EDCI 658 – History of Education



EDCI 658 – History of Education

Spring 2012

Instructor: Lynn M. Burlbaw

Graduate Asst: Emin Kilinç

Office: Harrington Tower 330

Office Hours: Th 2:00 to 4:00 pm, and by appointment

Phone: 979-845-8384 - leave message, faculty no longer have phones in their offices.

Email: burlbaw@neo.tamu.edu personal web site lburlbaw.cehd.tamu.edu

Course web site:

Class listserv: EDCI658@listserv.tamu.edu

Description of Course: The genesis of formal education in the Western world beginning with the ancient Greeks and working though the Enlightenment; tracing the idea that schooling is a fundamental part of human existence and therefore crucial to all questions concerning the human condition. (Texas A&M University Graduate Catalog 2006-2007, 315).

Course Objectives

At the end of this course, the student will

- Be able to explain the genesis of ideas found in education in Europe and the United States

- Explain how ideas conceived and articulated by historical figures appear and reappear throughout western education

- Demonstrate some level of competence in doing qualitative, document based research

- Demonstrate facility with the Pecha Kucha, PowerPoint and a movie making program

- Explain how the enduring understandings are representative of the knowledge learned in the course.

Required Textbook available at Campus Bookstore and on-line

Gutek, Gerald L. A History of the Western Educational Experience, 2nd ed. Prospect Heights, IL: Waveland Press, 1995. ISBN 0-88133-818-4

Students should have access to a program that converts powerpoint presentations to movies - this may be Camtasia (available for a modest fee from the university - ) or one of the movie making programs such as MovieMaker that are available with software packages.

Supplemental materials are available on the course web site and at elearning.tamu.edu

Class Attendance: Class will meet each Thursday night at 5:45 in Harrington Tower, Room 225. Class will run until 8:15, Central Time. There will be a 10 minute break around the middle of each class session. Students are expected to attend each class session and come prepared for class by completing the required readings and/or assignments.

I understand that, as professionals, you may have obligations that require you to miss a class. If you must miss a class meeting, please let me know prior to the session and make arrangements to complete the assignment(s) due that meeting date. Failure to do this may result in no credit being given for an assignment or activity.

University rules on attendance can be found at

Assignments: Three types of assignments will be completed in this course (descriptions follow):

First type: Web-based responses to class readings in the Gutek book

Second type: Presentation/analysis and discussion of chapter using Pecha Kucha

Third type: Biography of a school building and presentation based on biography.

Grading and Work Completion

Students are expected to complete assignments by the date indicated in the Assignment Calendar.

All assignments will be graded and points awarded for work completed. Late assignments will be assessed a penalty of 10%.

Grades will be assigned as follows:

Grade of “A” will be assigned for accumulating between 94% and 100% of total points

Grade of “B” will be assigned for accumulating between 86% and 93.9% of total points

Grade of “C” will be assigned for accumulating between 75% and 85.9% of total points

In incomplete will be given only upon written request and then only if the request meets the requirements listed in the Student Rules under Section 10: Grading.

Course Evaluation – the evaluation of a course is one of the measures used to assess quality, strengths and need for improvement. Each student who completes the course evaluation will receive an additional 50 points on their accumulated points for the semester.

Assignments and Values

|Assignments |Number |Value |Total |

|Weekly Web Assignment for Gutek Book and supplemental readings |11 | 50 | 550 |

|School Biography | | | |

|Paper |1 |200 | |

|Presentation (w/illustrative material) |1 |50 | |

|Research Reflection |1 |50 |300 |

|Class Chapter Analysis and Discussion |1 | | |

|Pecha Kucha Presentation | |75 | |

|Contribution to discussion | |75 |150 |

|Total Available Points for Course | 1000 |

Course Calendar

Below is a calendar showing the dates various assignments will be due. Following the calendar is a description of the various assignments. The Gutek Book column refers to the reading that is due for that week. Computer based responses are always due in the week before the Chapter discussion date. A calendar showing which chapter you will be responsible for will be distributed no later than the second class meeting after everyone has chosen which chapter group they wish to discuss.

|Date |Assignments from the below are due on the following dates by noon on that date |

| | | |

|Jan 19 |Introduction to Course, Syllabus, Books |

|Jan 26 |Historiography Readings Website | |

|Feb 2 |Chapters 2 – 4 |Jan 30 |

|Feb 9 |Chapters 5 – 7 |Feb 6 |

|Feb 16 |Chapter 8 |Feb 13 |

|Feb 23 |Chapters 9 - 10 |Feb 20 |

|Mar 1 |Chapter 11 |Feb 27 |

|Mar 8 | Chapters 12 – 13 |Mar 5 |

|Mar 15 |Spring Break, No Class | |

|Mar 22 |Chapters 14-15 |Mar 19 |

|Mar 29 |School Biographies |No response required |

|Apr 5 |International Schooling – Skype Conference |Alternate Readings will be given for this night. |

|Apr 12 |TBA | |

|Apr 19 |Chapter 21 -22 |Apr 16 |

|Apr 26 |Chapter 23 - Epilogue |Apr 23 |

|May 3 |TBA | |

Assignments for the Gutek Book

Web-based Responses: For the designated class meeting, you should complete, no later than noon on the Monday the week of the class meeting in which we will discuss a group of chapters, the web-based assignment for the chapter(s) from the Gutek book listed for that day.

Responses for the Historiography readings and Gutek Chapter 1 will be due by NOON on January 25, 2012.

The web-based responses ask you to write briefly about what you found especially interesting, informative, or provocative in the chapter read.

I also ask you, after having read the chapter, to identify at least one thing that you would like to know more about as a result of having read the chapter. A web form will be used for each night’s readings, not for each chapter submission – this means that for Jan 30th, you will have one form to use to respond to all of the chapters. Please confine these thoughts to the time of the chapter, e.g., a question that asks, “What would Plato think about No Child Left Behind?” would not be expected. However, “How are or have Plato’s principles of education found in The Republic reflected in contemporary schooling?” could be a good question. The questions you ask in this response section will be used by chapter discussants as they prepare for their discussion – this is not a stump the prof or committee activity.

For Jan 30th, you will have one form complete which covers all three chapters (2-4 in Gutek book) which will be discussed on Feb 2nd.

This assignment DOES NOT ask you to outline the chapter!

To complete these assignments, log onto the course web site, click on link titled Assignments and then click on the appropriate chapter hotlink. This will take you to a web form to complete the assignment. Failure to use this form will result in no credit being given for an assignment. You may also Control/Click here to go to the assignment page.

There are also links for the Introduction to the Gutek book, and the Historiography Readings.

Chapter presentation/analysis and discussion – you will participate in a prepared discussion on the chapter group you are a member of. The purpose of the discussion will be to internalize/ synthesize the information in the chapter(s) and explain the significance of the content – DO NOT make a presentation over the content of the chapter as if the class had not read the chapter. My expectation is that you will primarily include information not found in the textbook as part of the content of your discussion. This means that you will need to spend time looking at other books and resources in the library and on-line.

For each chapter group discussion, you should elect/draft/dragoon one person who will be the group leader who coordinates the discussion and communications with me and the class.

If a group is interested, I will create a discussion group in elearning so you may communicate and share ideas and materials - please let me know.

Once you have created the pecha kucha presentation, you will post it to YouTube no later than noon on the day before the class meeting and send the link to the whole class via the class listserv - EDCI658@listserv.tamu.edu

The class should visit the YouTube site and watch the pecha kucha video before class so you know what the content is and are able to participate in the discussion.

Each night's discussion activity will begin with the review of a pecha kucha presentation on each of the chapters in the grouping. Then, as a group, you will lead a discussion on the content of the chapters and your supplemental materials.

I would expect that each student have one or more questions that would lead to a conversation as result of watching the video on YouTube – bring those to class so we can talk about them.

The presentation will be made using the Pecha-Kucha model of presentation. See the following web-sites for information on Pecha-Kucha





Chapter Discussion Leaders - You will also have the questions submitted by your colleagues to provide guidance in the discussion – you DO NOT have to address every question in the What I Want to Know section but should attempt as many as possible that work with the discussion. I don’t see this as a question, answer, question, answer sequence. I will assist you with answering these questions.

Each discussion will be guided by a handout that will be prepared by the group – this discussion guide should be distributed to the class no later than 6:00 pm on the evening before class meets. You ARE NOT responsible for providing hard copies of the discussion guide to the class. Failure to provide a handout by the designated time will result in a reduction in grade for the class presentation.

Class members are responsible for checking their email after 6 pm on the night before class and downloading and printing any materials provided by the group.

The class, those not sitting in the discussion panel, will be responsible for participating and doing their part in moving the discussion forward.

When you are planning for your discussion, you may count on having 30 - 45 minutes of class time for your discussion/analysis after the showing of the pecha kucha movies. I have no doubts that the session could actually go longer than that but the idea is that you have an idea of how long you are planning on leading the discussion.

Chapter assignments will be made before the second class meeting.

So we are all on the same page as to what I mean by a discussion, I have provided some dictionary definitions of a discussion below. Notice the repetition of the word or phrase to break apart and the ideas of examination and exploration – you should also notice there is nothing about someone standing up and “telling” people stuff.

dis⋅cus⋅sion – noun

|/dɪˈskʌʃ[pic]ən/an act or instance of discussing; consideration or examination by argument, comment, etc., esp. to explore solutions; |

|informal debate. |

[pic]

Origin:

1300–50; ME < AF < LL discussiōn- (s. of discussiō) inquiry, examination, L: a shaking. See discuss, -ion [pic]

Unabridged (v 1.1)

Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2006.

|dis·cus·sion  (dĭ-skŭsh'ən)  Pronunciation Key  n.   |

|Consideration of a subject by a group; an earnest conversation. |

|A formal discourse on a topic; an exposition. |

The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition

Copyright © 2006 by Houghton Mifflin Company.

Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

discussion 

c.1340, from O.Fr. discussion, from L.L. discussionem "examination, discussion," in classical L., "a shaking," from discussus, pp. of discutere "strike asunder, break up," from dis- "apart" + quatere "to shake." Originally "examination, investigation, judicial trial;" meaning of "talk over, debate" first recorded 1448. Sense evolution in L. appears to have been from "smash apart" to "scatter, disperse," then in post-classical times (via the mental process involved) to "investigate, examine," then to "debate."

|Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper |

|Discussion – noun |

| |

|1. |an extended communication (often interactive) dealing with some particular topic; "the book contains an excellent discussion of modal |

| |logic"; "his treatment of the race question is badly biased"  |

|2. |an exchange of views on some topic; "we had a good discussion"; "we had a word or two about it"  |

WordNet® 3.0, © 2006 by Princeton University.

Discussion

Dis*cus"sion\, n. [L. discussio a shaking, examination, discussion: cf. F. discussion.]

1. The act or process of discussing by breaking up, or dispersing, as a tumor, or the like.

2. The act of discussing or exchanging reasons; examination by argument; debate; disputation; agitation.

Building Biography Project

The public schools are perhaps the most familiar but least understood institution in our society. Most Americans spend over 12 years attending public schools and later, as adults, confront a wide array of school-related issues.

(Tozer, Violas, and Senese, 2002, 4)

History is not disembodied. The past is implicit in the present, in each of us, and in the places we inhabit. Archibald (1999, 9)

Public schools are ubiquitous in people’s lives. As the Tozer, Violas, and Senese state above, everyone has experience with schools. Because schools are such a common part of the milieu of life, many drive or walk past or in the buildings and fail to attend to changes in schools. In an attempt to bring to people’s attention and encourage explorations of classrooms, Ian Grosvenor, along with Kate Rousmaniere and Martin Lawn edited Silences and Images: The Social History of the Classroom wherein authors such as the editors explored various ways of looking at classrooms; different lenses, different techniques, for different purposes.

In an attempt to open the eyes of students in this course, a school building biography will be completed. The final products will be a paper supplemented by a visual presentation to the class.

Here are the criteria for the assignment

Identify a building, in a school district, that is at least 50 years old

Building may or may not be currently in use, but must have been used for instructional purposes at some time during its life. The building may not even exist in physical form now. Private schools meet the qualification of building for this project.

Building identification will be due on Feb 2

You must be able to visit the building or site of the building and talk to people about the building and its use. You may not complete this assignment using only electronically available or from textual sources only.

A written biography consisting of images and at least 15 pages of text – see rule for joint projects

Use proper citations for all materials – check with APA or Chicago Manual of Style for format

Submit prepared materials on March 29, 2012.

Prepared materials include the pecha kucha presentation, your written biography and copies of ALL materials you collected for the project – pictures, scans, copies of pages from books, etc. You may use the scanner in Evans library to scan documents and save them as PDF files.

Collect data about the school building (here are some types of sources and data you might use for your school building biography):

Map of location of building – can be obtained through Google Earth or other program

Building date

Renovation date(s) if any

Closing date (if appropriate)

Construction materials description

Photographs of the building - both contemporary and historic – contemporary photos are required if the building still exists.

Types of uses with years of those occupations (grade levels, number of students, etc)

Photographs/documents related to the building - could be interior, exterior, groups of students, etc.

Testimonials from teachers, students, administrators, staff, etc. who used the building.

Newspapers, yearbooks, district reports (where available) should also be consulted for information on the school building.

Prepare a written biography of the building, including what is available of the above information.  The biography, which should include images (maps, scans, photos, illustrations, tables), will have at least 15 pages of text in addition to the images. This can be written from a first person perspective as long as the first person is the building.

Include as part of your data at least one map showing the location of the school in the community. You can use Google Earth to create a map showing the location of your school.

Submitted assignment will include the written biography and copies of all documents (this means you should make scans or take high resolution photographs of documents that cannot be scanned), data collected, and a narrated presentation illustrating the biography (little or no text to be included on the slides) to be shown to the class. These materials, including the final paper and the pecha kucha presentation should be saved to a CD or DVD and brought to class on March 29th.

The presentation will be made using the Pecha-Kucha model of presentation. See the following web-sites for information on Pecha-Kucha





This assignment can be done individually or in pairs (2 maximum – pairs will complete a biography of at least 20 pages of text). Presentations of biographies will take place on March 29th. Students should bring their presentation and an electronic copy of the paper to class on the 29th and be prepared to upload the files – pecha kucha and paper - on the class computer. You may email the electronic version to me also at burlbaw@neo.tamu.edu

Campus buildings which MAY NOT be studied – Cushing Library, Academic Building, Bolton Hall

References for School Building Biography Assignment.

Archibald, Robert R. (1999). A Place to Remember: Using History to Build Community. Walnut Creek, CA: AltaMira Press.

Grosvenor, Ian, Lawn, Martin, and Kate Rousmaniere (Ed.) (1999) Silences and Images: The Social History of the Classroom. NY: Peter Lang Publishing.

Tozer, Steven E., Paul C. Violas, and Guy Senese. (2002). School and Society, 4th Ed. Boston: McGraw Hill.

Diversity Statement for the Department of Teaching, Learning and Culture

The Department of Teaching, Learning and Culture (TLAC) does not tolerate discrimination, violence, or vandalism. TLAC is an open and affirming department for all people, including those who are subjected to racial profiling, hate crimes, heterosexism, and violence. We insist that appropriate action be taken against those who perpetrate discrimination, violence, or vandalism. Texas A&M University is an Affirmative Action and Equal Opportunity institution and affirms its dedication to non-discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, gender, age, sexual orientation, domestic partner status, national origin, or disability in employment, programs, and services. Our commitment to non-discrimination and affirmative action embraces the entire university community including faculty, staff, and students.

Americans with Disabilities Act Statement

The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) is a federal anti-discrimination statute that provides comprehensive civil rights protection for persons with disabilities. Among other things, this legislation requires that all students with disabilities be guaranteed a learning environment that provides for reasonable accommodation of their disabilities. If you believe you have a disability requiring an accommodation, please contact the Department of Student Life, Services for Students with Disabilities in Room B118 of Cain Hall. The phone number is 845-1637. For additional information visit

Plagiarism Statement

The handouts used in this course are copyrighted. By “handouts,” I mean all materials generated for this class, which include but are not limited to syllabi, quizzes, exams, lab problems, in-class materials, review sheets, and additional problem sets. Because these materials are copyrighted, you do not have the right to copy the handouts, unless I expressly grant permission.

As commonly defined, plagiarism consists of passing off as one’s own the ideas, words, writings, etc., which belong to another. In accordance with this definition, you are committing plagiarism if you copy the work of another person and turn it in as your own, even if you should have the permission of that person. Plagiarism is one of the worst academic sins, for the plagiarist destroys the trust among colleagues without which research cannot be safely communicated.

If you have any questions regarding plagiarism, please consult the latest issue of the Texas A&M University Student Rules, under the section “Scholastic Dishonesty.”

Excused Absences

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|Excused Absences |

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|7.1 The student is responsible for providing satisfactory evidence to the instructor to substantiate the reason for absence. Among the reasons|

|absences are considered excused by the university are the following: |

|7.1.6 Injury or illness that is too severe or contagious for the student to attend class. |

|7.1.6.1 Injury or illness of three or more days.  For injury or illness that requires a student to be absent from classes for three or more |

|university business days (to include classes on Saturday), the student should obtain a medical confirmation note from his or her medical |

|provider.  The Student Health Center or an off-campus medical professional can provide a medical confirmation note only if medical |

|professionals are involved in the medical care of the student. The medical confirmation note must contain the date and time of the illness and|

|medical professional's confirmation of needed absence. |

|7.1.6.2 Injury or illness less than three days.  Faculty members may require confirmation of student injury or illness that is serious enough |

|for a student to be absent from class for a period less than three university business days (to include classes on Saturday).  At the |

|discretion of the faculty member and/or academic department standard, as outlined in the course syllabus, illness confirmation may be obtained|

|by one or both of the following methods: |

| |

|a.  Texas A&M University Explanatory Statement for Absence from Class form available at  |

|b. Confirmation of visit to a health care professional affirming date and time of visit. |

|7.1.6.3  An absence for a non acute medical service does not constitute an excused absence. |

|To view all Student Rules, please go to:  |

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