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Prehistoric and primitive cultures

  • Mesopotamia
  • North China
  • The Hindu tradition
  • The introduction of Buddhist influences
  • Classical India
  • Indian influences on Asia
  • Xi (Western) Zhou (1046–771 bce )
  • Dong (Eastern) Zhou (770–256 bce )
  • Qin autocracy (221–206 bce )
  • Scholarship under the Han (206 bce –220 ce )
  • Introduction of Buddhism
  • Ancient Hebrews
  • Education of youth
  • Higher education
  • The institutions
  • Physical education
  • The primary school
  • Secondary education
  • Early Roman education
  • Roman modifications
  • Education in the later Roman Empire
  • Ancient Persia
  • Elementary education
  • Professional education
  • Early Russian education: Kiev and Muscovy
  • Influences on Muslim education and culture
  • Aims and purposes of Muslim education
  • Organization of education
  • Major periods of Muslim education and learning
  • Influence of Islamic learning on the West
  • From the beginnings to the 4th century
  • From the 5th to the 8th century
  • The Irish and English revivals
  • The cultural revival under Charlemagne and his successors
  • Influences of the Carolingian renaissance abroad
  • Education of the laity in the 9th and 10th centuries
  • Monastic schools
  • Urban schools
  • New curricula and philosophies
  • Thomist philosophy
  • The Italian universities
  • The French universities
  • The English universities
  • Universities elsewhere in Europe
  • General characteristics of medieval universities
  • Lay education and the lower schools
  • The foundations of Muslim education
  • The Mughal period
  • The Tang dynasty (618–907 ce )
  • The Song (960–1279)
  • The Mongol period (1206–1368)
  • The Ming period (1368–1644)
  • The Manchu period (1644–1911/12)
  • The ancient period to the 12th century
  • Education of the warriors
  • Education in the Tokugawa era
  • Effect of early Western contacts
  • The Muslim influence
  • The secular influence
  • Early influences
  • Emergence of the new gymnasium
  • Nonscholastic traditions
  • Dutch humanism
  • Juan Luis Vives
  • The early English humanists
  • Luther and the German Reformation
  • The English Reformation
  • The French Reformation
  • The Calvinist Reformation
  • The Roman Catholic Counter-Reformation
  • The legacy of the Reformation
  • The new scientism and rationalism
  • The Protestant demand for universal elementary education
  • The pedagogy of Ratke
  • The pedagogy of Comenius
  • The schools of Gotha
  • Courtly education
  • The teaching congregations
  • Female education
  • The Puritan reformers
  • Royalist education
  • The academies
  • John Locke’s empiricism and education as conduct
  • Giambattista Vico, critic of Cartesianism
  • The condition of the schools and universities
  • August Hermann Francke
  • Johann Julius Hecker
  • The Sensationists
  • The Rousseauists
  • National education under enlightened rulers
  • Spanish and Portuguese America
  • French Québec
  • New England
  • The new academies
  • The middle colonies
  • The Southern colonies
  • Newfoundland and the Maritime Provinces.
  • The social and historical setting
  • The pedagogy of Pestalozzi
  • The influence of Pestalozzi
  • The pedagogy of Froebel
  • The kindergarten movement
  • The psychology and pedagogy of Herbart
  • The Herbartians
  • Other German theorists
  • French theorists
  • Spencer’s scientism
  • Humboldt’s reforms
  • Developments after 1815
  • Girls’ schools
  • The new German universities
  • Development of state education
  • Elementary Education Act
  • Secondary and higher education
  • The educational awakening
  • Education for females
  • New Zealand
  • Education under the East India Company
  • Indian universities
  • The Meiji Restoration and the assimilation of Western civilization
  • Establishment of a national system of education
  • The conservative reaction
  • Establishment of nationalistic education systems
  • Promotion of industrial education
  • Social and historical background
  • Influence of psychology and other fields on education
  • Traditional movements
  • Progressive education
  • Child-centred education
  • Scientific-realist education
  • Social-reconstructionist education
  • Major trends and problems
  • Early 19th to early 20th century
  • Education Act of 1944
  • The comprehensive movement
  • Further education
  • Imperial Germany
  • Weimar Republic
  • Nazi Germany
  • Changes after World War II
  • The Third Republic
  • The Netherlands
  • Switzerland
  • Expansion of American education
  • Curriculum reforms
  • Federal involvement in local education
  • Changes in higher education
  • Professional organizations
  • Canadian educational reforms
  • The administration of public education
  • Before 1917
  • The Stalinist years, 1931–53
  • The Khrushchev reforms
  • From Brezhnev to Gorbachev
  • Perestroika and education
  • The modernization movement
  • Education in the republic
  • Education under the Nationalist government
  • Education under communism
  • Post-Mao education
  • Communism and the intellectuals
  • Education at the beginning of the century
  • Education to 1940
  • Education changes during World War II
  • Education after World War II
  • Pre-independence period
  • The postindependence period in India
  • The postindependence period in Pakistan
  • The postindependence period in Bangladesh
  • The postindependence period in Sri Lanka
  • South Africa
  • General influences and policies of the colonial powers
  • Education in Portuguese colonies and former colonies
  • German educational policy in Africa
  • Education in British colonies and former colonies
  • Education in French colonies and former colonies
  • Education in Belgian colonies and former colonies
  • Problems and tasks of African education in the late 20th century
  • Colonialism and its consequences
  • The second half of the 20th century
  • The Islamic revival
  • Migration and the brain drain
  • The heritage of independence
  • Administration
  • Primary education and literacy
  • Reform trends
  • Malaysia and Singapore
  • Philippines
  • Education and social cohesion
  • Education and social conflict
  • Education and personal growth
  • Education and civil society
  • Education and economic development
  • Primary-level school enrollments
  • Secondary-level school enrollments
  • Tertiary-level school enrollments
  • Other developments in formal education
  • Literacy as a measure of success
  • Access to education
  • Implications for socioeconomic status
  • Social consequences of education in developing countries
  • The role of the state
  • Social and family interaction
  • Alternative forms of education

a classroom in Brazil

What was education like in ancient Athens?

How does social class affect education attainment, when did education become compulsory, what are alternative forms of education, do school vouchers offer students access to better education.

Girl student writing in her notebook in classroom in school.

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  • World History Encyclopedia - Education in the Elizabethan Era
  • Academia - Return on Education Using the Concept of Opportunity Cost
  • National Geographic - Geography
  • Table Of Contents

a classroom in Brazil

What does education mean?

Education refers to the discipline that is concerned with methods of teaching and learning in schools or school-like environments, as opposed to various nonformal and informal means of socialization .

Beginning approximately at the end of the 7th or during the 6th century, Athens became the first city-state in ancient Greece to renounce education that was oriented toward the future duties of soldiers. The evolution of Athenian education reflected that of the city itself, which was moving toward increasing democratization.

Research has found that education is the strongest determinant of individuals’ occupational status and chances of success in adult life. However, the correlation between family socioeconomic status and school success or failure appears to have increased worldwide. Long-term trends suggest that as societies industrialize and modernize, social class becomes increasingly important in determining educational outcomes and occupational attainment.

While education is not compulsory in practice everywhere in the world, the right of individuals to an educational program that respects their personality, talents, abilities, and cultural heritage has been upheld in various international agreements, including the Universal Declaration of Human Rights of 1948; the Declaration of the Rights of the Child of 1959; and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights of 1966.

Alternative forms of education have developed since the late 20th century, such as distance learning , homeschooling , and many parallel or supplementary systems of education often designated as “nonformal” and “popular.” Religious institutions also instruct the young and old alike in sacred knowledge as well as in the values and skills required for participation in local, national, and transnational societies.

School vouchers have been a hotly debated topic in the United States. Some parents of voucher recipients reported high levels of satisfaction, and studies have found increased voucher student graduation rates. Some studies have found, however, that students using vouchers to attend private schools instead of public ones did not show significantly higher levels of academic achievement. Learn more at ProCon.org.

Should corporal punishment be used in elementary education settings?

Whether corporal punishment should be used in elementary education settings is widely debated. Some say it is the appropriate discipline for certain children when used in moderation because it sets clear boundaries and motivates children to behave in school. Others say can inflict long-lasting physical and mental harm on students while creating an unsafe and violent school environment. For more on the corporal punishment debate, visit ProCon.org .

Should dress codes be implemented and enforced in education settings?

Whether dress codes should be implemented and enforced in education settings is hotly debated. Some argue dress codes enforce decorum and a serious, professional atmosphere conducive to success, as well as promote safety. Others argue dress codes reinforce racist standards of beauty and dress and are are seldom uniformly mandated, often discriminating against women and marginalized groups. For more on the dress code debate, visit ProCon.org .

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education , discipline that is concerned with methods of teaching and learning in schools or school-like environments as opposed to various nonformal and informal means of socialization (e.g., rural development projects and education through parent-child relationships).

(Read Arne Duncan’s Britannica essay on “Education: The Great Equalizer.”)

Education can be thought of as the transmission of the values and accumulated knowledge of a society. In this sense, it is equivalent to what social scientists term socialization or enculturation. Children—whether conceived among New Guinea tribespeople, the Renaissance Florentines, or the middle classes of Manhattan—are born without culture . Education is designed to guide them in learning a culture , molding their behaviour in the ways of adulthood , and directing them toward their eventual role in society. In the most primitive cultures , there is often little formal learning—little of what one would ordinarily call school or classes or teachers . Instead, the entire environment and all activities are frequently viewed as school and classes, and many or all adults act as teachers. As societies grow more complex, however, the quantity of knowledge to be passed on from one generation to the next becomes more than any one person can know, and, hence, there must evolve more selective and efficient means of cultural transmission. The outcome is formal education—the school and the specialist called the teacher.

As society becomes ever more complex and schools become ever more institutionalized, educational experience becomes less directly related to daily life, less a matter of showing and learning in the context of the workaday world, and more abstracted from practice, more a matter of distilling, telling, and learning things out of context. This concentration of learning in a formal atmosphere allows children to learn far more of their culture than they are able to do by merely observing and imitating. As society gradually attaches more and more importance to education, it also tries to formulate the overall objectives, content, organization, and strategies of education. Literature becomes laden with advice on the rearing of the younger generation. In short, there develop philosophies and theories of education.

This article discusses the history of education, tracing the evolution of the formal teaching of knowledge and skills from prehistoric and ancient times to the present, and considering the various philosophies that have inspired the resulting systems. Other aspects of education are treated in a number of articles. For a treatment of education as a discipline, including educational organization, teaching methods, and the functions and training of teachers, see teaching ; pedagogy ; and teacher education . For a description of education in various specialized fields, see historiography ; legal education ; medical education ; science, history of . For an analysis of educational philosophy , see education, philosophy of . For an examination of some of the more important aids in education and the dissemination of knowledge, see dictionary ; encyclopaedia ; library ; museum ; printing ; publishing, history of . Some restrictions on educational freedom are discussed in censorship . For an analysis of pupil attributes, see intelligence, human ; learning theory ; psychological testing .

Education in primitive and early civilized cultures

The term education can be applied to primitive cultures only in the sense of enculturation , which is the process of cultural transmission. A primitive person, whose culture is the totality of his universe, has a relatively fixed sense of cultural continuity and timelessness. The model of life is relatively static and absolute, and it is transmitted from one generation to another with little deviation. As for prehistoric education, it can only be inferred from educational practices in surviving primitive cultures.

definition of education

The purpose of primitive education is thus to guide children to becoming good members of their tribe or band. There is a marked emphasis upon training for citizenship , because primitive people are highly concerned with the growth of individuals as tribal members and the thorough comprehension of their way of life during passage from prepuberty to postpuberty.

definition of education

Because of the variety in the countless thousands of primitive cultures, it is difficult to describe any standard and uniform characteristics of prepuberty education. Nevertheless, certain things are practiced commonly within cultures. Children actually participate in the social processes of adult activities, and their participatory learning is based upon what the American anthropologist Margaret Mead called empathy , identification, and imitation . Primitive children, before reaching puberty, learn by doing and observing basic technical practices. Their teachers are not strangers but rather their immediate community .

In contrast to the spontaneous and rather unregulated imitations in prepuberty education, postpuberty education in some cultures is strictly standardized and regulated. The teaching personnel may consist of fully initiated men, often unknown to the initiate though they are his relatives in other clans. The initiation may begin with the initiate being abruptly separated from his familial group and sent to a secluded camp where he joins other initiates. The purpose of this separation is to deflect the initiate’s deep attachment away from his family and to establish his emotional and social anchorage in the wider web of his culture.

The initiation “curriculum” does not usually include practical subjects. Instead, it consists of a whole set of cultural values, tribal religion, myths , philosophy, history, rituals, and other knowledge. Primitive people in some cultures regard the body of knowledge constituting the initiation curriculum as most essential to their tribal membership. Within this essential curriculum, religious instruction takes the most prominent place.

COMMENTS

  1. Education

    education, discipline that is concerned with methods of teaching and learning in schools or school-like environments as opposed to various nonformal and informal means of socialization (e.g., rural development projects and education through parent-child relationships).