Learning for Work

UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS PRESSISBN: 9780252046049

How Industrial Education Fostered Democratic Opportunity

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Sale price$275.00
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By Connie Goddard
Imprint:
UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 152 mm
Weight:
450 g
Pages:
304

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Description

Connie Goddard is a journalist and independent scholar who has coauthored two previous books about Chicago.

Acknowledgments Preface: Learning How the Work of the World Is Done Through Mind and Hand to Manhood Learning and Doing Arrives in Chicago Joining Hands and Heads on the Midway A "Star of Hope" Defines Industrial Education The People's School on the Prairie and How It Grew Agency and Efficiency: Manual Training Becomes Vocational Education Epilogue: Lessons on Education and Work from Bordentown and Ellendale Notes Bibliography Credits Index

"Learning for Work is a vibrant history of industrial education in the Progressive Era, a history shaped as much by now-unknown students and teachers as by more famous reformers and intellectuals. In recovering the story of the Chicago Manual Training School and its offshoots, Goddard also brings into focus debates over the relationships between education, work, opportunity, and social mobility in a nation structured, then as now, by hierarchies of race and class."--Rosanne Currarino, author of The Labor Question in America: Economic Democracy in the Gilded Age

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