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Church, school and locality: revisiting the historiography of "state" and "religious" educational infrastructures in England and Wales, 1780-1870

  • Autores: Mary Clare Martin
  • Localización: Paedagogica Historica: International journal of the history of education, ISSN 0030-9230, Vol. 49, Nº. Extra 1, 2013 (Ejemplar dedicado a: Rethinking the relationship : society, state and education), págs. 70-81
  • Idioma: inglés
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  • Resumen
    • The historiographical tradition which developed within the history of education from the 1970s regarded religious organisations as distractions from the �real� task of developing state-funded universal compulsory education. Despite more positive evaluations of voluntary agencies within the history of social policy, since the 1980s, the schools affiliated to the national co-ordinating religious societies are still regarded as potential agents of social control, inadequate in numerical terms, with poor standards, dull curricula and brutal discipline. This article seeks to redress the balance of this historiography by means of a case-study of part of the London hinterland. It will show how voluntary schools attached to national and international �modern� co-ordinating bodies might provide sufficient school places, a curriculum which was structured, with results evaluated positively by inspectors, and could operate systems of rewards rather than corporal punishment. Comparisons with the period after school boards were founded indicates that attendance rates stayed about the same, that the curriculum initially narrowed in one area, and that corporal punishment increased. While these factors were due partly to population increase, the evidence nevertheless demonstrates how voluntary schools could provide adequately, even well, for local populations, and that rate-aided school provision might have negative consequences


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