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FREE ESSAY ON RELIGION AND EDUCATION

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Religion and Education in America
A discussion of the morals on which the education system in America is based. -- 2,987 words; MLA

Education and Religion
This paper discusses the influence of new religious movement on formal education. -- 1,650 words;

"Like Nature, Education Abhors a Vacuum"
Examines how politics and religion affect education. -- 1,125 words;

Seventeenth Century Education in America
Compares and contrasts education in the Northern and Southern colonies of America during the seventeenth century. Also includes a review of the effects religion has had on the American educational system. -- 3,193 words; MLA

Education in Spain
History of modernization of country's educational system from 19th Century to present. Discusses political forces, role of religion, reform, programs. -- 2,925 words;

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RELIGION AND EDUCATION

The formation of our modern American School System has been heavily influenced by the
religious views of our predecessors, the colonial settlers of New England. The general
interest of settlers in their children's ability to read, their establishment of
elementary and secondary grammar schools, and the founding of colleges and universities
were all religiously motivated advances in early American education. While the twentieth
century has brought about a separation between church and state (in this case, state
referring to education), the roots of education in religion are still readily apparent. 
The moral theology of Puritanism, the dominant religion in seventeenth century New
England, seems to have been a major catalyst in the evolution of American education. The
Puritans believed that the very young, like the old, were sinners who were damned from
birth and doomed to lose their souls. The only way to escape the "one chief project of
that old deluder, Satan" (Massachusetts Education Law of 1647) and achieve salvation was
to be taught the ground rules of the good society. The Bible was the "textbook" in which
a young Puritan was to look for and find these rules. In order for this discovery to be
possible, however, a child had to become literate. While the task of teaching them first
befell the parents, the burden was often conferred upon the school.
Town, dame, and pauper schools were all educational establishments organized by the
Puritans in order to fulfill their desire for literate, and therefore moral, citizens.
Younger New England children in attendance were expected to learn basic reading, writing,
and mathematical skills. Secondary grammar schools were then instituted, but only as
preparatory environments for male students who might continue on to college or a
university. These colonial teenagers were instructed in the language of Latin and great
literature. Following secondary grammar school, one might be admitted to a college or
university. These institutions were established for the purpose of training youth for
important Puritan places, particularly in the ministry. Once admitted, they were to live
and learn at the college, being educated in such courses as grammar, rhetoric, logic,
arithmetic, geometry, astronomy, ethics, ancient history, Greek, and Hebrew. After four
years of success in his studies, a student would be made a bachelor of arts (B.A), and a
master of arts (M.A.) after an additional three years.
The aforementioned institutions of learning are the framework around which we have built
our ideas for the formation of twentieth century education. Society still relies on the
two-track system (first advocated by John Calvin of the Reformation and then put into
practice by the Puritans of New England), depends on colleges or universities for further
training, and follows the fundamental colonial curriculum for each. Elementary schools
continue to focus upon teaching basic reading, writing, and arithmetic skills to younger
children, as did the town, dame, and pauper schools of the mid-seventeenth century. The
emphasis of secondary colonial grammar schools on language, humane learning, and good
literature still holds true in the high schools of the United States today. Even the
bachelor and masters of arts degrees, attainable only through colleges and universities,
still exist stressing the importance of an education in the liberal arts.
The very basic purposes of education in Colonial America are similar to those today.
Nearly four hundred years after the Puritans first established the idea of education as a
necessity for religious instruction, salvation, and good citizenship in the colonies, we
continue to follow their core curriculum and fundamental organizational methods. Although
a line has been drawn between church and state throughout the twentieth century, we are
still able to recognize the influence of religion on the formation of our modern American
School System.

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