Dewey Decimal370/.9711
Table Of ContentIntroduction: Reconsidering children, teachers and schools in the history of British Columbia, Mona Gleason and Jean Barman Beginnings 1. The emergence of educational structures in nineteenth century British Columbia, Jean Barman Part I: Childhood and Pupilhood 2. Families vs. schools: Children of Aboriginal descent in British Columbia classrooms of the late nineteenth century, Jean Barman 3. Schooled for inequality: The education of British Columbia Aboriginal children, Jean Barman 4. A scandalous procession: Residential schooling and the re/formation of Aboriginal bodies, 1900-1950, Mary-Ellen Kelm 5. White supremacy and the rhetoric of educational indoctrination: A Canadian case study, Timothy J. Stanley 6. Race, class, and health: School medical inspection and "healthy" children in British Columbia, 1890-1930, Mona Gleason 7. "Everybody seemed happy in those days": The culture of childhood in Vancouver between the 1920s and the 1960s, Neil Sutherland Part II: Becoming and Being a Teacher 8. British Columbia's pioneer teachers, Jean Barman 9. Encounters with sexuality: The management of inappropriate body behavior in late-nineteenth century British schools, Jean Barman 10. Vancouver's forgotten entrepreneurs: Women who ran their own schools, Jean Barman 11. "May the Lord have mercy on you": The rural school problem in British Columbia in the 1920s, J. Donald Wilson and Paul J. Stortz 12. "I am ready to be of assistance when I can": Lottie Bowron and rural women teachers in British Columbia, J. Donald Wilson Part III: Organizing and Reorganizing Schools 13. Separate and unequal: Indian and white girls at All Hallows School, 1884-1920, Jean Barman 14. Growing up British in British Columbia: The Vernon Preparatory School, 1914-1946, Jean Barman 15. The triumph of "formalism": Elementary schooling in Vancouver from the 1920s to the 1960s, Neil Sutherland 16. "Lessons in Living": Film propaganda and progressive education in rural British Columbia, 1944, Brian Low 17. Reflections on the role of the school in the transition to work in British Columbia resource towns, Jean Barman 18. "You would have had your pick": Youth, gender, and jobs in Williams Lake, British Columbia, 1945-75, Tony F. Arruda Part IV: From There to Here 19. Pregnant with meaning: Teen mothers and the politics of inclusive schooling, Deirdre Kelly 20. Aboriginal families and Aboriginal education: Coming full circle, Jan Hare 21. Seeds of promise: Grandview/?Uuqinak'uuh School in Vancouver, Anne Makhoul
SynopsisThis new edition explores the myriad ways that education, broadly defined, molds each of us in profound and enduring ways. Laid against the supporting scaffolding of modern critical theory, the chapters offer cutting edge perspectives of going to school in British Columbia. How has education been tailored by race, class, gender? How do representations of schools and schooling change over time and whose interests are served? What echoes of current tensions can we hear in the past? The book offers a glimpse of the deep contradictions inherent in an experience that we all share.