, , “Infant Schools”; May, Dean and Vinovskis, Maris, “A Ray of Millennial Light: Early Education and Social Reform in the Infant School Movement in Massachusetts, 1826–1840,” in Family and Kin in Urban Communities, 1700–1930 , ed. Hareven, Tamara K. (New York, 1977), 62–99; Kaestle, Carl F. and Vinovskis, Maris A., Education and Social Change in Nineteenth-Century Massachusetts (Cambridge, Eng., 1980); Beatty, Barbara R., “‘A Vocation from on High’: Preschool Advocacy and Teaching as an Occupation for Women in Nineteenth-Century Boston” (Ed.D. diss., Harvard University, 1981).Google Scholar

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8 My brief overview of the infant school movement relies largely upon evidence from the Boston infant schools, for which the most data are available.Google Scholar

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49 May, and Vinovskis, , “Ray of Millennial Light,” 63; Barnard, Henry, “Kindergarten and Child-Culture Papers: Plan of Publication,” American Journal of Education 30 (1880): 1. Barnard's AJE made the first explicit reference to the kindergarten in 1870; the 1880 issue was devoted almost entirely to promoting the kindergarten, a testament to how quickly the movement caught on in the United States. Idem, “The System of Public Instruction in Prussia,” American journal of Education (1870): 616.Google Scholar

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