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9 - A Cultural/Historical View of Schooling in Human Development

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 December 2009

Barbara Rogoff
Affiliation:
Department of Psychology, University of California, Santa Cruz
Maricela Correa-Chávez
Affiliation:
Department of Psychology, University of California, Santa Cruz
Marta Navichoc Cotuc
Affiliation:
Department of Psychology, University of California, Santa Cruz
David B. Pillemer
Affiliation:
University of New Hampshire
Sheldon H. White
Affiliation:
Harvard University, Massachusetts
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Summary

In this paper we examine changing arrangements of human development that have accompanied societal shifts to mass, compulsory “Western” schooling. We draw attention to the often taken-for-granted role of schooling in children's lives once extensive schooling has become the childhood norm in their communities. To do so, we examine two cases, involving very different histories and current conditions. We first examine the life patterns associated with the growth of mass schooling across the past centuries for European-heritage families in the United States, integrating the work of historians who have described the process. Then we examine the phenomenon across three generations of Mayan families in Guatemala, using our own interviews and observations.

In the United States one can generally assume that if a child is 6 years old, she is in the first grade, or if a child is in the first grade, she is about 6 years old. As Irwin et al. (1978) put it, “In Western industrialized countries, going to school has the same inevitability for children that death and taxes have for their parents” (p. 415).

Although psychologists often identify developmental transitions in terms of children's ages, age indexes both biological maturation and changing roles in cultural institutions. As White (1975) has pointed out, age 5 to 7 years has for some centuries marked societal shifts in treatment of children, such as the standard onset of formal schooling in Europe and the United States.

Type
Chapter
Information
Developmental Psychology and Social Change
Research, History and Policy
, pp. 225 - 263
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2005

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