The weight of history: structures, patterns and legacies of secondary education in the British Isles, c.1200–c.1980
This article serves as context for the other papers in this special issue, all of which deal with developments in UK secondary education since c.1980. The paper comprises a review of selected impulses and imperatives that saw the substantial legacy of medieval and humanist schooling in Britain re-s...
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doaj-fef5858c36024889919d9acd7374f2502020-12-16T09:45:06ZengUCL PressLondon Review of Education1474-84792011-06-0110.1080/14748460.2011.585875The weight of history: structures, patterns and legacies of secondary education in the British Isles, c.1200–c.1980William RichardsonThis article serves as context for the other papers in this special issue, all of which deal with developments in UK secondary education since c.1980. The paper comprises a review of selected impulses and imperatives that saw the substantial legacy of medieval and humanist schooling in Britain re-shaped, during the period c.1830–c.1980, into the outline of today's landscape of secondary schooling. Three parallel themes are examined: the influence of universities and examinations in framing the secondary curriculum; the role of ideas about ability in shaping the growth of secondary education; and the place of practical/technical education in the secondary school years. By tracing these themes, an account of the changing patterns of institutional provision across the British Isles is provided that, by 1980, had led to a thriving independent sector of schools for a small minority coexisting alongside the massive enterprise of broadly comprehensive, state-funded secondary education in which significant tensions remained between separate 'grammar' and 'upper-elementary' traditions. Conclusions are drawn as to significant aspects of this historic inheritance acting on developments in secondary education in the contemporary era.https://www.scienceopen.com/document?vid=0bb75d53-357c-4957-94cd-add99f4d925f |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
William Richardson |
spellingShingle |
William Richardson The weight of history: structures, patterns and legacies of secondary education in the British Isles, c.1200–c.1980 London Review of Education |
author_facet |
William Richardson |
author_sort |
William Richardson |
title |
The weight of history: structures, patterns and legacies of secondary education in the British Isles, c.1200–c.1980 |
title_short |
The weight of history: structures, patterns and legacies of secondary education in the British Isles, c.1200–c.1980 |
title_full |
The weight of history: structures, patterns and legacies of secondary education in the British Isles, c.1200–c.1980 |
title_fullStr |
The weight of history: structures, patterns and legacies of secondary education in the British Isles, c.1200–c.1980 |
title_full_unstemmed |
The weight of history: structures, patterns and legacies of secondary education in the British Isles, c.1200–c.1980 |
title_sort |
weight of history: structures, patterns and legacies of secondary education in the british isles, c.1200–c.1980 |
publisher |
UCL Press |
series |
London Review of Education |
issn |
1474-8479 |
publishDate |
2011-06-01 |
description |
This article serves as context for the other papers in this special issue, all of which deal with developments in UK secondary education since c.1980. The paper comprises a review of selected impulses and imperatives that saw the substantial legacy of medieval and humanist schooling
in Britain re-shaped, during the period c.1830–c.1980, into the outline of today's landscape of secondary schooling. Three parallel themes are examined: the influence of universities and examinations in framing the secondary curriculum; the role of ideas about ability in shaping the
growth of secondary education; and the place of practical/technical education in the secondary school years. By tracing these themes, an account of the changing patterns of institutional provision across the British Isles is provided that, by 1980, had led to a thriving independent sector
of schools for a small minority coexisting alongside the massive enterprise of broadly comprehensive, state-funded secondary education in which significant tensions remained between separate 'grammar' and 'upper-elementary' traditions. Conclusions are drawn as to significant aspects of this
historic inheritance acting on developments in secondary education in the contemporary era. |
url |
https://www.scienceopen.com/document?vid=0bb75d53-357c-4957-94cd-add99f4d925f |
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