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Public-Private Symbiosis in Nashville Special Education

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 February 2017

Sherman Dorn*
Affiliation:
University of South Florida

Extract

The conventional historiography describing a strict public-private divide in United States schooling is misleading. The standard story claims that public schooling was a fuzzy concept 200 years ago; the division between public and private education for children thus developed largely over the nineteenth century. In the early nineteenth century, public funds went to many private schools and even large private systems, such as the New York Public School Society. In some instances, public funds went to parochial education, either explicitly or as part of an arrangement to allow for diverse religious instruction using public funds. However, the nineteenth century witnessed growing division between public and private, largely excluding religious education (or at least non-Protestant religious education). By the end of the nineteenth century, the standard educational historiography suggests, public schools meant public in several senses: funded from the public coffers, open to the public in general, and controlled by a public, democratically controlled process. Tacit in that definition was a relatively rigid dividing line between public and private school organizations. Historians know that this implicit definition of “public” omits key facts. First, the governance of public schools became less tied to electoral politics during the Progressive Era. Public schooling in nineteenth-century cities generally meant large school boards, intimately connected with urban political machines. By the 1920s, many city school systems had smaller boards in a more corporate-like structure. The consolidation of small rural school districts in the first half of the twentieth century completed this removal of school governance from more local politics. A second problem with the definition above is unequal access to quality education (however defined). Historically, the acceptance of all students was true only in a limited sense, either in access to schools at all (with the exclusion of many children with disabilities) or, more generally, to the resources and curriculum involved in the best public schooling of the early twentieth century (as with racial segregation).

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2002 by the History of Education Society 

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References

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94 That administrative progressives supported forms of education that limited opportunities for many children was not inconsistent, by any means, with their notion of public education; see Hansot, Tyack and Managers of Virtue, 114–28. On Ontario school systems, see Gidney, R.D. From Hope to Harris: The Reshaping of Ontario's Schools (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1999).Google Scholar

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