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Education in Connecticut

Education in Connecticut covers the public and private schools of all levels from colonial era to the present. Originally an offshoot of Massachusetts, colonial Connecticut was committed to Puritanism's high regard for education.[1] Yale College became a national model for higher education.[2] Immigration in the 19th century brought a large working class Catholic element that supported vocational training,[3] as well as a distinctive parochial educational system.[4] The southwestern districts include wealthy suburbs of New York City that use strong public schools to compete for residents.[5]

History edit

Hartford Public High School (1638) is the third-oldest secondary school in the nation after the Collegiate School (1628) in Manhattan and the Boston Latin School (1635).

 
Yale's Latin motto means "light and truth."

Jackson Turner Main finds that teaching in colonial days was a poorly paid, part-time, temporary job. Young men typically moved on to more secure occupations as soon as possible. There was one great exception: Reverend Thomas Clap (1703-1767), president of Yale college, 1740-1766. At his death he left an estate worth £6,656, including 600 acres of land. His wealth came from marriage and his attention to lucrative investments. [6]

Puritanism required a well educated ministry, and Harvard (founded 1636) and Yale (founded 1701) provided the men, Of the 2,466 graduates of the two schools from 1691 to 1760, 987 (40%) became ministers. However the salaries were low and increasingly ministers were unable to send their own sons to college.[7]

19th century edit

Henry Barnard (1811-1900) was a leading proponent of educational reform. In 1838 he led the state legislature with the passage of his bill. It provided for "the better supervision of the common schools", and established a board of "commissioners of common schools" in the state. He was the secretary of the board from 1838 until its abolition in 1842. He worked indefatigably to reorganize and reform the common school system of the state, thus earning a national reputation as an educational reformer.[8] [9] After taking a leading role in education in Rhode Island in the 1840s he returned to Connecticut. From 1851 to 1855, he was "superintendent of common schools", and principal of the Connecticut State Normal School at New Britain.[10]

In 1832, Quaker schoolteacher Prudence Crandall created the first integrated schoolhouse in the United States by admitting Sarah Harris, the daughter of a free African-American farmer in the local community, to her Canterbury Female Boarding School in Canterbury. Many prominent townspeople objected and pressured to have Harris dismissed from the school, but Crandall refused. Families of the current students removed their daughters. Consequently, Crandall ceased teaching white girls altogether and opened up her school strictly to African American girls.[11] In 1995, the Connecticut General Assembly designated Prudence Crandall as the state's official heroine.[12]

2012: Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting edit

On December 14, 2012, Adam Lanza shot and killed 26 people, including 20 children and 6 staff, at Sandy Hook Elementary School in the Sandy Hook village of Newtown, Connecticut, and then killed himself.[13]

Quality edit

Connecticut ranked third in the nation for educational performance, according to Education Week's Quality Counts 2018 report. It earned an overall score of 83.5 out of 100 points. On average, the country received a score of 75.2.[14] Connecticut posted a B-plus in the Chance-for-Success category, ranking fourth on factors that contribute to a person's success both within and outside the K-12 education system. Connecticut received a mark of B-plus and finished fourth for School Finance. It ranked 12th with a grade of C on the K-12 Achievement Index.[14]

K–12 edit

Public schools edit

Today, the Connecticut State Board of Education manages the public school system for children in grades K–12. Board of Education members are appointed by the Governor of Connecticut.

Parochial schools edit

Private preparatory schools edit

 
University of Connecticut, the state's main public university

Connecticut has a number of private schools. Private schools may file for approval by the state Department of Education, but are not required to. Per state law, private schools must file yearly attendance reports with the state.[15]

Notable private schools include the Taft School, Choate Rosemary Hall, the Kent School, and Miss Porter's School.

Colleges and universities edit

Connecticut was home to the nation's first law school, Litchfield Law School, which operated from 1773 to 1833 in Litchfield. Well known universities in the state include Yale University, Wesleyan University, Trinity College, Sacred Heart University, Fairfield University, Quinnipiac University, and the University of Connecticut. The Connecticut State University System includes 4 state universities, and the state also has 12 community colleges. The United States Coast Guard Academy is located in New London.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Bruce C. Daniels, The Connecticut town: Growth and development, 1635-1790 (1979) pp 108-111.
  2. ^ O. Burton Adams, "Yale Influence on the Formation of the University of Georgia." Georgia Historical Quarterly 51.2 (1967): 175-185.
  3. ^ Ivan Greenberg, "Vocational education, work culture, and the children of immigrants in 1930s Bridgeport" Journal of Social History (2007) 41#1 pp.149-160.
  4. ^ Delores Ann Liptak, "European Immigrants and the Catholic Church in Connecticut. 1870-1920"
  5. ^ Jack Dougherty, "Shopping for schools: How public education and private housing shaped suburban Connecticut." Journal of Urban History 38.2 (2012): 205-224.
  6. ^ Jackson Turner Main, Society and Economy in Colonial Connecticut (1985) p 258
  7. ^ James W. Schmotter, "Ministerial Careers in Eighteenth-Century New England: The Social Context, 1700-1760," Journal of Social History 9#2 (1975), pp. 249-267, at pp 250, 261. online
  8. ^ Will S. Monroe, The educational labors of Henry Barnard: a study in the history of American pedagogy (1893) pp 12-15.
  9. ^ Merle Curti, The Social Ideas of American Educators (1935) pp. 139–168.
  10. ^ Monroe, pp 18-20.
  11. ^ Wormley, G. Smith, "Prudence Crandall", Journal of Negro History 8#1 (1923) pp. 72-80. online
  12. ^ STATE OF CONNECTICUT, Sites º Seals º Symbols December 10, 2010, at the Wayback Machine; Connecticut State Register & Manual; retrieved on May 31, 2013
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on January 18, 2013. Retrieved January 15, 2013.
  14. ^ a b "Connecticut Earns a B on State Report Card, Ranks Third in Nation—Quality Counts". Education Week. Editorial Projects in Education. 37 (17). September 5, 2018. from the original on February 20, 2021. Retrieved February 11, 2019.
  15. ^ "Private Schools". CT.gov – Connecticut's Official State Website. from the original on April 14, 2021. Retrieved October 15, 2021.

Further reading edit

  • Ames, Charles L. History of Education in Connecticut From 1818 to 1925 (Edited by N. G. Osborn. History of Connecticut in Monographic Form. New York: State Historical Society, 1925• Vol. 5» Part I. 558 p.
  • Axtell, James. The school upon a hill: Education and society in colonial New England (Yale UP, 1974). online, a major scholarly survey
  • Bomhoff, Carl Bowker. “The development of state support of teacher education in Connecticut's school-reform movement, 1825-1850" (PhD dissertation, New York University; ProQuest Dissertations Publishing, 1952. 7308440).
  • Bushman, Richard L. 'From Puritan to Yankee: Character and the Social Order in Connecticut, 1690-1765 (1967)
  • Collier, Christopher. Connecticuts Public Schools: A History (2009). 850pp massive history of all aspects of the topic, by a scholar.
  • Cornwell, Eleanor Kazmercyk.  "The history of education in Milford, Connecticut" (MS thesis, Southern Connecticut State University; ProQuest Dissertations Publishing, 1959. EP27037).
  • Daniels, Bruce C. The Connecticut town: Growth and development, 1635-1790 (Wesleyan University Press, 1979)
  • DeFrank, Megan. "School Segregation in New Haven County." Connecticut Law Review Online 53 (2020): 1+ online .
  • Dougherty, Jack. "Shopping for schools: How public education and private housing shaped suburban Connecticut." Journal of Urban History 38.2 (2012): 205-224. online
  • "EDUCATION IN CONNECTICUT" Journal of Education 100#12 (Oct 1924), pp. 313-321 online summarizes education department of state governments and its many divisions and activities in 1920s.
  • Fowler, Herbert E. A Century of Teacher Education in Connecticut: The Story of the New Britain State Normal School and the Teachers College of Connecticut, 1849-1949 (1949)
  • Greenberg, Ivan. "Vocational education, work culture, and the children of immigrants in 1930s Bridgeport" Journal of Social History (2007) 41#1 pp.149-160.
  • Griffin Orwin B. Evolution of the Connecticut School System (Columbia Univ.: 1928). Scholarly overview of education up to 1910 online
  • Hodgkinson, Harold L. Connecticut: The State and Its Educational System. 1988 online
  • Kelley, Brooks Mather. Yale: A History (Yale University Press, 1999), a major scholarly histoty of the entire university, not just the undergraduate college.
  • Lassonde, Stephen. Learning to Forget: Schooling and Family Life in New Haven's Working Class, 1870-1940 (Yale UP 2005) a major scholarly study
    • ProQuest Dissertations Publishing,  1994. 9523192; PhD version online, 1994)
  • Liptak, Delores Ann. "European Immigrants and the Catholic Church in Connecticut. 1870-1920" (Ph.D. dissertation, U. of Connecticut; ProQuest Dissertations Publishing, 1979. 7914170.).
  • McDermott, Kathryn A. Controlling Public Education: Localism versus Equity (1999), focus on New Haven and 3 suburbs; summary
  • Macomber, Donna, et al. "Education in juvenile detention facilities in the state of Connecticut: A glance at the system." Journal of correctional education 61.3 (2010): 223+ online.
  • Moss, Hilary J. “Education’s Inequity: Opposition to Black Higher Education in Antebellum Connecticut.” History of Education Quarterly 46#1 (2006), pp. 16–35. online
  • Monroe, Will S. The educational labors of Henry Barnard; a study in the history of American pedagogy (1893) online
  • Perlmann, Joel, Silvana R. Siddali, and Keith Whitescarver. "Literacy, Schooling and Teaching Among New England Women" History of Education Quarterly (1997), 37:117–139. online
  • Pierson, George Wilson. History of Yale College (2 vol 1952) scholarly history of the undergraduate collage to 1937
  • Pratte, Richard Norman. "A History of Teacher Education in Connecticut from 1639 to 1939" (PhD dissertation, . University of Connecticut, 1967; ProQuest Dissertations Publishing, 1967. 6801396).
  • Preston, Jo Anne. " 'He lives as a Master': Seventeenth-Century Masculinity, Gendered Teaching, and Careers of New England Schoolmasters." History of Education Quarterly 43.3 (2003): 350-371. online.
  • Scopino, Aldorigo Joseph, Jr.   "The Social Gospel in Connecticut: Protestants, Catholics, Jews and social reform, 1893-1929" (PhD dissertation, University of Connecticut; ProQuest Dissertations Publishing, 1993. 9406063).
  • Smith, Wilson. , “The Teacher in Puritan Culture,” Harvard Educational Review 36 (Fall 1966): 394-411.
  • Steiner, Bernard Christian. The history of education in Connecticut (1893). online
  • Stewart, George. A History of Religious Education in Connecticut to the Middle of the Nineteenth Century (Yale University Press, 1924) a prize-winning history online
  • Vreeland, Herbert Harold, Jr. "Public secondary education in Connecticut in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries with special reference to its support by private bequests and gifts" (PhD dissertation,  Yale University; ProQuest Dissertations Publishing,  1941. 9128424).


Primary sources edit

  • Reviewed Works: Reports of the Board of Commissioners of Common Schools in Connecticut, together with the Annual Reports of the Secretary of the Board; The Connecticut Common School Journal...Fifth Annual Report of the Board of Education, [of Massachusetts] together with the Fifth Annual Report of the Secretary of the Board. in The North American Review , Vol. 54, No. 115 (Apr., 1842), pp. 458-476 online; detailed summaries of reports on Connecticut and Massachusetts for 1839-1841; useful primary sources.

External links edit

  • Carie Rose "MILESTONES IN CONNECTICUT EDUCATION: 1912-2012" (OLR Research Report, 2012)

education, connecticut, covers, public, private, schools, levels, from, colonial, present, originally, offshoot, massachusetts, colonial, connecticut, committed, puritanism, high, regard, education, yale, college, became, national, model, higher, education, im. Education in Connecticut covers the public and private schools of all levels from colonial era to the present Originally an offshoot of Massachusetts colonial Connecticut was committed to Puritanism s high regard for education 1 Yale College became a national model for higher education 2 Immigration in the 19th century brought a large working class Catholic element that supported vocational training 3 as well as a distinctive parochial educational system 4 The southwestern districts include wealthy suburbs of New York City that use strong public schools to compete for residents 5 Contents 1 History 1 1 19th century 1 2 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting 2 Quality 3 K 12 3 1 Public schools 3 2 Parochial schools 3 3 Private preparatory schools 4 Colleges and universities 5 See also 6 Notes 7 Further reading 7 1 Primary sources 8 External linksHistory editHartford Public High School 1638 is the third oldest secondary school in the nation after the Collegiate School 1628 in Manhattan and the Boston Latin School 1635 nbsp Yale s Latin motto means light and truth Jackson Turner Main finds that teaching in colonial days was a poorly paid part time temporary job Young men typically moved on to more secure occupations as soon as possible There was one great exception Reverend Thomas Clap 1703 1767 president of Yale college 1740 1766 At his death he left an estate worth 6 656 including 600 acres of land His wealth came from marriage and his attention to lucrative investments 6 Puritanism required a well educated ministry and Harvard founded 1636 and Yale founded 1701 provided the men Of the 2 466 graduates of the two schools from 1691 to 1760 987 40 became ministers However the salaries were low and increasingly ministers were unable to send their own sons to college 7 19th century edit Henry Barnard 1811 1900 was a leading proponent of educational reform In 1838 he led the state legislature with the passage of his bill It provided for the better supervision of the common schools and established a board of commissioners of common schools in the state He was the secretary of the board from 1838 until its abolition in 1842 He worked indefatigably to reorganize and reform the common school system of the state thus earning a national reputation as an educational reformer 8 9 After taking a leading role in education in Rhode Island in the 1840s he returned to Connecticut From 1851 to 1855 he was superintendent of common schools and principal of the Connecticut State Normal School at New Britain 10 In 1832 Quaker schoolteacher Prudence Crandall created the first integrated schoolhouse in the United States by admitting Sarah Harris the daughter of a free African American farmer in the local community to her Canterbury Female Boarding School in Canterbury Many prominent townspeople objected and pressured to have Harris dismissed from the school but Crandall refused Families of the current students removed their daughters Consequently Crandall ceased teaching white girls altogether and opened up her school strictly to African American girls 11 In 1995 the Connecticut General Assembly designated Prudence Crandall as the state s official heroine 12 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting edit Main article Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting On December 14 2012 Adam Lanza shot and killed 26 people including 20 children and 6 staff at Sandy Hook Elementary School in the Sandy Hook village of Newtown Connecticut and then killed himself 13 Quality editFurther information List of school districts in Connecticut Connecticut ranked third in the nation for educational performance according to Education Week s Quality Counts 2018 report It earned an overall score of 83 5 out of 100 points On average the country received a score of 75 2 14 Connecticut posted a B plus in the Chance for Success category ranking fourth on factors that contribute to a person s success both within and outside the K 12 education system Connecticut received a mark of B plus and finished fourth for School Finance It ranked 12th with a grade of C on the K 12 Achievement Index 14 K 12 editSee also Connecticut State Board of Education Public schools edit Today the Connecticut State Board of Education manages the public school system for children in grades K 12 Board of Education members are appointed by the Governor of Connecticut Parochial schools edit Private preparatory schools edit nbsp University of Connecticut the state s main public universityConnecticut has a number of private schools Private schools may file for approval by the state Department of Education but are not required to Per state law private schools must file yearly attendance reports with the state 15 Notable private schools include the Taft School Choate Rosemary Hall the Kent School and Miss Porter s School Colleges and universities editSee also List of colleges and universities in Connecticut Connecticut was home to the nation s first law school Litchfield Law School which operated from 1773 to 1833 in Litchfield Well known universities in the state include Yale University Wesleyan University Trinity College Sacred Heart University Fairfield University Quinnipiac University and the University of Connecticut The Connecticut State University System includes 4 state universities and the state also has 12 community colleges The United States Coast Guard Academy is located in New London See also editHenry Barnard Thomas Clapp President of Yale 1740 1766 History of Connecticut History of education in the United States History of education in MassachusettsNotes edit Bruce C Daniels The Connecticut town Growth and development 1635 1790 1979 pp 108 111 O Burton Adams Yale Influence on the Formation of the University of Georgia Georgia Historical Quarterly 51 2 1967 175 185 Ivan Greenberg Vocational education work culture and the children of immigrants in 1930s Bridgeport Journal of Social History 2007 41 1 pp 149 160 Delores Ann Liptak European Immigrants and the Catholic Church in Connecticut 1870 1920 Jack Dougherty Shopping for schools How public education and private housing shaped suburban Connecticut Journal of Urban History 38 2 2012 205 224 Jackson Turner Main Society and Economy in Colonial Connecticut 1985 p 258 James W Schmotter Ministerial Careers in Eighteenth Century New England The Social Context 1700 1760 Journal of Social History 9 2 1975 pp 249 267 at pp 250 261 online Will S Monroe The educational labors of Henry Barnard a study in the history of American pedagogy 1893 pp 12 15 Merle Curti The Social Ideas of American Educators 1935 pp 139 168 Monroe pp 18 20 Wormley G Smith Prudence Crandall Journal of Negro History 8 1 1923 pp 72 80 online STATE OF CONNECTICUT Sites º Seals º Symbols Archived December 10 2010 at the Wayback Machine Connecticut State Register amp Manual retrieved on May 31 2013 News from the Associated Press Archived from the original on January 18 2013 Retrieved January 15 2013 a b Connecticut Earns a B on State Report Card Ranks Third in Nation Quality Counts Education Week Editorial Projects in Education 37 17 September 5 2018 Archived from the original on February 20 2021 Retrieved February 11 2019 Private Schools CT gov Connecticut s Official State Website Archived from the original on April 14 2021 Retrieved October 15 2021 Further reading editAmes Charles L History of Education in Connecticut From 1818 to 1925 Edited by N G Osborn History of Connecticut in Monographic Form New York State Historical Society 1925 Vol 5 Part I 558 p Axtell James The school upon a hill Education and society in colonial New England Yale UP 1974 online a major scholarly surveyBomhoff Carl Bowker The development of state support of teacher education in Connecticut s school reform movement 1825 1850 PhD dissertation New York University ProQuest Dissertations Publishing 1952 7308440 Bushman Richard L From Puritan to Yankee Character and the Social Order in Connecticut 1690 1765 1967 Collier Christopher Connecticuts Public Schools A History 2009 850pp massive history of all aspects of the topic by a scholar Cornwell Eleanor Kazmercyk The history of education in Milford Connecticut MS thesis Southern Connecticut State University ProQuest Dissertations Publishing 1959 EP27037 Curti Merle The Social Ideas of American Educators 1935 pp 139 68 on Henry Barnard see onlineDaniels Bruce C The Connecticut town Growth and development 1635 1790 Wesleyan University Press 1979 DeFrank Megan School Segregation in New Haven County Connecticut Law Review Online 53 2020 1 online Dougherty Jack Shopping for schools How public education and private housing shaped suburban Connecticut Journal of Urban History 38 2 2012 205 224 online EDUCATION IN CONNECTICUT Journal of Education 100 12 Oct 1924 pp 313 321 online summarizes education department of state governments and its many divisions and activities in 1920s Fowler Herbert E A Century of Teacher Education in Connecticut The Story of the New Britain State Normal School and the Teachers College of Connecticut 1849 1949 1949 Greenberg Ivan Vocational education work culture and the children of immigrants in 1930s Bridgeport Journal of Social History 2007 41 1 pp 149 160 Griffin Orwin B Evolution of the Connecticut School System Columbia Univ 1928 Scholarly overview of education up to 1910 onlineHodgkinson Harold L Connecticut The State and Its Educational System 1988 online Kelley Brooks Mather Yale A History Yale University Press 1999 a major scholarly histoty of the entire university not just the undergraduate college Lassonde Stephen Learning to Forget Schooling and Family Life in New Haven s Working Class 1870 1940 Yale UP 2005 a major scholarly study ProQuest Dissertations Publishing 1994 9523192 PhD version online 1994 Liptak Delores Ann European Immigrants and the Catholic Church in Connecticut 1870 1920 Ph D dissertation U of Connecticut ProQuest Dissertations Publishing 1979 7914170 McDermott Kathryn A Controlling Public Education Localism versus Equity 1999 focus on New Haven and 3 suburbs summaryMacomber Donna et al Education in juvenile detention facilities in the state of Connecticut A glance at the system Journal of correctional education 61 3 2010 223 online Moss Hilary J Education s Inequity Opposition to Black Higher Education in Antebellum Connecticut History of Education Quarterly 46 1 2006 pp 16 35 onlineMonroe Will S The educational labors of Henry Barnard a study in the history of American pedagogy 1893 online Perlmann Joel Silvana R Siddali and Keith Whitescarver Literacy Schooling and Teaching Among New England Women History of Education Quarterly 1997 37 117 139 onlinePierson George Wilson History of Yale College 2 vol 1952 scholarly history of the undergraduate collage to 1937Pratte Richard Norman A History of Teacher Education in Connecticut from 1639 to 1939 PhD dissertation University of Connecticut 1967 ProQuest Dissertations Publishing 1967 6801396 Preston Jo Anne He lives as a Master Seventeenth Century Masculinity Gendered Teaching and Careers of New England Schoolmasters History of Education Quarterly 43 3 2003 350 371 online Scopino Aldorigo Joseph Jr The Social Gospel in Connecticut Protestants Catholics Jews and social reform 1893 1929 PhD dissertation University of Connecticut ProQuest Dissertations Publishing 1993 9406063 Smith Wilson The Teacher in Puritan Culture Harvard Educational Review 36 Fall 1966 394 411 Steiner Bernard Christian The history of education in Connecticut 1893 onlineStewart George A History of Religious Education in Connecticut to the Middle of the Nineteenth Century Yale University Press 1924 a prize winning history onlineVreeland Herbert Harold Jr Public secondary education in Connecticut in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries with special reference to its support by private bequests and gifts PhD dissertation Yale University ProQuest Dissertations Publishing 1941 9128424 Primary sources edit Reviewed Works Reports of the Board of Commissioners of Common Schools in Connecticut together with the Annual Reports of the Secretary of the Board The Connecticut Common School Journal Fifth Annual Report of the Board of Education of Massachusetts together with the Fifth Annual Report of the Secretary of the Board in The North American Review Vol 54 No 115 Apr 1842 pp 458 476 online detailed summaries of reports on Connecticut and Massachusetts for 1839 1841 useful primary sources External links editCarie Rose MILESTONES IN CONNECTICUT EDUCATION 1912 2012 OLR Research Report 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Education in Connecticut amp oldid 1184430770, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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