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Schooling Girls and Women and Schooling and American Indians

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Title: Schooling Girls and Women and Schooling and American Indians


1
Schooling Girls and Womenand Schooling and
American Indians
Focus on Political Economy Ideology
Schooling In addition
  • Tozer Chapters 5 and 7

2
Schooling Girls and Women
Political Economy
  • American Revolution-ideas on how new nation
    should be and educations essential role
  • Need for teachers in Common Schools led women to
    the workforce therefore needing a higher
    education for women
  • Growing industry required clerical workers

Ideology
  • Move from wives and mothers to workers in society
  • Women not viewed as rational and independent
    beings
  • Women still believed to be inferior to men, but
    entitled to an education
  • Most believed the only appropriate goal was
    matrimony
  • 19th century-3 thoughts regarding education of
    girls
  • Right Wing
  • Liberals
  • Left Wing

3
Schooling
  • Increase in number of girls in public school
  • Curriculum of domestic sciences
  • 1630-start of American Rev.-women barred from
    public schooling (few exceptions)
  • Those girls that were accepted to public school
    done so grudginglycould only attend when boys
    were absent (5-7am)
  • Wealthy women often tutored at home/private
    academies
  • Dancing, music, drawing, needlepoint
  • Read about Emma Willard and her accomplishments
  • p. 132

4
In addition
  • Womans first responsibility was to her husband
  • Manners and morals of society called for women to
    exemplify this behavior to their children
  • Cult of Domesticity-women should be educated as
    homemaking and nurturing were exclusively female
    teaching roles
  • Radicals Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton
    and Soujourner Truth, and others, led the demand
    for gender equality
  • Seneca Falls Womens Rights Convention-demand
    for vote and higher education for women
  • Normal Schools opened in response to demand for
    higher education for women
  • Vassar College founded on the premise that women
    were equal to men---major breakthrough
  • 1920s-bDomestic Vocational Education movement
  • Commercial Education-appropriate for white
    working class females, immigrants and African
    American females could then socialize in
    workforce

5
Schooling and American Indians
  • 6 STAGES
  • INTERACTION OF NATIVE AMERICANS AND EUROPE
    AMERICANS
  • CONQUEST- 1492-1886. Number of Indians reduced
    from 1 million to ¼ million by 1890war and
    disease. Indians seen as an impediment to
    expansion and progress.
  • CIVILIZATION- 1819 Civilization ActIndian men to
    stop hunting, move from kinship to
    individualization. Capitalism, women out of the
    fields.
  • REMOVAL- 1820s. Whites in the south East felt
    that change wasnt going fast enough,Indians felt
    that they could maintain their culture by moving.
  • Trail of Tearsrelocated to land in the West.
    For their own good. (president Jackson).

6
  • 4. CONCENTRATION- concentrate in out of the way
    places and continue to convert reservations
  • 5. ASSIMILATION- 1880s, poverty on
    reservations, living in teepees, not
    assimilating. Christian missionaries sent to
    kidnap children. Public schooling to socialize
  • Education Goal-assimilation, boarding schools,
    and later on reservation
  • schools, and public schools. Children required
    to cut hair, rituals banned, prohibited from
    speaking native language.
  • Land allotment and boarding school policies
    contributed to the destitution rather than the
    assimilation. Indians would receive and education
    appropriate to their statusvocationalmarginal
    laborers/repetitive hand work.
  • 6. SELF DETERMINATION- 1960s Bureau of Indian
    Affairs (BIA) established. Red Power to force
    the government to uphold its treaties. (Protest
    dismissed as communist inspired.)

7
Political Economy
  • -Each group of Indian people is a unique and
    complex
  • cultural within the North American
    environment
  • -Many differences among tribeslinguistics,
    cultural and
  • environmental
  • -Many different tribes coexisted as a means of
    survival.
  • -Iroquois lived in towns. Matrilineal (Women
    owned
  • property). Hunted, fished, crops, shared
    deer with other
  • towns. Coexisted with nature.
  • -Provided for own needs, cared for the sick,
    taught tribal beliefs to children, taught values
    and skills.
  • -War and disease accelerated Indian change and
    disillusioned Indians were constantly being
    encouraged to assimilate into European Christian
    culture
  • -Treaties were agreed upon between the tribes and
    the federal government.

8
Ideology
  • -The idea of Manifest Destiny was often used as
    justification for subduing all native cultures.
  • -19th century, Euro-Americans believed that their
    culture was the definition of civilization.
  • American Indians, when conceptualizing God, saw
    God and nature as one. American Indians believed
    that they should live in harmony with the
    environment, not to subdue it. Seen as savage by
    Euro-Americans.
  • -1886-Dawes Act-distribute tribal lands to
    individual tribes members Policy reduced tribal
    lands by 100 million acres between 1886-1933.
  • -Euro-American missionaries and government
    officials wanted to lessen the differences
    between themselves and the Indians.
  • -Growing Nationalism resulted in an inevitable
    clash of ideological perspectives

9
Schooling
  • European attempts to educate Native Americans
    were intended to be a part of a civil solution to
    problems that ensued violence.
  • -Native American families resisted formal
    education and its assimilative approach
  • -1886-Dawes Act-intended to teach Indians how
    yeoman farmers work.
  • -18th and 19th centuries, Government was funding
    a number of Indian schools run by Missionaries.
    Indians also educated in on-reservation boarding
    schools and in public schools.
  • -Boarding schools and the allotment policy was a
    major contributor of the break up of Indian
    tribes.
  • Boarding Schools criticized
  • -Barbaric living and working conditions in
    Boarding
  • Schools
  • -Attempt at rapid assimilation caused resentment
    of
  • the dominant culture did not create
    a faster
  • assimilation.

10
  • Francis E. Leupp- supported use of reservation
    day schools-- civilization could be brought to
    Indian instead of Indian to civilization.
  • Scientific Management and Educational Reform-
  • 1928-The Merriam Report titled Problem of Indian
    Administration concluded
  • -Need to revise the BIA policy of cultural
    assimilation and boarding schools
  • -BIAs most fundamental concern was education
  • -More government administration was needed to
    effect
  • policy change and maintenance
  • -Through education the Indian could begin to
  • understand better the demands of
    modern culture and
  • technology
  • -Important that Indians retain their cultural
    wisdom.
  • -Indian culture became a value by the BIA
    administration
  • -Indians would progress only if the most
    sophisticated management techniques and
    educational practices were employed.
  • -Lack of Indian administrators and
    teachers for Indian schools

11
Read about these major players in the schooling
of American Indians
  • W. Carson Ryan
  • John Collier
  • Willard Walcott Beatty (no relation to Warren!)
  • WHAT IS THE IRA?
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