Programme/Approved Electives for 2022/23
None
Available as a Free Standing Elective
No
This module is intended to introduce you to aspects of the history of schooling in Britain from 1870 to 1944. The module will cover distinct topics that run through the history of this period. This includes a focus on education and inequalities of social class and gender; education and nation-building, churches and state education, education and the economy, arguments over the curriculum. A consistent theme is that of the diversity and unevenness of educational provision and the ways in which debates and policy have responded to the problems and opportunities to which such features have given rise.The module draws on primary and secondary sources. Alongside histories of the period, you will read extracts from novels, government reports, parliamentary debates and political pamphlets. One of our reasons for doing this is to encourage you to make use of first hand evidence in your own research and inquiry.
Aims
&·to help students to develop an understanding of persistent patterns in the history of British schooling and to consider their relationships, origins and possible causes;&·to enable students to understand the relationship between the history of schooling and wider social change; &·to enable students to assess critically and to make use of historical and evidence.
Talis Aspire Reading ListAny reading lists will be provided by the start of the course.http://lists.lib.keele.ac.uk/modules/edu-10067/lists
Intended Learning Outcomes
Make sense of key developments related to the history of schooling in Britain in the period 1870-1997: 1Locate histories of schooling in the wider context of controversies that have surrounded educational change : 1 read and analyse texts in the form of policy documents, speeches, reports and novels for the purpose of communicating ideas about the history of schooling: 1Drawing on module themes, summarise and evaluate a piece of fiction or a published monograph: 1Identify and comment on the enduring features of schooling in this period, especially in relation to socially-determined patterns of access and outcome : 1
24 contact hours; 48 hours independent study/preparation for seminars; 78 hours preparation of essay;
Description of Module Assessment
1: Essay weighted 100%An essay of 2000 words on module themes.One essay from a choice of 6-7.