Women, Educational Policy-making, and Administration in England: Authoritative Women Since 1800

Front Cover
Joyce Goodman, Sylvia A. Harrop
Psychology Press, 2000 - Education - 210 pages

The role of women in policy-making has been largely neglected in conventional social and political histories. This book opens up this field of study, taking the example of women in education as its focus. It examines the work, attitudes, actions and philosophies of women who played a part in policy-making and administration in education in England over two centuries, looking at women engaged at every level from the local school to the state.
Women, Educational Policy-Making and Administration in England traces women's involvement in the establishment and management of schools and teacher training; the foundation of the school boards; women's representation on educational commissions, and their rising professional profile in such roles as school inspector or minister of education. These activities highlight vital questions of gender, class, power and authority, and illuminate the increasingly diverse and prominent spectrum of political activity in which women have participated.
Offering a new perspective on the professional and political role of women, this book represents essential reading for anybody with an interest in gender studies or the social and political history of England in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

 

Contents

women and the making
1
Women governors and the management of workingclass
17
women governors of middleclass girls
37
PART II
57
the fight to secure political
78
PART III
97
elementary schoolmistresses
116
PART IV
135
women on the Consultative
156
women ministers of education
175
Bibliography
193
Index
205

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