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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
Sani, Roberto – History of Education Quarterly, 2013
The "Partial Agenda for Modern European Educational History" proposed
by Albisetti focuses primarily on the nineteenth century, and on some large-scale trends and issues, such as those relating to education and secondary instruction for women. Discussing this issue implies--especially in the diverse and heterogeneous context of…
Descriptors: Educational History, Foreign Countries, Educational Trends, Trend Analysis
Jwan, Julius; Anderson, Lesley; Bennett, Nigel – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2010
In this article we discuss students', teachers' and school principals' perceptions of democratic school leadership reforms in Kenya. The article is based on a study that was conducted in two phases. In phase one (conducted between September and December 2007), interviews were undertaken with 12 school principals in which understandings of…
Descriptors: Democracy, Foreign Countries, Cultural Influences, Instructional Leadership
Liu, Xiaoyi – Education Journal, 2009
The rise of women's modern schooling in late Qing China was deemed to be, by the historical trend of modern China, a progress that coincided with China's modernization and national self-strengthening movement after the humiliating defeat of the Opium War. This article is an examination of this process from 1840 to 1911, which had undergone three…
Descriptors: Females, Boarding Schools, Foreign Countries, Sex Role
Srimulyani, Eka – Asia Pacific Journal of Education, 2007
The "pondok pesantren" education is a "traditional" form of Muslim education in Indonesia. This boarding school system can be traced back to the 18th century or further. However, it was not until 1930 that the "pesantren" officially admitted female students, beginning with the Pesantren Denanyar of Jombang. The…
Descriptors: Muslims, Females, Boarding Schools, Educational Quality

Abbott, Devon – American Indian Quarterly, 1987
Details the role of the Cherokee Female Seminary, established in 1851, in facilitating Cherokee acculturation. Describes educational philosophy and influence of A. Florence Wilson, principal for 26 years. Discusses curriculum, daily schedule, discipline, social events, religious influence. (NEC)
Descriptors: Acculturation, American Indian Education, American Indian History, American Indians

Matthews, Kay Morris; Jenkins, Kuni – History of Education, 1999
Presents an overview of six years into research of Maori girls' schooling in Aotearoa (New Zealand) and the role of education in the formation of their national identity. Focuses on the research methodology associated with the discovery of the documents and narratives on which the research is based. (CMK)
Descriptors: Boarding Schools, Educational History, Females, Foreign Countries

Scherer, M. A. – Journal of World History, 1996
Reexamines a well-known conflict between Unitarian reformer, Annette Akroyd, and Hindu liberal, Keshub Chunder Sen, over the administration of a private girls' school in 19th century India. Argues that previous interpretations stressing colonial ethnocentrism failed to take into account the complexity of the situation. (MJP)
Descriptors: Asian History, Boarding Schools, Colonialism, Cultural Interrelationships

Rogers, Rebecca – Women's History Review, 1995
Maintains that 19th-century French boarding school culture used the idea of community to transmit feminine but not necessarily domestic values. These included obedience, selflessness, and interdependence. Students, however, transformed and reworked these messages to fit their individual needs, as revealed by one young woman's diary. (MJP)
Descriptors: Boarding Schools, Diaries, Discipline, Educational History
Horne, Esther Burnett; McBeth, Sally – 1998
The life story of Esther Burnett Horne records the memories and experiences of a Native woman born in 1909, who was both pupil and teacher in Bureau of Indian Affairs boarding schools. An introduction by Sally McBeth examines methodological and cultural concerns of collecting and co-authoring a life history. In Chapter 1, Essie begins with oral…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Education, American Indian History, Autobiographies
Mihesuah, Devon A. – 1993
This book traces the history of the Cherokee Female Seminary, established by the Cherokee Nation in 1851 near Tahlequah (Oklahoma). Unusual among Indian schools because it was founded by neither the federal government nor missionaries, the school offered a rigorous curriculum from elementary grades through high school, patterned after that of…
Descriptors: Acculturation, American Indian Education, American Indian History, Boarding Schools
Cobb, Amanda J. – 2000
Bloomfield Academy was different from other American Indian boarding schools. The Chickasaws had not been relegated to a reservation and had achieved a much higher level of autonomy, self-sufficiency, and independence than most other tribal nations. The Chickasaw Nation founded Bloomfield in 1852 not because the government demanded it but because…
Descriptors: Acculturation, American Indian Education, American Indian History, Boarding Schools

Smith, Bonnie G. – History of Education Quarterly, 1993
Discusses the educational experiences of historians during the middle 1800s. Describes changes in historical research methods and historical interpretation that developed a new type of professional historian. Asserts that the school environment for adolescent boys directly was related to changes in historiography and historical writing. (CFR)
Descriptors: Boarding Schools, Classical Languages, Classical Literature, Educational Change
Gere, Anne Ruggles – History of Education Quarterly, 2005
The figure of the Native-American teacher remains largely absent in histories of the teaching profession in this country and of the government-operated Indian schools that emerged and flourished at the turn of the last century. At a time when a growing literature is enlarging the understanding of what schooling has meant and means to minority…
Descriptors: American Indians, Teachers, Educational History, Teacher Influence
Foster, Emery M.; Deffenbaugh, W. S.; Jessen, Carl A. – Office of Education, United States Department of the Interior, 1936
For many years the Office of Education has collected and published statistics of private schools. In 1933 there were on the mailing list of the Office of Education 11,515 private elementary and secondary schools in the continental United States. There are, doubtless, more private schools, but no means are available for ascertaining the exact…
Descriptors: Educational History, National Surveys, School Statistics, Statistical Surveys
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