In the reading for part two: 1900-1950-As American as Public School, there
were so many irregulations in the education system. These irregulations include
segregations, IQ tests, lack of space and nationalism. At the beginning of the
chapter children did not attend school regularly and some attended school part
time which was due to the lack of space for students. During the Great Depression,
children preferred going to work instead of going to school. After the
increasing number of students working, schools became a place for training
under progressive ideals, which made students love school more. standardized
testing such as the IQ test sorted students into categories for tracking. Children
had to meet some academic requirements which was considered the IQ test to get
accepted to good school. IQ tests were used to determine the quality of people
by ethnicity and race. This was hard for immigrants as they were hardly able read
or speak English.
Segregation was also present during that 1900s to 1950s. Black
children were not able to enroll into public school because of segregation. Immigrants
and black people were fighting for proper education and equality in receiving
it. Segregated schools placed students of diverse ethnicities into industrial
schools. By doing this, girls were put into household curriculum and boys were
put in industrial curriculum. This was unfair to the immigrants because they
were never given the chance to show their talents or to be creative. Julian Nava
says “it has been an enormous loss for our country” talking about the children
that were lost from minority groups and how they were not given a chance to
show what they have got from talents and creativity.
In the article Civic Education 1900-19050s, the effect of nationalism
and how it played a big role in education was discussed. Ethnic and civic
nationalism are central to explaining a historical change. Ethnic nationalists argued
that people of a nation are bound together by common descent and by ties of blood,
these ties are not to be chosen; they are inherited. Civic nationalism defines
a nation in terms of people regardless of their race, color, language and
ethnicity. This nationalism is called civic because it pictures the nation as a
united community that is granted equal rights. In the 1930’s the American
society was tempered by the great failure of civic nationalism. In part two of
the reading we see a lack of civic nationalism as people with different color,
race, ethnicity and language were treated differently and they were segregated
from the white students. The civil rights movement against segregation expanded
nationalism that caused changes in civic education which was contributed to the
defeat of ethnic nationalism.
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