"This book fills an immense lacuna in the history of women's education, the history of secondary education, and the history of curriculum. The use of multiple sources of information is ambitious and unusual. The lines of interpretation are provocative and fundamental, creating new conceptual dimensions for historians of women, education, and labor to explore.
"Education and Women's Work is a fine, complex book." -- Barbara Finkelstein, University of Maryland.
This book examines the transformations in women's work and education and assesses their effects on women from different social and cultural backgrounds.
John L. Rury is Associate Professor in the School for New Learning at DePaul University.
Table of Contents
List of Tables
List of Figures
Foreword
Acknowledgments
Introduction
One Women at School: The Feminization of American High Schools, 1870–1900
Visions of Equality
Feminization of the High School
The Coeducation Question
Equality and the Curriculum
Conclusion: An Age of Opportunity
Two Participation and Purpose in Women's Education: Who Went to School, and Why
Who Went to School
Female School Participation, 1870–1900: An Ecological Analysis
The Personal Record
Conclusion: Stepping into a Larger World
Three Women at Work: Female Labor Force Participation and Education, 1890–1930
The Changing Shape of Women's Work, 1890–1930
School-Leaving and Labor Force Participation: Regional Differences
Occupations and Education
Ethnicity, Education, and Women's Work
Conclusion: Opportunities and Constraints in Female Employment
Four Vocationalism Ascendant:Women and the High School Curriculum, 1890–1930
New Purposes in Women's Education
The Home Economics Movement
Commercial Education: A Vocational Groundswell
Industrial Education for Women
The Changing Face of Coeducation
Regional Patterns of Female Participation in High School Courses
Conclusion: Educational Policy and Women's Work
Five Varieties of Adaptation: Local Patterns of Women's Education and Work
Education and Women's Work in Two Cities
Women's Work and the High School Curriculum: Patterns of Adaptation
Education and Social Class: Women in Clerical Courses
Conclusion: Education and Local Labor Markets