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Unmaking and Remaking the “One Best System”: London, Ontario, 1852–1860

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 February 2017

Michael F. Murphy*
Affiliation:
University of Western Ontario

Extract

During the middle decades of the nineteenth century, publicly controlled common school systems took root in many parts of North America; the province of Ontario was no exception. Although antecedents in that province stretched back to 1816, during the 1840s, in particular, a series of school acts was passed to provide for the establishment and maintenance of common schools in rural and urban communities alike. These schools were financed by a combination of government grants and local taxation and managed by locally elected school trustees, while a fledgling provincial bureaucracy provided guidelines for the certification of teachers, the approval of texts, and the distribution of government grants. Within that framework, local people established public, state-funded schools, which gradually replaced earlier, more ad hoc forms of educational provision and which by 1850 provided most children with all the education they would ever receive. In most rural communities, the new state educational apparatus produced only a one-room school offering little more than the rudiments. On the other hand, many urban communities across Ontario constructed much more sophisticated systems, including graded primary schools, and central or union schools, which sometimes offered instruction in what would now be considered secondary education.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 1997 by the History of Education Society 

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