
Essays On Educational Reformers
Versandkostenfrei!
Versandfertig in 1-2 Wochen
24,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
PAYBACK Punkte
12 °P sammeln!
A clear-eyed beacon for readers curious about how schools became what they are today. This essay collection gathers the probing voices of Victorian America on curriculum improvement, teacher training reform, and the shifting funds that underpinned public schooling. Robert Hebert Quick's historical education essays offer a concise map of late nineteenth-century reform-Horace Mann's legacy, Charles Eliot's educational visions, and the enduring dialogue between teachers and scholars. The prose combines lucid analysis with humane storytelling, inviting casual readers and classic-literature collect...
A clear-eyed beacon for readers curious about how schools became what they are today. This essay collection gathers the probing voices of Victorian America on curriculum improvement, teacher training reform, and the shifting funds that underpinned public schooling. Robert Hebert Quick's historical education essays offer a concise map of late nineteenth-century reform-Horace Mann's legacy, Charles Eliot's educational visions, and the enduring dialogue between teachers and scholars. The prose combines lucid analysis with humane storytelling, inviting casual readers and classic-literature collectors alike to reflect on policy as it touches classrooms, communities, and the life of the nation. Within its pages lies a compact corpus for study by policy researchers and readers who crave a sense of education reform as lived history. This volume is more than a window into the past; it is a bridge to readers who want to understand how ideas about public school funding, teacher preparation, and the aims of schooling continue to echo today. It stands as a note of cultural significance, a touchpoint for scholars and curious minds seeking authentic nineteenth-century voices. Out of print for decades and now republished by Alpha Editions. Restored for today's and future generations. More than a reprint - a collector's item and a cultural treasure.