Literaturnachweis - Detailanzeige
Autor/in | DeYoung, Alan J. |
---|---|
Institution | Ohio Univ., Athens. |
Titel | Dilemmas of Rural Life and Livelihood: Academics and Community. Working Paper. |
Quelle | (2002), (18 Seiten)
PDF als Volltext |
Sprache | englisch |
Dokumenttyp | gedruckt; online; Monographie |
Schlagwörter | Stellungnahme; College Preparation; Consolidated Schools; Education Work Relationship; Educational Attitudes; Educational Change; Educational History; High Schools; Role of Education; Rural Schools; School Community Relationship; Secondary School Curriculum; Vocational Education Consolidated school; Mittelpunktschule; Zentralschule; Educational attitude; Bildungsverhalten; Erziehungseinstellung; Bildungsreform; History of education; Bildungsgeschichte; High school; Oberschule; Bildungsauftrag; Rural area; Rural areas; School; Schools; Ländlicher Raum; Schule; Schulen; Ausbildung; Berufsbildung |
Abstract | This essay considers connections between rural American life, livelihood, academics, and community. Two major areas are addressed: curricular issues in rural high schools and the nature of community and its central influence on the rural school. Historically youth who stayed in their rural community did not require preparation for higher education. A pre-college, or academic, curriculum in local high schools was thought by many rural residents to smack of elitism. After World War II, the metropolitan model of preparing youth for postsecondary education was imposed on rural schools. Rural educators increasingly came to believe that their job was to export as many able students as possible via college preparation programs. Since universities required increasing numbers of college equivalency units that were expensive to provide in small schools, consolidated schools were seen as real progress among remaining rural elites. However, rural high schools are not only educational institutions, but community hubs. The emerging belief that high schools need to focus on academic standards and not on local sporting or cultural events often results in a traumatic confrontation between the rural community and the school. Rural educators have a choice. They can try to rebuild rural communities and help reconnect schools to places rather than using them as sorting machines for exporting children to metropolitan America. But in the cacophony of "globalism" today, this is a losing battle. The other choice is to understand that high schools today need to prepare youths for post-high school possibilities as well as whatever is locally possible. But local values and hopes for local livelihoods should not be deprecated as somehow inferior to academic interests. (TD) |
Anmerkungen | For full text: http://kant.citl.ohiou.edu/ACCLAIM/rc/rc_sub/pub/3_wp/AD.WP1.pdf. |
Erfasst von | ERIC (Education Resources Information Center), Washington, DC |