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Zang, Barbara – 1987
Based on an examination of well-kept primary source material, this paper presents a personal and professional history of Mary Paxton Keeley, the first woman graduate of one of the first journalism schools in the United States, the School of Journalism at the University of Missouri. Starting with her early years, the paper explains that Keeley was…
Descriptors: Biographies, Feminism, Journalism, Journalism Education

Smith, L. Glenn – Educational Horizons, 1981
Argues that most of the influential educational thought in Western Civilization has been expounded by males with distinctly negative attitudes toward women. Part of a theme issue: "Views of Women in Education: Past, Present, and Future." (SJL)
Descriptors: Educational History, Educational Philosophy, Sex Bias, Western Civilization

Robenstine, Clark – Journal of Social Studies Research, 1991
Discusses the education of women and minorities in colonial Louisiana. Explains that Ursuline nuns established a school in the region for white, African-American, and Native American girls. Reports that students were taught reading, writing, arithmetic, and religion. Reveals that the nuns also cared for orphans, trained French immigrant brides,…
Descriptors: Colonial History (United States), Educational History, Minority Groups, Womens Education

Pillinger, Barbara Baxter – Journal of College and University Student Housing, 1984
Provides a human and historical perspective of residential life in the early days of Vassar College. Reviews the contributions of Maria Mitchell, a pioneer astronomer and academician who made a considerable contribution to the concept of student development through living and learning. (JAC)
Descriptors: Astronomy, College Students, Dormitories, Higher Education

Tom, Stephen C. – Initiatives, 1997
Analyzes three distinct periods that characterize women's efforts to become successful physicians: the Victorian era, the first 70 years of the 1900s, and the past twenty years. Compares social, historical, and scientific factors which have affected the number of enrollments and graduations by women. (EMK)
Descriptors: Females, Medical Education, Medical Schools, Medical Students

Diehl, Lesley A. – American Psychologist, 1986
The paradox of G. Stanley Hall seems to be his stance against coeducation simultaneous with his role as an educator of women. His theories must be considered in the context of the prevailing attitudes of the early 20th century toward the issue of sex differences. Hall was consistent in translating his theories into practice. (Author/VM)
Descriptors: Coeducation, Educational Policy, Females, Higher Education

Blair, Karen K. – Urban Education, 1984
Profiles nine women's clubs in Buffalo, 1876-1914. Argues that through such clubs, women pressed for personal and educational growth for themselves and then insisted on using their new knowledge and confidence to influence the city to offer more humane and generous services for all its citizens. (CMG)
Descriptors: Clubs, Educational History, Females, Informal Education
George, D'Ann Pletcher – 2002
This paper is concerned with the history of the attempt of progressive-era students at Bryn Mawr College to explore their interest in social-reform work through the writing that they did in required composition courses. In particular, the paper focuses on how these women attempted to fashion a public voice for themselves that could articulate…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Educational History, Higher Education, Social Action

Lechner, Elmar – Pedagogica Historica, 1991
Explores the role of women in eighteenth-century Germany's University of Halle. Reports that the school admitted both male and female students. Explains that the university's central principle, the conquest of the world through personal effort, was viewed as well suited to women, who had not been tainted by academic tradition. (SG)
Descriptors: Coeducation, Educational History, Educational Philosophy, Females
Wetzel, Jodi – 1978
This paper examines the historical development of Women's Studies as an academic discipline. Principles of this education include a feminist perspective and an interdisciplinary approach. Students assume the responsibility for their own learning. Varied resource people are used in the classroom. The object of this feminist model is to define the…
Descriptors: Curriculum, Feminism, Higher Education, History

Guy-Sheftall, Beverly – Journal of Negro Education, 1982
Discusses the impact that Spelman and Bennett Colleges have had on educational opportunities for Black women and highlights the contributions to the Black community of several alumnae from these institutions. Also provides an extensive bibliography of materials that focuses on Black women and higher education. (Author/GC)
Descriptors: Black Colleges, Black Education, College Role, Higher Education
Danker, Cherry B. – Echoes: The Northern Maine Journal, 1993
The author reminisces about her aunt Stella Bolstridge (1894-1989), who came from a large poor family in rural Maine, yet completed high school and nurses' training, served as an Army nurse in France during World War I, and became a lifelong advocate of women's education and women's rights. (SV)
Descriptors: Biographies, Females, Feminism, Personal Narratives
Weidner, Heidemarie Z. – 1992
Literary societies, while dying or already defunct in Eastern U.S. schools, still played significant roles in 19th-century frontier colleges like Butler University in Indianapolis, Indiana, and it is the thesis of the paper that a systematic investigation of the document left by these societies, although largely neglected by historians, will have…
Descriptors: Educational History, Extracurricular Activities, Higher Education, Rhetoric

Norman, Marion – Paedagogica Historica, 1983
Traces the life and works of Mary Ward, a nun who adapted Jesuit teaching practices to women's education during the Renaissance period in England. (JDH)
Descriptors: Educational History, Elementary Secondary Education, Feminism, Foreign Countries
Hughes, Mary – Adults Learning (England), 1991
The "1919 Report" on education in Britain recognized women's educational needs in light of the social, economic, and political changes following World War I. Despite the liberal and humanitarian attitudes expressed, the separate spheres of men and women and distinctions between working class and other women were maintained. (SK)
Descriptors: Access to Education, Adult Education, Educational History, Females