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Trimingham Jack, Christine – History of Education Review, 2022
Purpose: Charlotte Brontë integrated her own and her sisters' traumatic boarding school experiences into her novel, Jane Eyre (1847) as a way of expressing her anger through autobiographical fiction. The aim is to link contemporary research into boarding school trauma to the relevant events, thereby identifying what she wrote as a testimony…
Descriptors: Boarding Schools, Educational Experience, Trauma, Authors
Trond Risto – History of Education, 2024
There is no doubt that the first boarding school in the South Sami region in Norway (1910-1951) was authoritarian and contributed to Sami assimilation over several generations. Descriptions given by a former student regarding the poor conditions 70 years after he felt he was the victim of abuse is perhaps a sign of growing self-awareness among the…
Descriptors: Educational History, Boarding Schools, Minority Groups, Foreign Countries
Joe Stahlman; Hayden Haynes; Jocelyn Jones, Contributor – Journal of Folklore and Education, 2022
A photo essay and exhibition proves powerful for a community looking at the aftereffects of one Indian Boarding School.
Descriptors: Boarding Schools, United States History, American Indian History, Educational History
Mueller, Tim – History of Education, 2021
August Heißmeyer was a high-ranking SS officer, a member of Heinrich Himmler's inner circle, husband to Reich women's leader Gertrud Scholtz-Klink, and the driving force behind the pan-European expansion of Nazi elite schools during the Third Reich. In light of Heißmeyer's official pardon by Württemberg state president Dr Gebhard Müller in 1951,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational History, Authoritarianism, Biographies
Lillie, Karen – History of Education, 2022
This article explores elite international education in the late twentieth century through the case of the Leysin American School (LAS), an international boarding school in Switzerland. From LAS's founding in 1961 to its re-branding in 2011, broader geopolitical and economic frameworks shifted from a period dominated by the Cold War to one informed…
Descriptors: Educational History, Advantaged, Boarding Schools, Social Systems
Walford, Geoffrey – Oxford Review of Education, 2021
This article explores the phenomenon of country houses repurposed as private schools. It investigates the population of English schools within the Headmasters and Headmistresses Conference and the Girls' Schools Association and finds that some 55 of these schools are partially housed within former country houses, with 19 in Grade I listed…
Descriptors: Educational Facilities, Private Schools, Social Class, Boarding Schools
Kosim, Mohammad; Muqoddam, Faqihul; Mubarok, Faidol; Laila, Nur Quma – Cogent Education, 2023
Since Indonesia's independence in 1945, policies related to Islamic education have undergone a shift from a domestication approach to an accommodation approach. This paper aims to examine the forms of government policies that have regulated Islamic education during this time period, and to analyze the underlying factors and consequences of these…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Policy, Islamic Culture, Islam
Marleen Reichgelt – History of Education, 2024
Despite a visual turn in the field of history of education, including visual sources has far from become standard practice when writing histories of education or when considering children's voices from the past. Yet photographs can be especially fruitful when considering marginalised children who left few traces in other records. Building upon…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational History, Photography, Visual Aids
Hatfield, Mary – History of Education, 2022
This article focuses on an underexplored aspect of the Catholic convent school experience, namely the kinds of socialisation and regulation of emotion maintained within the convent community. Drawing on the emerging history of emotions and the concept of emotional communities first posited by Barbara H. Rosenwein, it considers how historians might…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Self Control, Middle Class, Foreign Countries
Bunnell, Tristan; Courtois, Aline; Donnelly, Michael – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2020
Our paper examines the opening of branches overseas ('satellite colleges') by elite private schools mainly located in England ('founding colleges'), largely in emerging economies of the Middle East and South East Asia. We trace the development of these 'satellite colleges' over three successive waves of growth, from opportunistic venturing in…
Descriptors: International Education, Foreign Countries, Selective Admission, Educational History
Carol A. Mullen – Policy Futures in Education, 2024
The topic of this academic review is settler slogans that mandate colonial school policy in North America. Also discussed is Indigenous futurity as a strategy for transforming education and countering the educational harm that comes from weaponized language. Beginning in 1887, the US federal government authorized colonial schooling, using the…
Descriptors: Colonialism, Politics of Education, Advertising, Mass Media
Keri Bradford – ProQuest LLC, 2021
This study addressed Native American students' perceptions of their educational experiences, 142 years after the first federally-run, off-reservation Indian Boarding School opened, and their perceptions of how university staff, faculty, and administrators could better serve Native students. Qualitative interviews were conducted with five Native…
Descriptors: American Indian Students, Higher Education, American Indian Education, American Indian History
Gerster, Daniel – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2020
The article explores how different concepts of "nature" were applied in secondary education in Germany around 1900 by examining the discussions on and practices in particular boarding schools. It will first scrutinise Enlightenment debates on "human nature" and how they were perceived in German secondary education in general…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Secondary Education, Boarding Schools, Criticism
Brita A. Bookser – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2024
A critical reappraisal of the origin story of early care and education (ECE) in the United States, this article unsettles dominant narratives by investigating the carceral foundations and liberatory strategies that characterise the emergence and sociopolitical evolution of ECE. Integrating Foucauldian counter-historical genealogy and…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Story Telling, Minority Group Influences, United States History
Svonni, Charlotta – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2023
This comparative curricular study examines the educational functions of the Swedish Sámi nomad school curricula before and after a central school reform in the 1960s. Due to the reform, the nomad school, a boarding school system for the Indigenous Sámi people in Sweden, was formed to bring about systemic changes in the education of Sámi children,…
Descriptors: Minority Groups, Boarding Schools, Educational History, Animal Husbandry