Image for Samuel Wilderspin and the infant school movement

Samuel Wilderspin and the infant school movement - 11

Part of the Routledge library editions. Education 1800-1926 series
See all formats and editions

Samuel Wilderspin became a household name in his own lifetime.

Befriended by Dickens, lampooned by Cruikshank, his achievements discussed in Parliament, he was one of the best known educators of the 1830s and 1840s.

However, Wilderspin's consistent opposition to denominational education combined with his liberal and advanced views made him unpopular with the Establishment.

Samuel Wilderspin's fame declined after his retirement in 1847 but his reputation as an infant school educator has survived.

Many of his ideas and practices have had a great influence on infant education.

In this book, Wilderspin's own story is placed in the context of this growing movement led by Owen, Buchanan and Oberlin, and it goes a long way towards reinstating him as one of the prominent figures in the early education movement.

Read More
Available
£155.00
Add Line Customisation
Available on VLeBooks
Add to List
Product Details
Routledge
1315414686 / 9781315414683
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
372.941
10/11/2016
England
English
311 pages
Copy: 30%; print: 30%
Reprint. Description based on CIP data; item not viewed. Originally published: 1982.