There Goes the Neighborhood: Rural School Consolidation at the Grass Roots in Early Twentieth-Century Iowa

There Goes the Neighborhood: Rural School Consolidation at the Grass Roots in Early Twentieth-Century Iowa

by David R. Reynolds
There Goes the Neighborhood: Rural School Consolidation at the Grass Roots in Early Twentieth-Century Iowa

There Goes the Neighborhood: Rural School Consolidation at the Grass Roots in Early Twentieth-Century Iowa

by David R. Reynolds

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Overview

Despite being the centerpiece of rural educational reform for most of the twentieth century, rural school consolidation has received remarkably little scholarly attention. The social history and geography of the movement, the widespread resistance it provoked, and the cultural landscapes its proponents sought to transform have remained largely unexplored. Now in There Goes the Neighborhood David Reynolds remedies this situation by examining the rural school consolidation movement in that most midwestern of midwestern states, Iowa. From 1912 to 1921, Iowa was the center of national attention as state and local education leaders attempted to implement a new model of rural education, intended to be emulated throughout the rest of the Midwest. As part of the Country Life movement—whose leaders sought to create a more modern future for farm families, an alternative form of rural community that combined the advantages of both city and country—the initially successful model collapsed in the early twenties, not to be revived until after World War II. Reynolds focuses on how and why rural school consolidation was so vigorously resisted in most of Iowa, why it failed in the twenties, and what its lasting consequences have been. Combining social and oral history, modern social theory, historical geography, and ethnography, There Goes the Neighborhood is the most authoritative analysis to date of the politics, geography, and social history of rural school consolidation in any state.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781587293078
Publisher: University of Iowa Press
Publication date: 04/25/2002
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 318
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

David Reynolds is professor and former chair in the Department of Geography at the University of Iowa. The author of more than fifty essays and books on these topics, he has been a student of community conflict, regionalism, and the social construction of place for twenty-five years.

Table of Contents

CONTENTS
Preface and Acknowledgments
PART I. THEORETICAL AND HISTORICAL CONTEXTS
1 Introduction: Placing Rural Education Reform
2 Family, Neighborhood, Church, and School
3 The Country Life Movement and Moral Landscapes of Modernity
4 The Political Economy of Public Schools in the Midwest during the GoldenAge
5 Educational Reform in Early Twentieth-Century Iowa
PART II. RESISTANCE AND PLACE
6 Rural Resistance to Consolidation: Who? Why? Where?
7 Rural School Consolidation and the Social Construction of Place: A Case Study of Delaware County
8 Rural School Consolidation and the Making of Buck Creek
9 Rural School Consolidation and the Remaking of Buck Creek
Epilogue: Rural School Consolidation—Misplacing Educational Reform?
Appendix
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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