A Separate Sisterhood
Women Who Shaped Southern Education in the Progressive Era
©2002
Textbook
XVIII,
214 Pages
Series:
History of Schools and Schooling, Volume 26
Summary
A Separate Sisterhood examines the personal lives and professional accomplishments of a group of wise and persistent women whose collective work in the early twentieth century crucially influenced educational reform in the New South. Working at the intersection of race, gender, and class, these women fought for educational improvement in a region of exceptional poverty, rural isolation, and racial prejudice. Their work, explored collectively for the first time in this groundbreaking text, demonstrates the roots of early advances in southern literacy education, vocational education, community outreach education, adult education, equal educational opportunity, curricular integrity, public support, and teacher pay equity.
Details
- Pages
- XVIII, 214
- Publication Year
- 2002
- ISBN (Softcover)
- 9780820456843
- Language
- English
- Keywords
- educational reform race gender class
- Published
- New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., Oxford, Wien, 2002. XVIII, 214 pp., ill.
- Product Safety
- Peter Lang Group AG