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Education History featured in December Archival Chronicle
December 19, 2011 | Leave a Comment
Bowling Green State University was founded in response to a public demand for more professionally-trained teachers. A century of change in society and in the workplace had made a “basic” education one which went beyond the simple rudiments of “Readin’, Writin’, and ‘Rithmetic.” By the beginning of the twentieth century, school attendance was compulsory through the eighth grade.
The classroom pictured at left shows over forty children under the direction of a single teacher. Thick textbooks are prominently displayed. Teachers no longer needed to rely on books haphazardly provided by the child’s family. A good education was the community’s investment in its own future. The profession of teaching had become highly respected by this time, if not always well-paid. Read the article on our website.
Gallery Feature: Teaching 1870-1930 provides a glimpse of the schools provided during the early years of the twentieth century as well as mementos of school life for students and teachers throughout this transitional time period.