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The Committee of Ten

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 April 2016

Jeanne E. Bishop*
Affiliation:
Westlake Schools Planetarium, 24525 Hilliard Road, Westlake, Ohio 44145, U.S.A.

Extract

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The college-educated populations of colonial 18th- and 19th-century United States were reasonably well-versed in principles of elementary astronomy — perhaps not fully in spatial concepts of seasons and lunar phases, though they certainly had some correct ideas about their causes. Astronomy had found a niche in academies and in the public high schools that succeeded them. In 1838 an observatory was installed in a Philadelphia high school. The states turned to the academies and early high schools for the majority of their elementary teachers, so the teachers who completed high school in the 19th century had been taught the reasons for common astronomical phenomena and conveyed these reasons to children. Parental teaching reinforced what was taught in primary schools. Until the late 19th century, colleges continued to offer astronomy or natural philosophy as part of the general curriculum. It therefore seems that a cycle of astronomy teaching and learning rudimentary astronomy was in effect until the late 1900’s.

Type
9. High-School Courses
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1990

References

1 U.S. Bureau of Education. Repori of the Committee on Secondary School Studies. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1893.Google Scholar
2 Bishop, Jeanne E.United States Astronomy Education: Past, Present, and Future.” Science Education 61 (3): 295305 (1977).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
3 Bishop, Jeanne E.Astronomy Education in the United States: Out from Under a Black Cloud.” Griffith Observer, pp. 210. March, 1980.Google Scholar