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Anti-Intellectualism in American Life by
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Nut Meg
is on page 380 of 434
"As soon as the inherited notion of learning as a leisure-class activity is discarded, the style of education it represented also falls under question...Academic and scholastic, instead of being titles of honor, are becoming terms of reproach."
— Feb 05, 2026 05:57PM
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Dave J.
is on page 354 of 434
"In the name of utility, democracy, and science, many educators had
come to embrace the supposedly uneducable or less educable child as
the center of the secondary-school universe, relegating the talented
child to the sidelines.... This group has indeed been neglected by many educators and looked upon...as a deviant, a side issue, a special problem, at times even a kind of pathology."
— Feb 03, 2026 05:05AM
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come to embrace the supposedly uneducable or less educable child as
the center of the secondary-school universe, relegating the talented
child to the sidelines.... This group has indeed been neglected by many educators and looked upon...as a deviant, a side issue, a special problem, at times even a kind of pathology."
Dave J.
is on page 308 of 434
"We cannot know, of course, how much impact the content of school
readers had on the minds of children. But any child who accepted
the attitudes prevalent...would have come to think of
scholarship and the fine arts as embellishments identified with the
inferior society of Europe, would have thought of art primarily with
regard to its services to nationality...[and] its contributions to character."
— Feb 01, 2026 11:50AM
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readers had on the minds of children. But any child who accepted
the attitudes prevalent...would have come to think of
scholarship and the fine arts as embellishments identified with the
inferior society of Europe, would have thought of art primarily with
regard to its services to nationality...[and] its contributions to character."
Nut Meg
is on page 337 of 434
95 pages to go, let's see if I can do it by midnight
— Jan 31, 2026 03:22PM
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Nut Meg
is on page 316 of 434
"Until 1830, most teachers had been men...opponents of women teachers were still to be heard in many communities, but they were often easily silenced when it was pointed out that women teachers could be paid one third or one half as much as men."
— Jan 30, 2026 06:00PM
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Nut Meg
is on page 305 of 434
"The belief in mass education was not founded primarily upon a passion for the development of mind, or upon pride in learning and culture for their own sakes, but rather upon the supposed political and economic benefits of education."
— Jan 27, 2026 03:19AM
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Nut Meg
is on page 287 of 434
"There is a type of alienation which is simply personal, which arises from the education and in some cases the personal culture of the expert. He is out of place. He is not the right kind of man, he would not be sought after as a companion if his services weren't needed."
— Jan 25, 2026 09:21PM
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