Bilingual Public Schooling in the United States
A History of America's "Polyglot Boardinghouse"
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
Bilingual Public Schooling in the United States
A History of America's "Polyglot Boardinghouse"
About This Book
This history of one of the most contentious educational issues in America examines bilingual instruction in the United States from the common school era to the recent federal involvement in the 1960s and 1970s. Drawing from school reports, student narratives, legal resources, policy documents, and other primary sources, the work teases out the underlying agendas and patterns in bilingual schooling during much of America s history. The study demonstrates clearly how the broader context - the cultural, intellectual, religious, demographic, economic, and political forces - shaped the contours of dual-language instruction in America between the 1840s and 1960s. Ramsey s work fills a crucial void in the educational literature and addresses not only historians, linguists, and bilingual scholars, but also policymakers and practitioners in the field.
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Half-Title
- Title
- Copyright
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Tables
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Drafting the Blueprints for This Old Boardinghouse
- 1 Laying the Foundation for the Boarding house: The Context of Nineteenth-Century Schooling and Bilingualism
- 2 Building the Polyglot Boardinghouse in the Northeast and the South
- 3 Inside the Boardinghouse's Parlor
- 4 The Polyglot Boarders Move West
- 5 Nativism among the Homeowners: The Metaphysics of Foreigner-Hating
- 6 Progressivism, Science, and the Remodeling of the Boardinghouse
- 7 "If You Can't Fight over There, Fight over Here": World War I and the Partial Destruction of the Boardinghouse
- 8 Rebuilding the Boardinghouse: The Interwar Years
- Epilogue: The Federal Landlord
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index