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Title: The 1950s: Postwar Changes in Society and Education


1
The 1950s Postwar Changesin Society and
Education
  • Chapter 3
  • Bonnie Pazin
  • ILEAD 5

2
Overview
  • Facts Timeline
  • Television
  • Suburbia
  • Interstates
  • The Eisenhower Administration
  • National Defense Education Act
  • The Atomic Age Cold War
  • Civil Defense in Education

3
Facts of the 1950s
  • Population 151,684,000 (U.S. Dept. of Commerce,
  • Bureau of the Census)
  • Unemployed  3,288,000
  • Life expectancy   Women 71.1,  men  65.6
  • Car Sales  6,665,800
  • Average Salary  2,992
  • Labor Force male/female 5/2
  • Cost of a loaf of bread  0.14
  • Bomb shelter plans, like the government pamphlet
    You Can Survive, become widely available

4
Terms of the 1950s
  • Heightened cold war
  • Red scare/espionage
  • decade of quiet conformism
  • Atomic age and the bomb shelter
  • Space race
  • Suburbia
  • Interstate Highways
  • Juvenile Delinquents
  • Maladjusted Youth
  • Affluent America
  • McCarthyism
  • Progressivism
  • Rock and Roll
  • Beat Generation

5
Events Technology Timeline
  • 1950 - President  Harry Truman  ( 'til 1952)
    approves production of the hydrogen bomb and
    Sends air force and navy to Korea in June.
  • 1951 - Transcontinental television begins with a
    speech by Pres. Truman. 
  • Dwight D. Eisenhower  is president  from 1953
    until 1961
  • 1952 - The Immigration and Naturalization Act of
    1952 is signed, removing racial and ethnic
    barriers to becoming a U.S. citizen. 
  • 1953 -  Julius and Ethel Rosenberg are
    electrocuted for their part in W.W.II espionage. 
  • 1953 - Fighting ends in Korea. 
  • 1954 -  U. S. Senator Joseph McCarthy begins
    televised hearings into alleged Communists in the
    army. 
  • 1954 - Racial segregation is ruled
    unconstitutional in public schools by the U.S.
    Supreme Court. 
  • 1955 -  Rosa Parks refuses to give up her seat on
    a public bus in Montgomery, Alabama. 
  • 1955 - The American Federation of Labor and the
    Congress of Industrial Organizations merge making
    the new AFL-CIO an organization with 15 million
    members. 
  • 1955  Dr. Jonas Salk  developed a vaccine for 
    polio
  • 1956 - The Federal Highway Act is signed, marking
    the beginning of work on the interstate highway
    system.
  • 1958 - Explorer I, the first U.S. satellite,
    successfully orbits the earth. 
  • December 10, 1958 - The first domestic
    jet-airline passenger service is begun by
    National Airlines between New York City and
    Miami. 
  • 1959 - Alaska and Hawaii become the forty-ninth
    and fiftieth states. 

6
A Legal End to Desegregation
  • Until 1954, an official policy of " separate but
    equal " opportunities for blacks -- determined to
    be the correct method to insure that all children
    in America received an adequate and equal
    education in public schools
  • In 1954, Chief Justice Earl Warren and other
    members of the Supreme Court wrote in Brown v.
    the Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas
  • separate facilities for blacks did not make those
    facilities equal according to the Constitution
  • Integration was begun across the nation
  • In 1956,  Autherine J.Lucy successfully enrolled
    in the University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa.
  • In 1957, Elizabeth Eckford was the first black
    teenager to enter then all-white Little Rock
    Central High School , Little Rock, Arkansas.
  • Although integration took place quietly in most
    towns, the conflict at Central High School in
    Little Rock was the first of many confrontations
    in Arkansas which showed that public opinion on
    this issue was divided.

7
Good Economic Times
  • GNP increased from 285 billion in 1950 to 501
    billion in 1960
  • Manufacturings income increased from 76 billion
    in 1950 to 126 billion in 1960
  • Service sector more than doubled from 22 billion
    in 1950 to 44.5 billion in 1960
  • Unemployment rate at a low 4
  • Inflation rate less than 2 annually

8
Developments in Science Technology
  • Dr. Jonas Salk develops Polio Vaccine (1955)
  • Development of the computer
  • UNIVAC The world's first commercial computer
    began use on June 14, 1951. 
  • UNIVAC weighed eight tons
  • Fortran programming language developed by IBM
  • The advent of television

9
The advent of television
  • 1950 3.9 million homes with a television
  • 1960 46 million homes with a television
  • TV news coverage of major events were a more
    dramatic than the newspaper
  • Created a framework of popular culture and values
    the Dick and Jane perspective on how
    Americans should live

10
Changes in Pop Culture
  • Rock and Roll
  • Elvis Presley
  • Jerry Lee Lewis
  • Beat Generation
  • Writers like Jack Kerouac
  • First all color TV show
  • Howdy Doody 1955

11
Beginnings of Juvenile Deliquency
  • H.G. Good in A History of Education
  • When student given free use of car, school marks
    go down
  • Much confusion and disorder of unruly pupils
    teachers resign
  • Schools accused of breeding deliquency what can
    they do to prevent it?
  • Studies and scales created to predict probable
    delinquency

12
Rising Birth Rate
  • Generation of Baby Boomers
  • Population rose from 152 million in 1950 to 181
    million in 1960
  • Led to the resettlement of Americans to outlying
    areas of big cities

13
Growth of Suburbia
  • White middle class ethnic group moving to suburbs
  • New economic affluence
  • Changes in home building and ownership
  • Could build relatively inexpensive tract homes
    move from apartments to single family homes
  • Ex. Levittown, NY and PA William Levitt often
    called the Henry Ford of Housing
  • Interstates make commuting possible

14
Interstates and a highly mobile society
  • Suburbia facilitated by Eisenhowers large
    federal subsidies for interstate highway
    construction
  • 1956 National Defense Highway Act provides for
    building 41,000 of freeways
  • Interstates reduced isolation by geography
  • Made commuting possible and began the idea of
    rush hour traffic

15
Educational Pattern until 1950s
  • Large cities large urban school district with
    elementary and secondary under jurisdiction of a
    single board and superintendent of schools
  • At end of WWII, large urban schools seen as
    strongest sectors of American public education
  • Facilities
  • Richness of curriculum
  • Size of administrative and teaching personnel
  • Rural areas often had single school, one room
    districts

16
Demographic and Educational Shift in the 1950s
  • As suburbs develop, large cities found with
    declining urban tax base and declining of schools
  • Changing demographics in urban areas
  • Black and hispanic ethnic groups moving towards
    inner cities
  • Inner city population would generate new needs
    for education (not addressed until the 60s)
  • Rural schools being consolidated into larger,
    more efficient, modern districts

17
Demographic and Educational Shift in the 1950s
  • Metropolitan areas rings of suburbs around
    cities
  • Each suburb had its own
  • local municipal government
  • Elementary and secondary school districts
  • Bedroom communities
  • Largely-male workforce commuted to work each day
  • Women returned to homemakers

18
Demographic and Educational Shift in the 1950s
  • Young families producing school age children
  • Need for teachers and new schools grew
  • In 1950 24.3 million elementary students grew
    to 35.5 million in 1960

19
Surburban School Growth
  • Brick and Mortar period of school construction
  • Eisenhower administration supported federal aid
    to school construction
  • Was reluctant to do so
  • Generally followed Republican ideology of local
    control

20
Teacher Shortage
  • H.G. Good, in his book History of Education,
    wrote of a teacher shortage that became prevalent
    after WWII
  • Shortage made greater by the increase in children
    (also a shortage of classrooms)
  • Summer workshops for talented students were being
    created
  • Television introduced into schools to help with
    shortage could place hundreds of students with
    a few teachers aids and teachers could be in
    classrooms

21
Television in the Classroom
  • Television was thought to save teachers time and
    classroom space
  • Telecasts fixed the students attention
  • Telecasts were by experts in field who had time
    to perfect lessons
  • Television could not be a replacement for labs
    and hands-on learning
  • Control of curriculum was limited by the course
    of study
  • Prepare class for film, present the telecast,
    conduct exercises for their comprehension

22
Dwight D. Eisenhower
  • Succeeded Truman
  • Republican Nominee
  • Defeated Adlai Stevenson in 1952 and again in
    1956
  • President from 1953-1961
  • Popular war hero
  • Distinguished career as allied supreme commander
    in WWII
  • President of Columbia University
  • Commander of NATO

23
I Like Ike
  • Dwight D. Ike Eisenhower was a moderate, middle
    of the road Republican
  • As Cold War between US and USSR escalated,
    Eisenhower was a commanding, reassuring father
    figure as the US lived with the threat of
    nuclear war

24
The Time of the Eisenhower Administration
  • US generally economically prosperous and
    affluent growing middle class
  • Eisenhower did not attempt to reverse major
    trends of New Deal
  • Had two premises to his foreign policy
  • Avoiding the catastrophe of nuclear war
  • Maintaining national security through nuclear
    deterrence

25
Interest in Federal Aid to Education
  • Focused on unequal educational opportunity
  • Disparities between North South, urban rural
  • Inequalities between black and white segregated
    scools
  • Inadequate physical plants
  • Teacher shortages
  • Outdated curriculum

26
Eisenhower on Education
  • Truman, his predecessor, believed that the
    federal government had a role in advancing
    education
  • Eisenhower believed education should be handled
    at state and local level
  • Did not believe federal government had large role
    in education

27
Eisenhower on Education
  • Despite his reluctance he was drawn into
    education issues
  • Establishment of Department of Health, Education
    and Welfare (1953)
  • Supreme Court ruling that racial segregation in
    public schools was unconstitutional (1954)
  • Little Rock, Arkansas desegregation controversy
  • Enactment of the National Defense Education Act
    (NDEA 1957)

28
SPUTNIK
  • October 4, 1957
  • Soviets launch successfully a space satellite
  • that orbited the earth
  • Generated international, widespread criticism of
    American education especially in math, science
    and technology
  • Seen as a decline in academic rigor allowing USSR
    to take the lead in the space race
  • By concentrating more rigorously on math
    science in US schools, Americans could reclaim
    the lead

29
National Defense Education Act
  • 1957 -- National Defense Education Act (NDEA)
  • Gave assistance to
  • Science Technology
  • Math
  • Foreign language instruction
  • Guidance
  • Based on premise that federal government had an
    interest in these areas related to national
    defense
  • Eisenhower stated that it would strengthen our
    schools and advance our national security

30
National Defense Education Act
  • Over 100 million annually sent to aid public
    education
  • Led to curricular developments
  • New Math
  • New Chemistry, New Physics
  • Increase in Foreign Language Study
  • Technology education studies
  • Teachers institutes were created
  • Brought classroom teachers to colleges
    universities over the summer to work with
    innovators in their fields

31
Is American education doing its job?
  • Critic Rudolph Flesch in his book Why Johnny
    Can't Read, claimed that the American educational
    system was not doing its job. 
  • Other voices in the movement to revamp American
    schools were
  • Arthur Bestor- Educational Wastelands
  • Albert Lynd- Quackery in the Public Schools
  • Robert Hutchins - The Conflict in Education
  • Admiral Hyman Rickover- Education and Freedom

32
Atomic Age
  • In the aftermath of dropping of atomic bombs in
    the 1940s, US and Soviet Union raced to create a
    super bomb hydrogen bomb
  • US detonated a hydrogen bomb in 1952
  • Nine months later Soviets followed
  • Throughout the cold war, the race escalated to
    potential for global holocaust

33
The War of the Future
  • WWII demonstrated that war in the future would
    involve civilians as well as military
  • National security and military preparedness
    needed to be accompanied by civilian defense
  • Schools began instituting civil defense programs
    due to new methods of attack

34
Civil Defense
  • Truman stated Education is our first line of
    defense. In the conflict of principal and policy
    which divides the world today, Americas hope,
    our hope, the hope of the world is education.
  • Truman created the Federal Civil Defense
    Administration (1951)
  • Encourage and coordinate nations civil
    preparedness

35
Civil Defense
  • Civil defense educators began with broad goals
    and moved towards specific emergency procedures
    such as an atomic attack
  • FCDA mobilized state and local agencies for the
    cause
  • Produced educational materials about civil
    defense
  • Much of education in general developed and
    promoted civil defense including state
    departments of education, US Office of Education,
    schools of education
  • Most state departments of education prepared
    civil defense strategies and materials for use in
    schools
  • Teachers were considered key people in civil
    defense

36
Civil Defense Curriculum and Instruction
  • US Atomic Energy Commission developed workshops
    and institutes for teachers
  • Schools of education developed programs
  • Information about atomic energy infused into
    curriculum as units in existing science and
    social studies in high schools
  • Elementary students even incorporated atomic
    energy into their readings
  • Example a 2nd grade essay on good atoms

37
Civil Defense Education
  • Strongly precautionary stance about its powers of
    mass destruction
  • Units on communism were also developed at same
    time by state departments of education
  • Impacted safety education, atomic bomb drills,
    changes in school architecture as well as through
    formal curriculum

38
Duck and Cover
  • Civil Defense Education included inservice for
    teachers and classroom materials
  • Films incorporated such as Duck and Cover
  • Bert the Turtle ducks and covers during an atomic
    attack
  • Followed by children ducking and covering during
    an attack
  • Duck and Cover was included in the National Film
    Registry in the Library of Congress in 2004

39
Civil Defense in Schools
  • Clara P. McMahon, Elementary School Journal
  • Advised teachers that schools must adjust
    curriculum to incorporate qualities of students
    needed in an emergency
  • Listed 9 desired skills including
  • Acting without panic
  • Administering simple first aid
  • Thinking critically, problem solving
  • Working well with others
  • Recognizing and obeying air raid signals

40
Civil Defense in Schools
  • Communities formed district-wide committees
    involving parents
  • School districts sent letters home with students
  • Parents were advised to discuss issues with their
    children

41
National PTA
  • National Parent-Teacher Association in 1951
    advised members to develop positive mental health
    programs
  • Alleviate childrens anxieties
  • Parents and teachers urged to be calm

42
School Preparedness Procedures
  • Many schools implemented procedures and actual
    bomb drills
  • Smooth implementation was delegated to building
    principals
  • Detroit public schools issued a directive,
    Protection of School Children in the New
    Emergency Preliminary Guide for Immediate
    Action with 10 steps for principals
  • Detroit considered a high-profile target city due
    to auto industry and took serious precautions

43
Bomb Drills
  • Large target cities were the first to begin
    atomic air raid drills
  • New York
  • LA
  • Chicago
  • Detroit
  • Milwaukee
  • Fort Worth
  • San Francisco
  • Philadelphia

44
3 Types of Drills
  • No advanced warning
  • Advanced warning
  • Dispersal

45
No Advanced Warning
  • Duck and cover drills were most common
  • Pupils fell to the floor, crawled under desks and
    assumed the atomic head clutch position
  • Backs to windows, faces between knees, hands
    clasped on back of neck, ears covered with arms
    and eyes closed
  • Duck and Cover film and others used in class

46
Advanced Warning
  • Assumed you had time to get to shelter in
    basement, hallways or others believed to be able
    to withstand a bomb blast
  • Principal sounded alarm
  • Students lined up and moved to designated areas
    sitting up against walls

47
Dispersal Drills
  • Enough warning time to get home from school
  • Conducted at end of school day
  • Least common drill
  • Done mostly in big cities like New York
  • Provided little control over students movement
    and were not built-in to the standard civil
    defense education

48
ID Tags
  • Modeled after GI dog tags and given to students
  • New York City had biggest program

49
To be a child in the 1950s
  • Threat of nuclear war important piece of their
    formative part of childhood and school
    experiences
  • Bomb drills remain vivid memories both the
    drills and the anxiety associated with them
  • Children had no escape due to television
  • Psychology experts uncertain about effects of
    civil defense programs on children

50
School Architecture
  • Growth of suburbia led to new schools being built
  • Now served dual purpose
  • Be functional for education
  • Provide maximum shelter from nuclear attack
  • Large banks of windows that maximized light and
    ventilation were eliminated for fear of glass in
    attack
  • New designs featured more solid walls and bomb
    curtains in some places
  • Architects felt it would shield from natural
    disasters also
  • Schools could then be used as shelter for larger
    population if necessary

51
An example in Colorado
  • The expanding student population of Grand
    Junction prompted the building of a new high
    school in 1955.
  • It was designed in a clean lined, modern 1950s
    style by architect Paul Atchison of Denver.
  • The auditorium was made large enough to serve
    also as a civic auditorium.

52
Issues to explore?
  • Long term effects of civil defense education on
    todays curriculum
  • Effects did civil defense education have on
    psychology
  • Teacher shortage and movement to value teachers
    through salary and education
  • Television in education how it was used and how
    it is used today
  • How computer development affected education
  • Movement to reform science education after
    Sputnik and the beginning of the space race
  • The involvement of federal government in
    education vs. state and local governments
  • Pop culture and education how they influence
    each other
  • Rating Americas schools are the schools doing
    enough?
  • Juvenile deliquency and schools part in control
    and prevention
  • Architecture in the 50s schools and housing
    and effects on Suburbia, industry and education

53
References
  • Good, H.G. (1962). A History of American
    Education, Second Edition. New York The
    Macmillan Company.
  • Gutek, G. (2000). American Education 1945-2000
    A history and commentary. Long Grove, IL
    Waveland Press Inc.
  • Lindop, E. (2002) America in the 1950s.
    Connecticut Twenty First Century Books.
  • McMahon, Clara P. Civil Defense and Educational
    Goals. Elementary School Journal, Vol. 53, No. 8
    (Apr., 1953), pp. 440-442. Retrieved from
    www.jstor.org
  • Mondale, S. and Patton, S. (2001). School The
    Story of American Public Education. Boston
    Beacon Press.
  • Michel, George J. Success in National
    Educational Policy from Eisenhower to Carter.
    Peabody Journal of Education Vol. 57, No. 4
    (Jul., 1980), pp. 223-232. Retrieved from
    www.jstor.org

54
References
  • http//kclibrary.nhmccd.edu/decade50.htmleducatio
    n
  • http//www.archives.nysed.gov/edpolicy/research/ch
    ronology1944.shtml
  • http//www.wikipedia.org
  • http//www.gjhistory.org/pix/1950s_education.htm
  • http//www.miragestlouis.com/home.html
  • http//home.att.net/boomers.fifties.teenmag/1950_
    history.html
  • http//server1.fandm.edu/levittown/one/b.html
  • http//www.capitalcentury.com/1951.html
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