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School and Society Book Cover
School and Society: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives, 4/e
Stephen E. Tozer, The University of Illinois, Chicago
Paul C. Violas
Guy Senese, Northern Arizona University

Diversity and Equity: Schooling Girls and Women

Multiple Choice Quiz



1

The only community(ies) that provided elementary education on a regular basis for girls prior to the revolution was (were)
A)the upper-class Boston area
B)Quakers
C)Moravians
D)b and c above
2

Man as essentially rational nature and woman as essentially emotional is a theme of
A)classical liberalism as espoused by Thomas Jefferson
B)the Augustinian tradition
C)social Darwinists
D)a and b above
3

It was unusual for women to teach during Connecticut's winter school sessions in the early nineteenth century because
A)the schools were very cold and it was felt that women's delicate health would be compromised
B)there was far too much work to be done in the home during the winter months and so there was no time for other work
C)it was felt to be inappropriate for women to be teaching the boys and young men who attended school in the non-summer months.
D)all of the above
4

Overall, the "cult of domesticity" had the following primary impact
A)it slowed the progress that could have been made towards increasing access to education for women
B)it legitimized the need for formal education for women, albeit education that was oriented to homemaking
C)it increased the level of respect accorded women
D)all of the above
5

Sarah Grimke pointed out
A)that Adam was responsible for the fall in the Garden of Eden
B)that women would never be considered equal until they abandoned their roles as wives and mothers
C)the irony of men judging women inferior when they had actively contributed to women's subordination
D)a and c above
6

Mary Leal Harkness, though writing in the twentieth century, epitomized the following current of thought on women's education
A)conservative
B)liberal
C)radical
D)none of the above
7

Liberals and conservatives did not agree on
A)the definition of women's roles
B)the level of education that should be available to women
C)the need for women to be educated in order to be better companions to their husbands and better instructors of their children
D)all of the above
8

The writers of the Seneca Falls manifesto used classical liberal notions of natural rights and progress
A)to protest the historical limitation of women and demand positions of equality with men
B)to advocate, if necessary, violent protest of male domination in a "rebellion against tyranny"
C)to demand more vocational education opportunities for women
D)all of the above
9

Emma Willard's "Plan for Improving Female Education"
A)pointed out the deficiencies of current schooling opportunities for women
B)asserted that women should not need the approval of men
C)proclaimed the right of women to attend universities
D)neglected academic subjects as proposed areas of curriculum
10

Emma Willard moved her school from Middlebury, Vermont to Waterford, New York because
A)New York was more supportive of women's educational opportunities
B)she believed the New York governor and legislature would provide funding for her work
C)she was moving to New York anyway
D)a and b above
11

The legacy of Emma Willard includes
A)reinforcement for the separate education of men and women
B)quality teacher training that encouraged critical thinking on the part of students
C)a model for educated women
D)all of the above
12

In 1861, Matthew Vassar established Vassar College with the premise that
A)with enough money Vassar could provide educational programs of equal quality for women
B)women were equal to men
C)all women were entitled to a college education that was at least comparable to men's
D)a and b above
13

Vassar's success might have been more influential in changing attitudes towards women's education if not for
A)the high tuition placing it out of reach for most women
B)America's preoccupation with other problems such as immigration, urbanization, and the resulting social and economic disturbances
C)Charles Eliot's public relations campaign disparaging Vassar
D)all of the above
14

The hidden agenda of the domestic science curriculum was
A)to keep all women in their roles as homemakers and mothers
B)to prepare girls for the office workplace even if they had no desire to work
C)to maintain class divisions by targeting immigrant, African-American, and lower-income girls for these classes
D)none of the above
15

The academy system for women had the following shortcomings
A)the tuition requirement restricted many potential students from attending
B)the schools were overcrowded
C)students could use textbooks only after male students were finished with them
D)all of the above
16

The argument that women's education was best centered on homemaking and mothering was contrary to
A)the interest many girls and women showed for more demanding educations
B)the reality that 15 percent of females 10 and older were in the workforce by 1880 and less than 60 percent were married
C)progressive ideology
D)all of the above
17

Mary Leal Harkness's comment that "superstition begins to hamper a girl's education almost at the very beginning," she is talking about
A)the belief that women were "less marriageable" if they appeared to be more intelligent than men
B)the concern that girls' health would be compromised by educational demands
C)the prejudice that time spent on educating girls would take time away from the more important task of educating boys
D)all of the above
18

Women's educational history should be studied as a separate entity from the history of education because
A)such study tells us a great deal about the political economy and ideology of various historical periods
B)women's education has been different in purpose and content from men's education
C)we can understand contemporary women's education better if we understand its history
D)all of the above
19

The National Education Association
A)tended to encourage women's education since so many of its members were female
B)tried to stay away from making any public statements about women's education since it was such a controversial issue
C)backed the idea of vocational education for girls with an emphasis on gender-specific occupations.
D)none of the above
20

Sojourner Truth, Matthew Vassar, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott were all
A)abolitionists
B)social Darwinists
C)radical thinkers about women's roles
D)liberals