Connie Goddard
Revisiting Industrial Education: Lessons from Three Distinctive Progressive Era Schools Tuesday, Nov. 16, 2021; 7:00 – 8:15 p.m.
Free, open to the public No need to register
Zoom link:shorturl.at/xGHR3
Before there were vocational-education programs, there was manual training and industrial education, which emphasized the practical instruction of the hand and eye. Manual training improved perception, observation, dexterity and visual accuracy. It combined practical with academic education.
Goddard’s forthcoming book, Revisiting Industrial Education: Lessons from Three Distinctive Progressive Era Schools, examines influential schools in North Dakota, New Jersey and Chicago. Chicago’s innovative Manual Training School (CMTS), was created in 1884 and influenced dozens of similar schools before being incorporated into John Dewey’s department of education at the University of Chicago in 1901; once there, it lost its distinctive identity. Why Dewey ignored CMTS – as well as complementary ideas from Frank Lloyd Wright and W.E.B. Du Bois – are among the fascinating questions Goddard asks in her “rich contextualization of educational activities around the turn of the century,” as an early reviewer said of her book.
Goddard will also discuss: Getting published; Writing during Covid and Lessons from writers who guided her research.
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For more information, contact program chair Greg Borzo: (312) 636-8968; [email protected]