“A Home for Poets”: The Liberal Curriculum in Victorian Britain's Teachers' Training Colleges
In the 1850s, at St. Mark's training college in Chelsea, London, ten students regularly violated the “lights out” rule in the evening at the end of long, exhausting days. Desirous of increasing their culture and general knowledge, they gave over half an hour every evening before sleep to what t...
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Published in | History of education quarterly Vol. 54; no. 1; pp. 42 - 69 |
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Main Author | |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Cambridge, UK
Cambridge University Press
01.02.2014
Blackwell Publishing Ltd Wiley Periodicals |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | In the 1850s, at St. Mark's training college in Chelsea, London, ten students regularly violated the “lights out” rule in the evening at the end of long, exhausting days. Desirous of increasing their culture and general knowledge, they gave over half an hour every evening before sleep to what they styled, after the working-class clubs of the same name, “a mutual improvement society” in which they took turns giving lectures on a wide range of topics. They were not alone: throughout the second half of the nineteenth century, teachers-in-training across Britain supplemented their already daunting workload by writing poetry, reading novels, discussing Shakespeare, and holding debates about pressing social and political questions. From the perspective of many Victorian observers and historians today, this anecdote is an anomaly, an aberration that carries little weight in telling the story of the training colleges in which the majority of teachers in Victorian Britain eventually came to receive an education. For them, training colleges were the sites of rote memorization and pedagogical learning. Though some educationalists called for a more liberal curriculum for teachers, according to this view, teachers' education only began to emphasize expansive reading, original thinking, the cultivation of the individual, and general curiosity beginning in the 1890s with the rise of day training colleges affiliated with universities. |
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Bibliography: | istex:8BC26C032ECD03C0B8E5F456B8D058AA8246D2D7 Spencer Foundation/National Academy of Education ark:/67375/WNG-2S9KFD1T-9 Mellon Foundation ArticleID:HOEQ12046 crbischof@gmail.com I would like to thank Seth Koven, Bonnie Smith, Ellen Ross, Michael Adas, and the external reviewers for their very helpful feedback. Funding from the Mellon Foundation and the Spencer Foundation/National Academy of Education made it possible to research and write this article and is acknowledged with the utmost gratitude. Christopher Robert Bischof is a History PhD Candidate and Mellon Dissertation Fellow at Rutgers University. His dissertation explores how elementary teachers in Victorian Britain navigated the tensions between their own strivings, the national project of state‐building, and the making of a modern society; e‐mail |
ISSN: | 0018-2680 1748-5959 |
DOI: | 10.1111/hoeq.12046 |