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The founding fathers, education, and "the great contest": the American Philosophical Society prize of 1797

Justice, Benjamin(Edited by)
Part of the Historical Studies in Education series
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In 1795, the nation's leading research institution offered a prize for the best essay on a system of public education for the United States. Over the next two years, the proposals they received ranged from the ridiculous to the provocative to the eerily familiar. The Founding Fathers, Education, and "The Great Contest" revisits that unique moment in American history, when the founding fathers first opened the enduring debate on how best to educate the American citizenry. In ten essays, leading historians use the American Philosophical Society's education prize as a starting point for broader explorations of critical themes: gender, race, religion, public versus private education, centralization versus localism, voluntary associations, higher education, and research methods. This book also publishes, for the first time, all of the original contest essays.

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£57.50
Product Details
Palgrave Macmillan
1137271027 / 9781137271020
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
18/07/2013
English
275 pages
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