Exam 3: School As a Public Institution: The Common-School ERA
Exam 1: Introduction: Understanding School and Society23 Questions
Exam 2: Liberty and Literacy: The Jeffersonian Ideal39 Questions
Exam 3: School As a Public Institution: The Common-School ERA48 Questions
Exam 4: Social Diversity and Differentiated Schooling: The Progressive ERA42 Questions
Exam 5: Diversity and Equity: Schooling Girls and Women43 Questions
Exam 6: Diversity and Equity: Schooling and African Americans43 Questions
Exam 7: Diversity and Equity: Schooling and American Indians42 Questions
Exam 8: National School Reform: The Early Cold War ERA43 Questions
Exam 9: Liberty and Literacy Today: Contemporary Perspectives36 Questions
Exam 10: Teaching in a Public Institution: The Professionalization Movement36 Questions
Exam 11: Differentiated Schooling, Labor Market Preparation, and Contemporary School Reform: The Postcold34 Questions
Exam 12: Diversity and Equity Today: Defining the Challenge35 Questions
Exam 13: Diversity and Equity Today: Meeting the Challenge36 Questions
Exam 14: School and Society: Teaching and Teacher Leadership in the 21st Century24 Questions
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Which of the following is true of Mann's stance on corporal punishment in schools?
(Multiple Choice)
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Supporters of the common school movement emphasized schooling's ability to
(Multiple Choice)
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There was opposition to Mann's ideas for common-school reforms, but the reforms were successful. The most important reason for this was
(Multiple Choice)
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The idea of educating the "citizen" was central to Horace Mann's educational ideals. Discuss Mann's concept of the "citizen" and show how it was reflected in his educational proposals.
(Essay)
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How do the physical, environmental, and resource-related challenges of schools in Mann's time parallel the challenges schools, teachers, and students experience today, particularly in urban or low-income schools?
(Essay)
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Which of the following is true of the "common elements" of the common school advocated by Mann?
(Multiple Choice)
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Brownson's opposition to Mann's normal school concept stemmed from his
(Multiple Choice)
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Clearly, the inadequacy of school facilities, both in terms of educational resources and physical facilities, as well as our social acceptance of these inadequacies, has plagued the American school system since the beginning. On the one hand, we as a society say we value education, yet on the other hand, we as a society fail to demonstrate this "valuing" as illustrated by our tolerance of this historical problem. How can we explain, and address, this phenomenon?
(Essay)
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In Prussia, what aspect of education was not controlled by the government?
(Multiple Choice)
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Which of the following is true of the normal schools developed by the Prussians?
(Multiple Choice)
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What is the human capital theory, and why is it significant to understanding this chapter?
(Essay)
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The idea that schools could and should serve to inculcate students with a set of common values
(Multiple Choice)
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In today's schooling climate, Brownson would be most likely to support
(Multiple Choice)
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The influx of Irish immigrants, as a group, was considered problematic because
(Multiple Choice)
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The commitment to public schooling in the Massachusetts Bay Colony was driven in part by
(Multiple Choice)
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Women's opportunities for employment as teachers increased during the common-school era primarily because
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