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Education in the United States
Role of Education
The United States has one of the most extensive and diverse educational
systems in the world. Educational institutions exist at all learning
levels, from nursery schools for the very young to higher education for
older youths and adults of all ages. Education in the United States is
notable for the many goals it aspires to accomplishâ€â€promoting
democracy, assimilation, nationalism, equality of opportunity, and
personal development. Because Americans have historically insisted that
their schools work toward these sometimes-conflicting goals, education
has often been the focus of social conflict.
While schools are expected to achieve many social objectives, education
in America is neither centrally administered nor supported directly by
the federal government, unlike education in other industrialized
countries. In the United States, each state is responsible for providing
schooling, which is funded through local taxes and governed by local
school boards. In addition to these government-funded public schools,
the United States has many schools that are privately financed and
maintained. More than 10 percent of all elementary and secondary
students in the United States attend private schools. Religious groups,
especially the Roman Catholic Church, run many of these. Many of
America s most renowned universities and colleges are also privately
endowed and run. As a result, although American education is expected to
provide equality of opportunity, it is not easily directed toward these
goals. This complex enterprise, once one of the proudest achievements of
American democracy because of its diversity and inclusiveness, became
the subject of intense debate and criticism during the second half of
the 20th century. People debated the goals of schools as well as whether
schools were educating students well enough.
History of Education in America
Until the 1830s, most American children attended school irregularly, and
most schools were either run privately or by charities. This irregular
system was replaced in the Northeast and Midwest by publicly financed
elementary schools, known as common schools. Common schools provided
rudimentary instruction in literacy and trained students in citizenship.
This democratic ideal expanded after the Civil War to all parts of the
nation. By the 1880s and 1890s, schools began to expand attendance
requirements so that more children and older children attended school
regularly. These more rigorous requirements were intended to ensure that
all students, including those whose families had immigrated from
elsewhere, were integrated into society. In addition, the schools tried
to equip children with the more complex skills required in an
industrialized urban society.
Education became increasingly important during the 20th century, as
America’s sophisticated industrial society demanded a more literate
and skilled workforce. In addition, school degrees provided a
sought-after means to obtain better-paying and higher-status jobs.
Schools were the one American institution that could provide the
literate skills and work habits necessary for Americans of all
backgrounds to compete in industries. As a result, education expanded
rapidly. In the first decades of the 20th century, mandatory education
laws required children to complete grade school. By the end of the 20th
century, many states required children to attend school until they were
at least 16. In 1960, 45 percent of high school graduates enrolled in
college; by 1996 that enrollment rate had risen to 65 percent. By the
late 20th century, an advanced education was necessary for success in
the globally competitive and technologically advanced modern economy.
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, workers with a bachelor’s degree
in 1997 earned an average of $40,000 annually, while those with a high
school degree earned about $23,000. Those who did not complete high
school earned about $16,000.
In the United States, higher education is widely available and
obtainable through thousands of private, religious, and state-run
institutions, which offer advanced professional, scientific, and other
training programs that enable students to become proficient in diverse
subjects. Colleges vary in cost and level of prestige. Many of the
oldest and most famous colleges on the East Coast are expensive and set
extremely high admissions standards. Large state universities are less
difficult to enter, and their fees are substantially lower. Other types
of institutions include state universities that provide engineering,
teaching, and agriculture degrees; private universities and small
privately endowed colleges; religious colleges and universities; and
community and junior colleges that offer part-time and two-year degree
programs. This complex and diverse range of schools has made American
higher education the envy of other countries and one of the nation’s
greatest assets in creating and maintaining a technologically advanced
society.
When more people began to attend college, there were a number of
repercussions. Going to college delayed maturity and independence for
many Americans, extending many of the stresses of adolescence into a
person’s 20s and postponing the rites of adulthood, such as marriage
and childbearing. As society paid more attention to education, it also
devoted a greater proportion of its resources to it. Local communities
were required to spend more money on schools and teachers, while
colleges and universities were driven to expand their facilities and
course offerings to accommodate an ever-growing student body. Parents
were also expected to support their children longer and to forgo their
children s contribution to the household.
Funding
Education is an enormous investment that requires contributions from
many sources. American higher education is especially expensive, with
its heavy investment in laboratory space and research equipment. It
receives funding from private individuals, foundations, and
corporations. Many private universities have large endowments, or funds
that sustain the institutions beyond what students pay in tuition and
fees. Many, such as Harvard University in Massachusetts and Stanford
University in California, raise large sums of money through fund drives.
Even many state-funded universities seek funds from private sources to
augment their budgets. Most major state universities, such as those in
Michigan and California, now rely on a mixture of state and private
resources.
Before World War II, the federal government generally played a minor
role in financing education, with the exception of the Morrill Acts of
1862 and 1890. These acts granted the states public lands that could be
sold for the purpose of establishing and maintaining institutions of
higher education. Many so-called land-grant state universities were
founded during the 19th century as a result of this funding. Today,
land-grant colleges include some of the nation’s premier state
universities. The government also provided some funding for basic
research at universities.
The American experience in World War II (especially the success of the
Manhattan Project, which created the atomic bomb) made clear that
scientific and technical advances, as well as human resources, were
essential to national security. As a result, the federal government
became increasingly involved in education at all levels and
substantially expanded funding for universities. The federal government
began to provide substantial amounts of money for university research
programs through agencies such as the National Science Foundation, and
later through the National Institutes of Health and the departments of
Energy and Defense. At the same time, the government began to focus on
providing equal educational opportunities for all Americans. Beginning
with the GI Bill, which financed educational programs for veterans, and
later in the form of fellowships and direct student loans in the 1960s,
more and more Americans were able to attend colleges and universities.
During the 1960s the federal government also began to play more of a
role in education at lower levels. The Great Society programs of
President Lyndon Johnson developed many new educational initiatives to
assist poor children and to compensate for disadvantage. Federal money
was funneled through educational institutions to establish programs such
as Head Start, which provides early childhood education to disadvantaged
children. Some Americans, however, resisted the federal government’s
increased presence in education, which they believed contradicted the
long tradition of state-sponsored public schooling.
By the 1980s many public schools were receiving federal subsidies for
textbooks, transportation, breakfast and lunch programs, and services
for students with disabilities. This funding enriched schools across the
country, especially inner-city schools, and affected the lives of
millions of schoolchildren. Although federal funding increased, as did
federal supervision, to guarantee an equitable distribution of funds,
the government did not exercise direct control over the academic
programs schools offered or over decisions about academic issues. During
the 1990s, the administration of president Bill Clinton urged the
federal government to move further in exercising leadership by
establishing academic standards for public schools across the country
and to evaluate schools through testing.
Concerns in Elementary Education
The United States has historically contended with the challenges that
come with being a nation of immigrants. Schools are often responsible
for modifying educational offerings to accommodate immigrants. Early
schools reflected many differences among students and their families but
were also a mechanism by which to overcome these differences and to
forge a sense of American commonality. Common schools, or publicly
financed elementary schools, were first introduced in the mid-19th
century in the hopes of creating a common bond among a diverse
citizenship. By the early 20th century, massive immigration from Europe
caused schools to restructure and expand their programs to more
effectively incorporate immigrant children into society. High schools
began to include technical, business, and vocational curricula to
accommodate the various goals of its more diverse population. The United
States continues to be concerned about how to incorporate immigrant
groups.
The language in which students are taught is one of the most significant
issues for schools. Many Americans have become concerned about how best
to educate students who are new to the English language and to American
culture. As children of all ages and from dozens of language backgrounds
seek an education, most schools have adopted some variety of bilingual
instruction. Students are taught in their native language until their
knowledge of English improves, which is often accomplished through an
English as a Second Language (ESL) program. Some people have criticized
these bilingual programs for not encouraging students to learn English
more quickly, or at all. Some Americans fear that English will no longer
provide a uniform basis for American identity; others worry that
immigrant children will have a hard time finding employment if they do
not become fluent in English. In response to these criticisms, voters in
California, the state that has seen the largest influx of recent
immigrants, passed a law in 1998 requiring that all children attending
public schools be taught in English and prohibiting more than one year
of bilingual instruction.
Many Americans, including parents and business leaders, are also alarmed
by what they see as inadequate levels of student achievement in subjects
such as reading, mathematics, and science. On many standardized tests,
American students lag behind their counterparts in Europe and Asia. In
response, some Americans have urged the adoption of national standards
by which individual schools can be evaluated. Some have supported more
rigorous teacher competency standards. Another response that became
popular in the 1990s is the creation of charter schools. These schools
are directly authorized by the state and receive public funding, but
they operate largely outside the control of local school districts.
Parents and teachers enforce self-defined standards for these charter
schools.
Schools are also working to incorporate computers into classrooms. The
need for computer literacy in the 21st century has put an additional
strain on school budgets and local resources. Schools have struggled to
catch up by providing computer equipment and instruction and by making
Internet connections available. Some companies, including Apple Computer
Inc., have provided computer equipment to help schools meet their
student’s computer-education needs.
Concerns in Higher Education
Throughout the 20th century, Americans have attended schools to obtain
the economic and social rewards that come with highly technical or
skilled work and advanced degrees. However, as the United States became
more diverse, people debated how to include different groups, such as
women and minorities, into higher education. Blacks have historically
been excluded from many white institutions, or were made to feel
unwelcome. Since the 19th century, a number of black colleges have
existed to compensate for this broad social bias, including federally
chartered and funded Howard University. In the early 20th century, when
Jews and other Eastern Europeans began to apply to universities, some of
the most prestigious colleges imposed quotas limiting their numbers.
Americans tried various means to eliminate the most egregious forms of
discrimination. In the early part of the century, "objective" admissions
tests were introduced to counteract the bias in admissions. Some
educators now view admissions tests such as the Scholastic Achievement
Test (SAT), originally created to simplify admissions testing for
prestigious private schools, as disadvantageous to women and minorities.
Critics of the SAT believed the test did not adequately account for
differences in social and economic background. Whenever something as
subjective as ability or merit is evaluated, and when the rewards are
potentially great, people hotly debate the best means to fairly evaluate
these criteria.
Until the middle of the 20th century, most educational issues in the
United States were handled locally. After World War II, however, the
federal government began to assume a new obligation to assure equality
in educational opportunity, and this issue began to affect college
admissions standards. In the last quarter of the 20th century, the
government increased its role in questions relating to how all Americans
could best secure equal access to education.
Schools had problems providing equal opportunities for all because
quality, costs, and admissions criteria varied greatly. To deal with
these problems, the federal government introduced the policy of
affirmative action in education in the early 1970s. Affirmative action
required that colleges and universities take race, ethnicity, and gender
into account in admissions to provide extra consideration to those who
have historically faced discrimination. It was intended to assure that
Americans of all backgrounds have an opportunity to train for
professions in fields such as medicine, law, education, and business
administration.
Affirmative action became a general social commitment during the last
quarter of the 20th century. In education, it meant that universities
and colleges gave extra advantages and opportunities to blacks, Native
Americans, women, and other groups that were generally underrepresented
at the highest levels of business and in other professions. Affirmative
action also included financial assistance to members of minorities who
could not otherwise afford to attend colleges and universities.
Affirmative action has allowed many minority members to achieve new
prominence and success.
At the end of the 20th century, the policy of affirmative action was
criticized as unfair to those who were denied admission in order to
admit those in designated group categories. Some considered affirmative
action policies a form of reverse discrimination, some believed that
special policies were no longer necessary, and others believed that only
some groups should qualify (such as African Americans because of the
nation’s long history of slavery and segregation). The issue became a
matter of serious discussion and is one of the most highly charged
topics in education today. In the 1990s three statesâ€â€Texas,
California, and Washingtonâ€â€eliminated affirmative action in their
state university admissions policies.
Several other issues have become troubling to higher education. Because
tuition costs have risen to very high levels, many smaller private
colleges and universities are struggling to attract students. Many
students and their parents choose state universities where costs are
much lower. The decline in federal research funds has also caused
financial difficulties to many universities. Many well-educated
students, including those with doctoral degrees, have found it difficult
to find and keep permanent academic jobs, as schools seek to lower costs
by hiring part-time and temporary faculty. As a result, despite its
great strengths and its history of great variety, the expense of
American higher education may mean serious changes in the future.
Education is fundamental to American culture in more ways than providing
literacy and job skills. Educational institutions are the setting where
scholars interpret and pass on the meaning of the American experience.
They analyze what America is as a society by interpreting the nation’s
past and defining objectives for the future. That information eventually
forms the basis for what children learn from teachers, textbooks, and
curricula. Thus, the work of educational institutions is far more
important than even job training, although this is usually foremost in
people’s minds.
Public Education in the United States, programs of instruction offered
to children, adolescents, and adults in the United States through
schools and colleges operated by state and local governments. Unlike the
nationally regulated and financed education systems of many other
industrialized societies, American public education is primarily the
responsibility of the states and individual school districts.
The national system of formal education in the United States developed
in the 19th century. It differed from education systems of other Western
societies in three fundamental aspects. First, Americans were more
inclined to regard education as a solution to various social problems.
Second, because they had this confidence in the power of education,
Americans provided more years of schooling for a larger percentage of
the population than other countries. Third, educational institutions
were primarily governed by local authorities rather than by federal
ones.
The most notable characteristic of the American education system is the
large number of people it serves. In 1995, 87 percent of Americans
between age 25 and 29 had graduated from high school. Among those who
had completed high school, 62 percent had completed at least some
college, and 28 percent had earned at least a bachelor’s degree.
Expanding access to college education is an important priority for the
U.S. government. In his 1997 State of the Union address U.S. president
Bill Clinton called for the creation of new public policy to enable
virtually every high school graduate to receive some form of college
education.
After the American Revolution (1775-1783), the founders of the United
States argued that education was essential for the prosperity and
survival of the new nation. Thomas Jefferson, author of the Declaration
of Independence, proposed that Americans give a high priority to a
“crusade against ignoranceâ€Â. Jefferson was the first American leader
to suggest creating a system of free schools for all persons that would
be publicly supported through taxes. In 1779 he proposed an education
plan that would have supported free schooling for all children in the
state of Virginia for three years. The best students from this group
would continue in school at public expense through adolescence. The most
advanced of these students would go on to publicly funded colleges.
Jefferson’s proposal was never enacted and his idea of selecting the
best and brightest students for special advantage failed to gain
widespread support. However, Jefferson’s plans for universal education
and for publicly funded schools formed the basis of education systems
developed in the 19th century.
Until the 1840s American education was not a system at all, but a
disjointed collection of local, regional, and usually private
institutions. The extent of schooling and the type of education
available depended on the resources and values of the particular town or
city, on the activities of religious groups seeking to further their
ends through schools and colleges, and on many other private
groupsâ€â€such as philanthropic associations and trade
organizationsâ€â€that created different types of schools for different
reasons. Most institutions only provided educational opportunities for
boys from wealthy families. Public governing bodies were rarely involved
in the financing or control of schools.
Elementary Education and the Common-School Movement
The American school system originated in the 1830s and 1840s, when a new
generation of education reformers attacked the tradition of disjointed
and localized education. Prominent American educators, such as Horace
Mann in Massachusetts and Henry Barnard in Connecticut, sought to
increase educational opportunity for all children by creating the
common-school movement. In 1837 Mann became secretary of the board of
education in Massachusetts and supervised the creation of a statewide
common-school system. Barnard led similar efforts in Connecticut where
he became superintendent of common schools in 1849. The term common
meant several things to these educators. Their reform efforts focused on
elementary education, on the idea that all young children should be
schooled, and on the notion that the content of education should be the
same for everyone.
The common-school reformers optimistically argued that education could
transform all youth into virtuous, literate citizens. They suggested
that education could build a distinctive new nation that would be better
equipped to compete with other countries. They appealed to people’s
fears about growing economic and religious tensions in the United States
as immigration of various ethnic groups increased. The reformers
believed that common schooling could create common bonds among an
increasingly diverse population. It could also preserve social stability
and prevent crime and poverty. Common-school advocates contended that
free elementary education should be available to everyone, that it
should be financed by public funds, and that it should be conducted in
schools accountable not only to local school boards but to state
governments. They also argued for the establishment of compulsory school
attendance laws for children of elementary school age.
By the end of the 19th century the reformers had largely achieved their
objective. Free public education at the elementary level was available
for all American children. Massachusetts passed the first compulsory
school attendance laws in 1852, followed by New York in 1853. By 1918
all states had passed laws requiring children to attend at least
elementary school.
Not everyone accepted publicly funded and controlled schools as the only
way to provide education. The most significant opposition came from
members of the Roman Catholic Church, who believed that the moral values
taught in public schools were biased toward Protestantism. Arguing that
proper education could not separate intellectual development from moral
development, Catholics created their own separate school system. In 1925
the Supreme Court of the United States ruled in Pierce v. Society of
Sisters that states could not compel children to attend public schools,
and that children could attend private schools instead. In 1994, 11
percent of American students in elementary and secondary schools
attended private institutions. Most of these attended Catholic schools.
Secondary Schools
Before the 20th century, a bewildering variety of schools existed for
the small number of teenagers who had the ability or the desire to
pursue education beyond the elementary level. These schools offered
students opportunities to prepare for college, or to learn a complex
skill instead of competing for one of the rapidly decreasing number of
on-the-job apprenticeships. Only a relatively small number of teenagers
had the ability or desire to pursue secondary education. In 1900 only 10
percent of American adolescents aged 14 to 17 were enrolled in high
schools. Most of these students were from affluent families.
The first publicly supported secondary school in the United States was
Boston Latin School, founded in 1635. But until the late 19th century
private tutors or privately supported academies mostly conducted
secondary education. Public financing for secondary education was rare
until 1874, when a Michigan Supreme Court decision involving the city of
Kalamazoo established that communities could use local property taxes to
support high schools.
The rise in American high school attendance was one of the most striking
developments in U.S. education during the 20th century. From 1900 to
1996 the percentage of teenagers who graduated from high school
increased from about 6 percent to about 85 percent. High school
attendance grew because more and more students regarded additional
schooling as the key to succeeding in an increasingly urban and
industrialized society. In addition, after the introduction of strict
child labor laws in the early 20th century, fewer teenagers entered the
workforce than they had previously, which gave them the time to attend
school. School provided teenagers with an acceptable alternative to
labor that gave meaning to their lives before they entered the
workforce, established a family, or began college. As the 20th century
progressed, most states enacted legislation extending compulsory
education laws to the age of 16. Most students found it more
enjoyableâ€â€and more profitable in the long runâ€â€to stay in school
beyond the legal limits than to leave, or drop out, before graduating.
The 20th century high school was a uniquely American invention. More
than elementary schools or colleges, high schools demonstrated the
American faith that schooling could successfully address a lengthening
list of individual and social concerns. High schools provided
supervision and a place for youth to experience adolescence with
friends. They also sought to give students education to meet the
practical demands of everyday life, to get a job, or to go on to more
education. By “Americanizing†immigrants into mainstream political
and social values, public high schools worked to accomplish for
adolescents what the common elementary school had always attempted for
younger students. High schools thus embodied the sometimes-contradictory
values of educating students to fit into American society while
providing opportunities for them to break out from whatever social or
economic circumstances constrained their development.
Higher Education
During the 20th century participation in higher or postsecondary
education in the United States has increased as dramatically as it has
in American high schools. At the beginning of the century about 2
percent of Americans from the ages of 18 to 24 were enrolled in a
college. There were fewer than 1000 colleges then, with enrollment
totaling about 157,000 students. Near the end of the century more than
60 percent of this age group, or over 14 million students, were enrolled
in about 3500 four-year and two-year colleges. This tremendous increase
does not even include the 6500 postsecondary vocational and technical
institutes that enroll millions of additional students but do not give
bachelor’s or associate degrees.
Religious convictions motivated the founding of the earliest American
colleges, such as Harvard (1636), College of William and Mary (1693),
and Yale (1701). In the 19th century rivalry among Protestant
denominations, and competition among towns seeking a commercial edge
over their rivals, were responsible for the creation of hundreds of
colleges. Almost all were privately supported, and many failed to
survive. Nevertheless, 573 colleges existed in the United States in
1870, a testament to civic and religious support and to the faith of
Americans in the power of schooling.
Unlike in elementary and secondary education, where public support and
control of schools soon became the norm, public institutions never
dominated college and university education. Unlike the religious
controversy surrounding elementary and secondary schools, the religious
origins of many private colleges were never seen as a threat to
mainstream values. Government officials also believed colleges served
broad public purposes, such as the training of physicians or engineers.
The Morrill Acts of 1862 and 1890 provided federal financial support to
state universities. The acts also led to the establishment of many new
land-grant colleges and state universities through gifts of federal land
to the states for the support of higher education.
By the end of the 19th century scientific and scholarly research
flourished at both private and public universities. Commercial and
practical uses of knowledge, especially in agriculture and engineering,
created powerful incentives for states to increase financial support for
their public universities. In addition, the numbers of students
attending college increased dramatically after World War II ended in
1945, which further pressed states and municipalities to expand
opportunities for publicly funded postsecondary education. Federal
financial aid for students provided by the Servicemen’s Readjustment
Act of 1944â€â€also known as the GI Billâ€â€stimulated this surge in
college enrollment following the war.
Tension Between Localism and Centralization
Individual statesâ€â€rather than the federal governmentâ€â€have primary
authority over public education in the United States. In 1794 New York
became the first state to establish a board of regents to oversee public
education. Eventually, every state developed a department of education
and enacted laws regulating finance, the hiring of school personnel,
student attendance, and often curriculum. Until the 20th century the
degree of regulation varied enormously from state to state.
Traditions of Localism
In general, however, states have delegated control over public education
matters to local districts, with the exception of licensing requirements
and general rules concerning health and safety. Public schools have also
relied heavily on local property taxes to meet the vast majority of
school expenses. American schools have thus tended to reflect the
educational values and financial capabilities of the communities in
which they are located. When students move from one community to
another, they often encounter entirely different curriculums even though
they are in the same grade. Even within a given school district,
different neighborhoods often contain very different public schools.
In contrast, countries like France, Germany, and Japan have school
systems that are financed and regulated on the national level. This has
allowed them to maintain a relatively uniform school environment
throughout their respective countries, regardless of the values and
economies of local communities. They have also accomplished this partly
by mandating highly competitive standardized examinations. These exams
usually have direct consequences for the students who take them, often
by permitting or denying access to higher education or positions of
employment.
Centralizing Tendencies
As greater numbers of Americans enrolled in schools during the 20th
century, education became a powerful social and economic force. Efforts
to increase the size and efficiency of public schools led to the
creation of more centralized school systems. To bring order and
efficiency to school systems, American educators had already developed
standardized mechanisms of school organization by the end of the 19th
century. For example, class placement was determined by a student’s
age, each class period was a specified length, and students graduated
after a specified number of years in attendance.
Schools also became more centrally organized as education developed into
a highly structured profession with a streamlined chain of
administrative command. For example, in the late 19th century the
position of the school superintendent increased in power and influence.
The first public school superintendent began directing the Buffalo, New
York, school system in 1837. By 1900 the superintendent had replaced the
school principal as the most influential and highest paid figure in
public elementary and secondary education.
Also by 1900 specialized teacher training institutions called normal
schools were well established, and many had already become four-year
degree-granting colleges. Institutions that provided training for
teachers developed expertise that often led to standardized practices,
ranging from notions about the ideal size of elementary classrooms to
the ideal form of a lesson plan. As education became a bigger and more
lucrative enterprise, mass-market textbook publishing companies and
testing organizations made significant profits by producing materials
used in schools throughout the country.
Increased State Involvement
As the 20th century progressed most states assumed a more active
regulatory role than in the past. States consolidated school districts
into larger units with common procedures. In 1940 there were over
117,000 school districts in the United States, but by 1990 the number
had decreased to just over 15,000. The states also became much more
responsible for financing education. They helped fund the rapid
expansion of state postsecondary institutions after World War II. They
sometimes supported efforts to equalize local school district
expenditures by using state funds and state laws to ensure more
equitable per pupil expenditures regardless of the wealth or poverty of
individual districts. In 1940 local property taxes financed 68 percent
of public school expenses, while the states contributed 30 percent. In
1990 local districts and states each contributed 47 percent to public
school revenues. The federal government provided most of the remaining
funds.
During the 1980s and 1990s, virtually all states have given
unprecedented attention to their role in raising education standards.
Much of the initiative for greater state involvement in education
stemmed from the publication of a report by a federal commission in 1983
that indicated low academic achievement in American schools. This
report, entitled A Nation at Risk, presented statistics suggesting that
American students were outperformed on international academic tests by
students from other industrial societies. Statistics also suggested that
American test scores were declining over time. Many parents, educators,
and government officials believed that only a concerted, centralized
reform effort could overcome these apparent shortcomings of American
education. Because the perceived crisis in student performance was based
largely on test-score results, most states have implemented reform
strategies that emphasize more frequent testing conducted by states,
more effective state testing, and more state-mandated curriculum
requirements. Some educators have also proposed the introduction of
“high-stakes†examinations, in which performance on the examination
would have a significant impact on the individual taking the test.
Results on a high stakes examination might either permit or restrict a
student’s access to higher education or the job market. Despite
widespread support for such examinations, few states have introduced
them.
Increased Federal Involvement ÂÂ
Although educational authority resides ultimately with the states, the
federal government has long encouraged and assisted specific educational
activities that it considers to be in the national interest. The federal
government’s activities in the field of education have further
centralized American schooling. The Smith-Hughes Act of 1917, for
example, helped create vocational programs in high schools, and the GI
Bill of 1944 was the first important federal effort to provide financial
aid for military veterans to attend college. In addition, federal civil
rights laws require all schools and colleges to conform to national
standards of educational equality.
The federal commitment to improve and finance public schools expanded
enormously when Congress passed the National Defense Education Act of
1958 and the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965. In these
two landmark statutes, Congress addressed for the first time such broad
problems as expanding educational opportunity for poor children and
improving instruction in pivotal but usually neglected subjects, such as
science, mathematics, and foreign languages. In addition, these laws
strengthened many large universities by providing federal funds for
research. They also supported students attending private colleges by
providing federal support for financial aid. Because this assistance
came from federal sources rather than from state or local governments,
it increased centralized control of American education.
Federal involvement in schools since the 1980s has been expressed less
by legislation providing money for new programs than by government
reports and proclamations that schools were performing insufficiently. A
Nation at Risk and many subsequent federal reports and studies on the
condition of schooling sparked a vigorous school reform effort at local
and state levels. But aside from espousing ambitious national education
goals, the federal government has been far less active in shaping
education legislation during the 1980s and 1990s than it had been in the
1960s and 1970s.
Education and Equality
Despite the fact that American education has provided unprecedented
educational opportunities, some groups of Americans have benefited from
the system more than others. Especially since the 1950s, public policy
toward education has sought to provide greater equityâ€â€that is,
equality of educational opportunity for all Americans. Policymakers have
attempted to eliminate various forms of discrimination in schools even
more than they have addressed issues of educational quality or
standards. Most federal intervention into the educational practices of
local school relates to issues of equal educational opportunity.
Racial Equality
During the 1950s segregation by race in public and private schools was
still common in the United States. In the American South separate
schools for African Americans and whites were sanctioned by state laws
that had been upheld by the Supreme Court of the United States in Plessy
v. Ferguson (1896). In the North no such laws existed, but racial
segregation was common in schools located in segregated neighborhoods
and in school districts where school boards deliberately drew boundaries
to ensure racial separation. Segregation usually resulted in inferior
education for blacks, whether in the North or the South. Average public
expenditures for white schools routinely exceeded expenditures for black
schools. Teachers in white schools generally received higher pay than
did teachers in black schools, and facilities in most white schools were
far superior to facilities in most black schools.
In 1954 the Supreme Court unanimously ruled in Brown v. Board of
Education of Topeka that racial segregation in public schools was
unconstitutional, thus reversing the position it had held since 1896.
Despite vigorous resistance for many years by many southern states, by
1980 the federal courts had largely succeeded in eliminating the system
of legalized segregation in southern schools.
Most black Americans, however, lived in northern cities. In cities where
intentional segregation was proven to exist, such as Boston, the federal
courts ordered redrawing of neighborhood school district lines. The
courts sometimes also ordered busing of students from one neighborhood
to another to achieve racial balance in each school. In higher
education, federal law mandated affirmative action programs to ensure
that colleges admit more racial minority students and hire more faculty
members.
Despite the use of judicial power to achieve desegregation and the
presumed equality of educational opportunity it promised, many schools
in the United States remained highly divided along racial lines. Many
whites and middle class blacks had moved out of central cities by the
1970s, leaving poor blacks and rising populations of Hispanic Americans
to attend urban schools. The courts generally refused to sanction
metropolitan busing plansâ€â€those that require busing across district
lines between city and suburbâ€â€as a tool to achieve racial integration.
Nor did the courts mandate that affirmative action produce the same
level of results that had been achieved through the introduction of
racial quotas for institutions of higher education.
Most federally mandated desegregation efforts have been aimed at
increasing educational achievement among African American students.
However, many educators cite continued inequality in educational
opportunities for Hispanic American students. Hispanics are the fastest
growing ethnic group in American schools, increasing from 6 percent of
the enrollment in public schools in 1972 to 12 percent in 1993. In 1996
a report issued by the Presidential Advisory Commission on Educational
Excellence for Hispanic Americans indicated that a disproportionate
number of Hispanic American students attend predominantly non-white
schools and schools that lack adequate educational resources.
Educational achievement is also lower for Hispanic students than for
white students. In 1992 the dropout rate among Hispanic students was 12
percent, while for white students it was 5 percent. Income gaps and
language barriers between many Hispanics and non-Hispanics further
complicate efforts to achieve educational equality for Hispanic
students.
Gender Equality
Discrimination against women and girls has been as pervasive in American
schools as discrimination based on race. Laws in the 19th century
required states to provide equal educational opportunity for both boys
and girls. Most public schools were coeducational, yet many teachers
subtly but firmly suggested to girls that a woman’s place was mainly
in the home rather than in secondary schools, colleges, or
professionsâ€â€unless the intended career was school teaching. Educators
first encouraged broader views of women’s life possibilities in
all-girls schools and, especially, women’s colleges. During the
mid-19th century female education reformers, including Catharine Esther
Beecher, Emma Willard, and Mary Lyon, established women’s academies
that provided female students with secondary and sometimes college-level
instruction and offered subjects that educators previously considered
unnecessary for women, such as mathematics, science, and history. The
first coeducational college was Oberlin College (founded in 1833), the
first enduring all-women’s college was Vassar College (1861), and the
first graduate school for women was at Bryn Mawr College (1880).
With the expansion of the American school system in the early 20th
century, a huge demand for elementary and secondary schoolteachers
encouraged large numbers of women to participate in higher education to
gain teaching credentials. Even then, social expectations for women to
remain in domestic roles, as well as male discrimination against women,
often closed career doors to well-educated women. These barriers only
began to lower when the women’s rights movement gained power during
the 1960s. Title IX of the 1972 federal Education Amendments prohibited
discrimination on the basis of sex in educational institutions that
received federal aid. This legislation began to remove perhaps the most
visible symbol of discrimination against women in schools and
collegesâ€â€the scarcity of athletic opportunities for women compared
with those available to men.
Special Programs
Many educators and some political leaders have increasingly viewed mere
access to a school and its offerings as an inadequate solution to the
problem of educational inequality. Especially since the 1960s, education
reformers have argued that special programs and resources were essential
to guarantee genuine equality of education to disadvantaged youth. Title
I (later called Chapter I) of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act
of 1965 provided federal funds for supplementary education programs
targeted toward poor and black children. Most of these funds were spent
on young children, according to a prevailing theory that educational
disadvantages could best be eliminated at an early age, before their
effects had become more difficult to reverse. The federal Head Start
program, established in 1965, created special education programs for
preschoolers and remains one of the most admired achievements of the War
on Poverty programs of the 1960s.
The federal government has also provided financial assistance for
educational programs for other disadvantaged groups. The Bilingual
Education Act, part of the 1967 amendments to the Elementary and
Secondary Education Act, authorized federal funds for school districts
having substantial numbers of students with limited mastery of English.
Estimates of the number of students in the United States with limited
mastery of English range from 2.5 to 4.6 million, or from 7 to 10
percent of the U.S. student population.
The Education for All Handicapped Children Act of 1975 mandated
individualized instructional programs for students with disabilities. It
also called for placing such students, whenever possible, in regular
classrooms rather than separating them from mainstream students. In 1994
the U.S. Department of Education reported that 6.6 percent of all
Americans below age 21 received special education services.
Contemporary Issues
Today, formal education serves a greater percentage of the U.S.
population than at any time in history. It has also assumed many of the
responsibilities formerly reserved for family, religion, and social
organizations. Most Americans expect schools to provide children with
skills, values, and behaviors that will help them become responsible
citizens, contribute to social stability in the country, and increase
American economic productivity. The federal government also requires
schools to correct social inequality among students of different racial,
ethnic, social, or economic backgrounds.
Although the objectives assumed by formal education increased
dramatically during the 20th century, the format and techniques of
American schooling have remained, for the most part, quite stable and
resistant to change. Despite occasional experimentsâ€â€such as the
introduction of movable rather than fixed desks, team teaching, and
ungraded coursesâ€â€the practice of teaching and the process of learning
in 1900 closely resembled that of today. Students took courses; classes
consisted of groups of 20 to 30 students with a teacher at the front of
the room; instruction proceeded by lecture, demonstration, discussion,
or silent work at a desk; and teachers often assigned homework for the
students to complete after class.
However, some aspects of teaching have changed. The influence of modern
psychology and of education reformers such as John Dewey caused schools
to become less formal, more relaxed, and somewhat more centered on the
individual child rather than on the institution or the society. School
facilities improved for most students, except perhaps in the inner
cities. More money was spent on education, resulting in both a general
upgrading of teacher salaries and improvements in programs that focus on
specific kinds of students, such as special education. Spending on
students in public elementary and secondary schools increased from $961
per pupil in 1940 (adjusted for inflation to 1990 dollars) to $5526 per
pupil in 1990.
Educational Technology
Many technological innovations of the 20th century have promised
breakthroughs in the methods and effectiveness of teaching. Some of the
most promising innovations included filmstrips and motion pictures,
teaching machines (mechanical devices that present systematic
instruction to students), and programmed instruction (instruction
delivered in a graded sequence of steps, usually by means of a computer
or other device). But the promise generated by much of this new
technology proved illusory, and most changes in teaching methods became
nothing more than short-lived fads.
Two very different technologies, however, may have far greater effects
on educational practice than their predecessors. The revolution in
computer and communications technology holds out hope that all students
will connect with more information and more people than ever before, and
that learning might become more individualized. The other promising
technological advance is in biochemistry and genetic engineering.
Innovations in these fields suggest that certain barriers to learning,
such as short attention spans or faulty memories, might one day be
reduced by means other than the traditional reliance on sheer effort
alone. For example, medical researchers conduct studies on the brain and
central nervous system in hopes of discovering ways to enhance memory
and intelligence.
Extended Schooling
Educational institutions in the United States are increasingly offering
schooling opportunities to people both much younger and much older than
the traditional school-age population. For example, the percentage of
3-year-olds and 4-year-olds enrolled in preschools increased from 15
percent in 1971 to 34 percent in 1993. This rise of early schooling
parallels the increase in single parent households and households in
which both parents have careers.
Enrollment has similarly increased in adult education programs, which
are usually defined as part-time study not directed toward a degree.
Adult education programs vary substantially. Millions of adults enroll
in such programs for job-related reasons, often because companies
provide incentives for employees to upgrade skills through training.
Many adults also attend school to pursue personal interests and hobbies.
A growing number of older and relatively affluent people has created a
new market for travel, reading, and other kinds of self-development.
Many institutions of higher education have developed part-time, evening,
and summer programs to tap the nontraditional adult market more
aggressively.
Education Outside of Schools
Education occurs not only in schools and colleges but also in many other
settings, directly and indirectly, intentionally and unintentionally.
Since the 1980s, education policymakers and reformers have given greater
attention and funding to improve the quality of education in nonschool
settings. For example, educators view the family as perhaps the most
powerful educational force, and schools have increased education
programs designed specifically for parents. Museums have also given
greater attention to their instructional role, and many museums with an
educational purpose have been created specifically for children. During
the 1960s the pioneering work of the Children’s Television Workshop,
which created “Sesame Street†(1969), was an early demonstration of
how television could advance rather than retard educational values. The
proportion of government funds spent on education in nonschool settings
is likely to continue to increase.
The School Reform Movement
Reform efforts in the 1980s and 1990s have been characterized by an
unprecedented effort to improve both academic standards and equality of
opportunity in public schools, especially in high schools. Unlike reform
movements in the 1960s and 1970s, most recent initiatives now come from
states rather than from the federal government. States often mandate
curriculum and testing programs whether local districts want them or
not.
Some members of the school reform movement believe that too little power
exists at the local level. They claim that teachers and schools can
increase their effectiveness only by having greater authority over such
fundamental matters as curriculum content, teaching methods, and hiring
of staff. Supporters of local control over education often support the
creation of charter schools, which receive public funds but are free
from most restrictions on curriculum, teaching methods, and staff. Other
reformers contend that not all local communities have the resources to
provide quality education. They argue that to meet goals of equity and
excellence, all local districts should meet high educational standards
and provide ample school budgets.
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Education in the United States of America
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