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Solving the “Rural School Problem”: New State Aid, Standards, and Supervision of Local Schools, 1900–1933

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 February 2017

Tracy L. Steffes*
Affiliation:
Brown University

Extract

“The greatest educational problem now facing the American people is the Rural School Problem,” argued Minnesota county superintendent Julius Arp in 1918. “There is no defect more glaring today than the inequality that exists between the educational facilities of the urban and rural communities. Rural education in the United States has been so far outstripped by the education of our urban centers, that from an educational standpoint, the country child is left far behind in the struggles of life.” This conceptualization of the Rural School Problem, framed within a larger national discussion about the growing disparity between urban and rural life wrought by industrialization, galvanized a broad based coalition of educators, ministers, farmers, agro-businessmen, sociologists, and social reformers into a robust campaign for rural school reform in the early twentieth century. Often lost in recent education histories which have paid much greater attention to urban school reform, this rural school movement had far-reaching consequences, not only for local school governance in the countryside, but for emerging state administration of education. The Rural School Problem, this article argues, helped to stimulate and legitimate significant new state interventions into local schools and define the forms of state aid, regulation, and bureaucracy in a formative period of state development.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 2008 History of Education Society 

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References

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78 Frost, Norman, “The Development of Rural School Supervision.” National Society for the Study of Education 13th Yearbook, Part I: The Status of Rural Education (Bloomington, IL: Public School Publishing Company, 1931), 180. See also Katherine Cook, M., “Supervision of Instruction as a Function of State Departments of Education.” Studies of State Departments of Education USBE Bulletin No. 6, Monograph No. 7 (1940), 128. Cook includes state-by-state statistics on the number and type of supervisor for each school year from 1913–14 to 1938–39.Google Scholar

79 Wilson, R. H. to Buttrick, Wallace, 5 March 1915, file 3135, box 300, series 1.2, GEB records; Wood, Moses E. to Buttrick, Wallace, 10 August 1916, folder 3135, box 300, series 1.2, GEB records.Google Scholar

80 Duke, E.A. to Buttrick, Wallace, 8 December 1916, folder 3135, box 300, series 1.2, GEB records.Google Scholar

81 Duke, E.A. to Buttrick, Wallace, 31 March 1917, folder 3135, box 300, series 1.2, GEB records.Google Scholar

82 Davidson, Isobel, “Rural School Supervision as an Agency for Improving Rural Schools.” Journal of Sural Education 1 (1921): 39 For similar state leadership of county level supervisors, including state conferences in California, see Weiler, Kathleen, Women and Rural School Reform: California, 1900–1940. History of Education Quarterly 34 (Spring 1994): 25–47.Google Scholar

83 “Virginia State Department of Public Instruction Score Card for Country Schools” [1915], folder 1765, box 188, series 1.1, GEB records.Google Scholar

84 Lathrop, Edith A., “The Improvement of Rural Schools by Standardization.” USBE Rural School Leaflet No. 32 (1925). Lathrup includes statistics and analysis of the scorecards themselves and the state programs of standardization. Mueller, A.D., “Standardization of Rural Schools.” Journal of Rural Education 3 (January 1924): 225231; Sherman, William L. and Theobald, Paul, “Progressive Era Rural Reform: Creating Standard Schools in the Midwest.” Journal of Research in Rural Education 17 (Fall 2001): 84–91. Sherman and Theobald note that Iowa uniquely tied its rural scorecard ratings to state aid.Google Scholar

85 For example, the North Carolina state survey critiqued the poor character of many new rural schools buildings. GEB, Public Education in North Carolina; Cook, William A., “Schoolhouse Sanitation: Study of Laws and Regulations Governing the Hygiene and Sanitation of Schoolhouses.” USBE Bulletin No. 21 (1915).Google Scholar

86 Hill, A. B. to Gendemen of General Education Board, 22 April 1924, folder 236, box 26, series 1.1, GEB records; Brierley, W.W. to Hill, A. B., 24 May 1924, folder 236, box 26 series 1.1, GEB records; Hirst, C. M. to Bachman, Frank, 21 April 1927, folder 236, box 26, series 1.1, GEB records. The GEB helped fund many of these divisions in the South. See “Divisions of Schoolhouse Planning,” in Annual Report of the General Education Board 1924–1925 20–21 “Divisions of Information and Statistics and Divisions of School Buildings,” in Annual Report of the General Education Board 1925–1926, 33–34.Google Scholar

87 Bishop, , The Development of a State School System; Cook, “Schoolhouse Sanitation.”Google Scholar

88 Deffenbauch, Walter S. and Keesecker, Ward W., “Compulsory School Attendance Laws and Their Administration.” USBE Bulletin No 4 (1935); Segel, David and Proffitt, Maris M., “Pupil Personnel Services as a Function of State Departments of Education.” Studies of State Departments of Education USBE Bulletin No. 6, Monograph No. 5 (1940).Google Scholar

89 Noall, Irvin Simon, “Administration of Compulsory School Attendance,” (Ed.D., University of California, 1935).Google Scholar

90 Buttrick, Wallace to Alderman, Edwin A., 1 April 1905, folder 1680, box 180, series 1.1, GEB records. Fosdick, Raymond B., Adventures in Giving: The Story of the General Education Board (New York: Harper & Row, 1962).Google Scholar

91 Payne, Bruce, Gloss, E.C., Sydenstrickler, Edgar, , James Conner Jr., and Russell, E.H., “The Public High School Situation in Virginia: To the Co-Operative Education Commission of Virginia” [ca. 1905], folder 1680, box 180, series 1.1, GEB records; “The Need of Public High Schools in Virginia” Press release for newspaper editors, December 1905, folder 1683, box 180, series 1.1, GEB records. Both reports estimated that only 20 schools in the whole state had four or more high school teachers.Google Scholar

92 Payne, Bruce R., “Summary of High School Instituted in Virginia During the Present Year [1906],” folder 1684, box 180, series 1.1, GEB records.Google Scholar

93 Payne, Bruce R., “Secondary Education in Virginia; Report for the Month of April [1906],” folder 1653, box 180, series 1.1, GEB records.Google Scholar

94 Maphis, Charles to Sage, E. C., 15 December 1914, folder 1686, box 180, series 1.1, GEB records.Google Scholar

95 Maphis, Charles to Flexner, Abraham, 3 August 1915, folder 1682, box 180, series 1.1, GEB records.Google Scholar

96 Maphis, Charles to Buttrick, Wallace, 15 May 1914, folder 1681, box 180, series 1.1, GEB records.Google Scholar

97 Zelizer, Julian E., “The Uneasy Relationship: Democracy, Taxation, and State Building Since the New Deal,” in The Democratic Experiment: New Directions in American Political History, Jacobs, Meg, Novak, William J., and Zelizer, Julian E., eds. (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2003). In his study of California, Peter Schrag argues that when local school boards were stripped of power to raise local school taxes, community (and particularly local business) interest in schools and candidates for school board dramatically decreased. Peter Schrag, Paradise Lost: California's Experience, America's Future (New York: New Press, 1998).Google Scholar

98 Noall, , “Administration of Compulsory Attendance.”Google Scholar

99 Theobald, , Call School Google Scholar

100 Leo Favrot to Wallace Buttrick, 28 August 1913, folder 213, box 24, series 1.1, GEB records.Google Scholar