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Institutionalization and Education in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 February 2017
Extract
[Editor's Note: The viewpoints which follow represent a reconstructed transcript of a symposium held at the annual American Educational Research Association meeting in Boston, Massachusetts, April 8, 1980. The Symposium, chaired by Prof. Paul H. Mattingly of New York University, was also entitled “Institutionalization and Education in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries.”]
Prof. Mattingly:
Welcome to this Symposium, “Institutionalization and Education in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries.” This afternoon we hope to initiate several lines of inquiry which will be productive in the historical study of institutionalization and education. Both of these notions have become increasingly important in all disciplines of American scholarship, and in a sense in proportion to this heightened significance their meaning becomes progressively confused. It would not be totally out of place to make that ratio one of the maxims for studying both institutions and education today.
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References
Notes
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