Women's Education

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Women's Education

by sam2304 » Wed Mar 21, 2012 1:51 am
Linda Kerber argued in the mid- 1980's that after the American Revolution (1775-1783), an ideology of "republican motherhood" resulted in a surge of educational opportunities for women in the United States. Kerber maintained that the leaders of the new nation wanted women to be educated in order to raise politically virtuous sons. A virtuous citizenry was considered essential to the success of the country's republican form of government; virtue was to be instilled not only by churches and schools, but by families, where the mother's role was crucial. Thus, according to Kerber, motherhood became pivotal to the fate of the republic, providing justification for an unprecedented attention to female education.

Introduction of the republican moth- erhood thesis dramatically changed historiography. Prior to Kerber's work, educational historians barely mentioned women and girls; Thomas Woody's 1929 work is the notable exception. Examining newspaper advertisements for acade- mies, Woody found that educational opportunities increased for both girls and boys around 1750. Pointing to "An Essay on Woman" (1753) as reflecting a shift in view, Woody also claimed that practical education for females had many advocates before the Revolution. Woody's evidence challenges the notion that the Revolution changed attitudes regarding female education, although it may have accelerated earlier trends. Historians' reliance on Kerber's "repub- lican motherhood" thesis may have obscured the presence of these trends, making it difficult to determine to what extent the Revolution really changed women's lives.

1.According to the passage, within the field of educational history, Thomas Woody's 1929 work was
A. innovative because it relied on newspaper advertisements as evidence
B. exceptional in that it concentrated on the period before the American Revolution
C. unusual in that it focused on educational attitudes rather than on educational practices
D. controversial in its claims regarding educational opportunities for boys
E. atypical in that it examined the education of girls

2. According to the passage, Kerber argued that political leaders thought that the form of government adopted by the United States after the American Revolution depended on which of the following for its success?
A. Women assuming the sole responsibility for instilling political virtue in children
B. Girls becoming the primary focus of a reformed educational system that emphasized political virtue
C. The family serving as one of the primary means by which children were imbued with political virtue
D. The family assuming many of the functions previously performed by schools and churches
E. Men an women assuming equal responsibility for the management of schools, churches, and the family

3.The passage suggests that, with regard to the history of women's education in the United States, Kerber's work differs from Woody's primarily concerning which of the following?
A. The extent to which women were interested in pursuing educational opportunities in the eighteenth century
B. The extent of the support for educational opportunities for girls prior to the American Revolution
C. The extent of public resistance to educational opportunities for women after the American Revolution
D. Whether attitudes toward women's educational opportunities changed during the eighteenth century
E. Whether women needed to be educated in order to contribute to the success of a republican form of government

Source: Old Paper based tests. I usually find lot of wrong OAs in old PBTs and would like to confirm my answer choices. Explain your options as to why you choose them :)

These were my choices E C D.
The OAs available are B C B.
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by [email protected] » Wed Mar 21, 2012 6:05 am
1.
A.WRONG
B.CORRECT. Because of the below section
"Thomas Woody's 1929 work is the notable exception. Examining newspaper advertisements for acade- mies, Woody found that educational opportunities increased for both girls and boys around 1750. Pointing to "An Essay on Woman" (1753) as reflecting a shift in view, Woody also claimed that practical education for females had many advocates before the Revolution."
C.OUT OF RANGE
D.again OUT OF RANGE
E.WRONG

2
A.WRONG because "virtue was to be instilled not only by churches and schools, but by families, where the mother's role was crucial. "
B.CORRECT because "motherhood became pivotal to the fate of the republic, providing justification for an unprecedented attention to female education"
C. WRONG BECAUSE it is mainly concentrating on family, where the para talks of girls or womans...
D.WRONG...because it is one of the things along with church n school...
E.WRONG...OUT OF RANGE

3
A.out of range...
B.out of range...it does not talk of opportunities for girls...but about attitude about the girls education as in "Woody's evidence challenges the notion that the Revolution changed attitudes regarding female education, although it may have accelerated earlier trends. "
C.out of range
D.correct as it mentioned at "Woody's evidence challenges the notion that the Revolution changed attitudes regarding female education, although it may have accelerated earlier trends. "
E.wrong

Guys, correct me if i am wrong

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by killer1387 » Wed Mar 21, 2012 7:28 pm
IMO ECB
1.According to the passage, within the field of educational history, Thomas Woody's 1929 work was

E. atypical in that it examined the education of girls
--> "Prior to Kerber's work, educational historians barely mentioned women and girls; Thomas Woody's 1929 work is the notable exception."


2. According to the passage, Kerber argued that political leaders thought that the form of government adopted by the United States after the American Revolution depended on which of the following for its success?

C. The family serving as one of the primary means by which children were imbued with political virtue
--> "Kerber maintained that the leaders of the new nation wanted women to be educated in order to raise politically virtuous sons.A virtuous citizenry was considered essential to the success of the country's republican form of government; virtue was to be instilled not only by churches and schools, but by families, where the mother's role was crucial. Thus, according to Kerber, motherhood became pivotal to the fate of the republic, providing justification for an unprecedented attention to female education."

3.The passage suggests that, with regard to the history of women's education in the United States, Kerber's work differs from Woody's primarily concerning which of the following?

B. The extent of the support for educational opportunities for girls prior to the American Revolution

--> "Linda Kerber argued in the mid- 1980's that after the American Revolution (1775-1783), an ideology of "republican motherhood" resulted in a surge of educational opportunities for women in the United States."

"Woody found that educational opportunities increased for both girls and boys around 1750. Pointing to "An Essay on Woman" (1753) as reflecting a shift in view, Woody also claimed that practical education for females had many advocates before the Revolution. Woody's evidence challenges the notion that the Revolution changed attitudes regarding female education, although it may have accelerated earlier trends."

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by patanjali.purpose » Thu Mar 22, 2012 12:00 am
sam2304 wrote:Linda Kerber argued in the mid- 1980's that after the American Revolution (1775-1783), an ideology of "republican motherhood" resulted in a surge of educational opportunities for women in the United States. Kerber maintained that the leaders of the new nation wanted women to be educated in order to raise politically virtuous sons. A virtuous citizenry was considered essential to the success of the country's republican form of government; virtue was to be instilled not only by churches and schools, but by families, where the mother's role was crucial. Thus, according to Kerber, motherhood became pivotal to the fate of the republic, providing justification for an unprecedented attention to female education.

Introduction of the republican moth- erhood thesis dramatically changed historiography. Prior to Kerber's work, educational historians barely mentioned women and girls; Thomas Woody's 1929 work is the notable exception. Examining newspaper advertisements for acade- mies, Woody found that educational opportunities increased for both girls and boys around 1750. Pointing to "An Essay on Woman" (1753) as reflecting a shift in view, Woody also claimed that practical education for females had many advocates before the Revolution. Woody's evidence challenges the notion that the Revolution changed attitudes regarding female education, although it may have accelerated earlier trends. Historians' reliance on Kerber's "repub- lican motherhood" thesis may have obscured the presence of these trends, making it difficult to determine to what extent the Revolution really changed women's lives.

1.According to the passage, within the field of educational history, Thomas Woody's 1929 work was
A. innovative because it relied on newspaper advertisements as evidence
B. exceptional in that it concentrated on the period before the American Revolution
C. unusual in that it focused on educational attitudes rather than on educational practices
D. controversial in its claims regarding educational opportunities for boys
E. atypical in that it examined the education of girls

2. According to the passage, Kerber argued that political leaders thought that the form of government adopted by the United States after the American Revolution depended on which of the following for its success?
A. Women assuming the sole responsibility for instilling political virtue in children
B. Girls becoming the primary focus of a reformed educational system that emphasized political virtue
C. The family serving as one of the primary means by which children were imbued with political virtue
D. The family assuming many of the functions previously performed by schools and churches
E. Men an women assuming equal responsibility for the management of schools, churches, and the family

3.The passage suggests that, with regard to the history of women's education in the United States, Kerber's work differs from Woody's primarily concerning which of the following?
A. The extent to which women were interested in pursuing educational opportunities in the eighteenth century
B. The extent of the support for educational opportunities for girls prior to the American Revolution
C. The extent of public resistance to educational opportunities for women after the American Revolution
D. Whether attitudes toward women's educational opportunities changed during the eighteenth century
E. Whether women needed to be educated in order to contribute to the success of a republican form of government

Source: Old Paper based tests. I usually find lot of wrong OAs in old PBTs and would like to confirm my answer choices. Explain your options as to why you choose them :)

These were my choices E C D.
The OAs available are B C B.
IMO 1-E; 2-C;

1- IMO B is wrong - no where pssg says Woody is different bcoz he concentrated period before revolution

3 - though I opted for D, I tend to agree with OA=B; IMO D is wrong bcoz it mentioned 'during the eighteenth century' - we can very easily see that both author talk about a time frame within 18th century ie Woody 1750, 1753 etc, AND Linda Kerber uses period of Revolution (1775-1783) - all these fall in 18th century. This is what made D a wrong choice. Moreover, the basis bone of contention is whether AMERICAN REVOLUTION had an impact on girl/women education and therefore AMERICAN REVOLUTION should be part of right choice. But, somehow I am not very convinced with the words "extent of the support for educational opportunities".

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by sam2304 » Thu Mar 22, 2012 12:29 am
I para - talks about Kerber arguing that edu opportunities for women was on a rise after American revolution - Why so ? resons it and convincingly concludes that female education got attention.

II para - author starts digging the past, he brings in thomas woody's work and its details to challenge Kerber's argument that american revolution changed edu opportunities. Then the author says historians relied too much on kerber's work without considering the past events and concludes that the real extent of revolution on women education is still undetermined - Am I right in bringing out the main point of each para ?

For the 3rd question B seems to be the answer based on what I understood above. And E C goes for the 1st and 2nd question as agreed by killer and patanjali. Thanks once again :)
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by ronnie1985 » Fri Mar 23, 2012 7:40 am
The official answers are the most logical.
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by proudtobeindian » Fri Mar 23, 2012 10:19 am
@ ronnie1985 ..I actually do not agree with the OG answers. My choices are,

1. E - "Prior to Kerber's work, educational historians barely mentioned women and girls; Thomas Woody's 1929 work is the notable exception"

Since the above two sentences are related by a semicolon, we can say that Sentence 2 is related to sentence 1.

The answer cannot be B because as per passage, "Woody also claimed that practical education for females had many advocates before the Revolution". The word "also" suggests that this sentence is an extension of earlier thought and is not a primary thought.

2. A - "but by families, where the mother's role was crucial" - The success depends not on the family serving but on the mother and hence A.

3. B