Iniciativas Locais e Mobilização por Escolas Primárias em São Paulo, 1830-1889

One of the most common explanations for the historical deficiencies of public primary education in Brazil has been the alleged indifference of families that lacked resources to send their children to private schools. This article addresses such an issue in a period covering most of the Empire, when...

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Main Author: Renato Perim Colistete
Format: Article
Language:Portuguese
Published: Universidade de São Paulo 2017-12-01
Series:Revista de História
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.revistas.usp.br/revhistoria/article/view/120263
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spelling doaj-aea0bf3a31364117b8e7ff00705f258d2020-11-25T00:10:45ZporUniversidade de São PauloRevista de História0034-83092316-91412017-12-010176013310.11606/issn.2316-9141.rh.2017.120263120176Iniciativas Locais e Mobilização por Escolas Primárias em São Paulo, 1830-1889Renato Perim Colistete0Departamento de Economia. Faculdade de Economia, Administração e Contabilidade. Universidade de São PauloOne of the most common explanations for the historical deficiencies of public primary education in Brazil has been the alleged indifference of families that lacked resources to send their children to private schools. This article addresses such an issue in a period covering most of the Empire, when the conditions for access to primary schools were especially unfavourable. Poverty, isolation, illiteracy, political centralization and bureaucracy inhibited local initiatives and created few incentives, if any, for families to get involved in primary schools. The article shows, however, that parents and residents organized themselves across the province of São Paulo and submitted petitions to their local representatives and the provincial assembly requiring the installation of schools, since the first decades of the Empire. Town councils and, in the 1880s, education councils strengthened local demand for primary education. Under particularly adverse conditions, the evidence of mobilization for public schools gains a special significance and raises doubts about the views that, in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, rejected the viability of local self-government due to the alleged inability of the “people” to intervene in the public sphere consistently.http://www.revistas.usp.br/revhistoria/article/view/120263Educação primáriaMunicípiosSão Pauloescola pública
collection DOAJ
language Portuguese
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Renato Perim Colistete
spellingShingle Renato Perim Colistete
Iniciativas Locais e Mobilização por Escolas Primárias em São Paulo, 1830-1889
Revista de História
Educação primária
Municípios
São Paulo
escola pública
author_facet Renato Perim Colistete
author_sort Renato Perim Colistete
title Iniciativas Locais e Mobilização por Escolas Primárias em São Paulo, 1830-1889
title_short Iniciativas Locais e Mobilização por Escolas Primárias em São Paulo, 1830-1889
title_full Iniciativas Locais e Mobilização por Escolas Primárias em São Paulo, 1830-1889
title_fullStr Iniciativas Locais e Mobilização por Escolas Primárias em São Paulo, 1830-1889
title_full_unstemmed Iniciativas Locais e Mobilização por Escolas Primárias em São Paulo, 1830-1889
title_sort iniciativas locais e mobilização por escolas primárias em são paulo, 1830-1889
publisher Universidade de São Paulo
series Revista de História
issn 0034-8309
2316-9141
publishDate 2017-12-01
description One of the most common explanations for the historical deficiencies of public primary education in Brazil has been the alleged indifference of families that lacked resources to send their children to private schools. This article addresses such an issue in a period covering most of the Empire, when the conditions for access to primary schools were especially unfavourable. Poverty, isolation, illiteracy, political centralization and bureaucracy inhibited local initiatives and created few incentives, if any, for families to get involved in primary schools. The article shows, however, that parents and residents organized themselves across the province of São Paulo and submitted petitions to their local representatives and the provincial assembly requiring the installation of schools, since the first decades of the Empire. Town councils and, in the 1880s, education councils strengthened local demand for primary education. Under particularly adverse conditions, the evidence of mobilization for public schools gains a special significance and raises doubts about the views that, in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, rejected the viability of local self-government due to the alleged inability of the “people” to intervene in the public sphere consistently.
topic Educação primária
Municípios
São Paulo
escola pública
url http://www.revistas.usp.br/revhistoria/article/view/120263
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