In 1905 the Canadian government separated several districts from the Northwest Territories to establish the Provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan. Both provinces continued the centralized education system of the Territories. The newly-formed Departments of Education were expected to provide schooling in the recently settled agricultural areas, but were often unable to persuade parents to erect school districts. In 1910 the situation was bleak; Alberta and Saskatchewan had the lowest school age enrollment figures in the country. Over the next twenty years, both departments accelerated the establishment of school districts administered by locally elected trustees and funded by local property taxes and small government grants. In rural locatio...
Notes - Memoirs by Ella Rita Zakariasen focusing on her first teaching assignment at Tremblay School...
Review of: Schoolwomen of the Prairies and Plains: Personal Narratives from Iowa, Kansas, and Nebras...
The contribution of pioneer children (aged 4–16) to the economic survival of Canadian prairie farms ...
In 1905 the Canadian government separated several districts from the Northwest Territories to establ...
Immortalized in pioneer tales and rural history as an icon of early Kansas, the female one-room scho...
This is a story of a dream that died. Between 1900 and 1915 over one-hundred thousand people moved i...
Prior to the consolidation of British Columbia’s rural districts into larger administrative units in...
Review of: Public Schools in Hard Times: The Great Depression and Recent Years. Tyack, David; Lowe, ...
The term one-room school often evokes images, myths, and misconceptions. This book captures the me...
Open access journalIn the mid-1930s, in the midst of economic depression, social turmoil and politic...
In the mid-1960s, a bitter dispute broke out between parents in the Atlee-Jenner School District in ...
Until the 1950s, many teachers in Saskatchewan still taught in one-room schools located within farmi...
Religion and local politics have always weighed on secondary education in rural Saskatchewan but so ...
John Martin Campbell, in this fine book consisting of sixty black and white, well conceived photogra...
Review of: "The Depression Dilemmas of Rural Iowa, 1929–1933," by Lisa L. Ossian
Notes - Memoirs by Ella Rita Zakariasen focusing on her first teaching assignment at Tremblay School...
Review of: Schoolwomen of the Prairies and Plains: Personal Narratives from Iowa, Kansas, and Nebras...
The contribution of pioneer children (aged 4–16) to the economic survival of Canadian prairie farms ...
In 1905 the Canadian government separated several districts from the Northwest Territories to establ...
Immortalized in pioneer tales and rural history as an icon of early Kansas, the female one-room scho...
This is a story of a dream that died. Between 1900 and 1915 over one-hundred thousand people moved i...
Prior to the consolidation of British Columbia’s rural districts into larger administrative units in...
Review of: Public Schools in Hard Times: The Great Depression and Recent Years. Tyack, David; Lowe, ...
The term one-room school often evokes images, myths, and misconceptions. This book captures the me...
Open access journalIn the mid-1930s, in the midst of economic depression, social turmoil and politic...
In the mid-1960s, a bitter dispute broke out between parents in the Atlee-Jenner School District in ...
Until the 1950s, many teachers in Saskatchewan still taught in one-room schools located within farmi...
Religion and local politics have always weighed on secondary education in rural Saskatchewan but so ...
John Martin Campbell, in this fine book consisting of sixty black and white, well conceived photogra...
Review of: "The Depression Dilemmas of Rural Iowa, 1929–1933," by Lisa L. Ossian
Notes - Memoirs by Ella Rita Zakariasen focusing on her first teaching assignment at Tremblay School...
Review of: Schoolwomen of the Prairies and Plains: Personal Narratives from Iowa, Kansas, and Nebras...
The contribution of pioneer children (aged 4–16) to the economic survival of Canadian prairie farms ...