Not that long ago, I asked a retiring historian of education about the future. “There will always be work for historians like us,” he assured me. “Serious people will keep asking serious questions that we are uniquely equipped to answer.”Footnote 1 In this essay, I look at two spaces where historians of education have answered serious questions before: official inquiries into school systems, and courtrooms where educational rights and injustices are litigated. To be sure, these are not the only places where historians handle consequential matters. Teaching about the past in a classroom is serious business. So is historical research in archives. For that matter, our colleagues in other education disciplines are also engaged in their own forms of serious work. I do not wish to take anything away from any of these efforts. Rather, concentrating on two examples of the serious work of historians of education is just one way for me to spotlight and spell out the special knowledge and skills we possess. This, I hope, will encourage us to continue to apply that knowledge and those skills, wherever serious questions may arise for us in the future.
Official Inquiries
“Some day there will be an investigation of the high costs of investigations,” Canadian satirist Bob Edwards once joked.Footnote 2 While many Westminster parliamentary systems have them, Canada might be unique for the sheer number of official inquiries, such as royal commissions, that federal and provincial governments have called. Many of these have been education commissions, with just about every province during the twentieth century calling at least one major one.Footnote 3 British Columbia alone convened eight.Footnote 4
Education commissions are mandated to scour the system, to study it up and down and from back to front.Footnote 5 This is a perfect remit for historians. We gather evidence. Commissions thrive on collected facts and data. We are strong generalists, able to trace “social, political, and economic factors” simultaneously in ways that sociologists, political scientists, and economists, who specialize in one or the other of these factors in isolation, are not. Commissions take all possible angles on an issue: social, political, economic, and many others. We are specialists in the study of change over time, its causes and effects.Footnote 6 Commissions are absorbed with change. “Royal Commission studies allow us to reappraise our educational efforts,” British Columbia’s 1988 Sullivan Commission report reads, “to look backward and forward in time, to preserve what is good and enduring, and to consider the changes we can make to produce even more effective ways for people to learn.”Footnote 7 We write well for general audiences. Commission reports are “grey literature” that our clarity and directness—and a little of our zip—can brighten.
These historian qualities may be why education commissions have often called on us to contribute to, and even lead, their work. The historian of education Louis-Philippe Audet was secretary of Quebec’s landmark Parent Commission (1961-1963) and likely produced at least the first chapter of the commission’s report, on the history of education in Quebec.Footnote 8 Another historian of education of Audet’s generation, C. E. Phillips, was on Ontario’s equally watershed Hall-Dennis Commission (1965-1968).Footnote 9 Two historians, Thomas Fleming and John Calam were, respectively, the research director and senior researcher for the Sullivan Commission’s section on “schools and society,” while Fleming also edited the commission’s final report.Footnote 10
Courtrooms
Another place where historians of education have had considerable influence is the serious business of litigation of education rights and educational injustices. Both types of proceedings often require courts to gain a sense of the educational past. Historians are the experts they call to give them that awareness. One of the biggest cases in Canadian history to litigate education rights was the Bill 30 case. The case concerned the rights of Catholics in the province of Ontario to fully publicly funded Catholic separate high schools.Footnote 11 As the Ontario government prepared to legislate full public funding for those schools in 1985, it referred its proposed law (Bill 30) to the Ontario Court of Appeal to test the bill’s constitutionality.Footnote 12 The court ruled the bill constitutional in a 3-2 decision. This split ruling opened the door to an appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada (SCC), an appeal that was soon filed by a group led by the Metropolitan Toronto School Board (a public board of education) and the Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation (the public high school teachers’ union).Footnote 13
When the SCC heard the Bill 30 appeal in 1987, Canada’s highest court considered three core constitutional questions bearing on the legislation. One of these was decidedly a historical question: Did Ontario fully fund Catholic high schools at the time of Confederation in 1867? If the answer turned out to be yes, then the right to full public funding for Catholic schools was constitutionally protected, as Canada’s founding documents (the British North America Act and the Constitution Act, 1982)—and indeed the nation’s founding compromise itself—forever protect all denominational rights and privileges in education that existed “at the Union [at Confederation].”Footnote 14 To answer the question, the 1987 SCC decision states, “it [was] necessary to consider the history of pre-Confederation legislation pertaining to education in Upper Canada [i.e., Ontario].”Footnote 15
The appellants in the Bill 30 case hired R. D. Gidney, a historian of education at the University of Western Ontario (UWO), to testify on the historical question about denominational rights. The respondents hired their own historians of education. Together the two sides submitted “more than a thousand pages” of historical evidence, including Gidney’s, which the ruling cites.Footnote 16 Gidney would later write with education law professor and UWO colleague G. M. Dickinson that, with exceptions, “there have been few legal cases in this country in which historical evidence and interpretation have played so prominent a part” as the Bill 30 case.Footnote 17
Few cases—at that point in time. Gidney and Dickinson did not anticipate the Indian Residential Schools (IRS) cases that would pile up in the 1990s. These cases litigated not education rights—but educational injustices, such as poor learning conditions, abuse, and inadequate instruction, in the IRS system that Canada’s federal government oversaw or operated for Indigenous children from the 1880s to the 1990s. The avalanche of cases (4,500 different lawsuits by 2000) were eventually collected as a class action,Footnote 18 which was then settled with the Indian Residential School Settlement Agreement (IRSSA) in 2006.Footnote 19 That settlement included the government agreeing to support a Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC), which traveled the country, collected testimony, and reported in 2015.Footnote 20
The IRSSA assigned the TRC seven goals, including compiling “as complete an historical record as possible of the IRS system and its legacy.”Footnote 21 To accomplish this, the TRC relied on historians’ research. The six volumes in the TRC’s report include Canada’s Residential Schools: The History, Part 1, Origins to 1939 (volume 1) and Canada’s Residential Schools: The History, Part 2, 1939 to 2000 (volume 2), two publications that run a combined two thousand pages.Footnote 22 Separate volumes on Inuit and northern experiences, and on Métis experiences, as well as a report on survivor testimony, include considerable historical evidence as well.Footnote 23 TRC volumes 1 and 2 lean heavily on two historians’ monographs, namely J. R. Miller’s Shingwauk’s Vision and J. S. Milloy’s A National Crime.Footnote 24 History of education played a serious part in the serious business of addressing past Canadian wrongs on an unprecedented national stage.
On smaller stages also, historians have recently given evidence in court cases litigating educational injustices. In the 2020 case of Cavanaugh et al. v. Grenville Christian College et al., for example, Paul Axelrod, a York University professor emeritus and historian of education, testified as an expert on the historical standard of care in provincial public schools. The Cavanaugh trial weighed accusations that staff at Grenville, a private school for mostly boarding students in grades 7 to 12, had abused students under the school’s system of strict rules and harsh punishments. Axelrod’s evidence, which the judge called crucial to the court’s finding against Grenville Christian College, demonstrated without a doubt that discipline at Grenville from the 1970s to 1990s fell far short of prevailing norms at public or private schools.Footnote 25
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Official inquiries, such as royal commissions, and court cases and their outcomes, such as the TRC, are serious business. They deal with evidence, call for a big-picture view that is clearly communicated for a public audience, and are often concerned with change over time. Historians possess unique knowledge and abilities enabling us to speak on these matters. We are evidence-gathering generalists, plain-language communicators, and are better equipped to explain change over time and its causes and effects than practitioners of any other discipline. We are uniquely prepared for serious questions, which people will continue to ask and which we will continue to answer.
Jason Ellis is associate professor in the Department of Educational Studies at the University of British Columbia. He is editor of Historical Studies in Education/Revue d’histoire de l’éducation.