History of Education Research in Australia
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.14516/ete.2016.003.002.000Palabras clave:
Historiography, Australian history of education, Research topics, Social history, HistoriansResumen
History of education research has flourished in Australia since the 1960s. However, fewer university appointments in recent years suggest that a decline will soon occur. Nevertheless, research over the previous fifty years has produced much excellent work, following three significant historiographical trends. The first is the dominant Anglo-Empirical Whig tradition, which has concentrated on conflicts between church and state over schooling, and the founders and establishment of schools and public school systems. The second arose from social history, shifting the focus of research onto families, students and teachers. However, the concentration on the social class relations of schooling was eventually overtaken by substantial studies into gender relations. In more recent times, cultural studies and the influence of Foucault have been responsible for new research questions and research, marking a new historiographical trend. A survey of topics for which more research is required concludes the editorial, not least of which is the history of Indigenous education.
Referencias
Austin, A. G. (1963). Select documents in Australian education: 1788-1900. Melbourne: Isaac Pitman.
Austin, A. G. (1961). Australian education 1788-1900. Melbourne: Isaac Pitman.
Austin, A. G. (1958). George William Rusden and National Education in Australia 1849-1862. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press.
Barcan, A. (2002). Radical students: The old left at Sydney University. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press.
Blackmore, J. (1992). Making educational history: A feminist perspective. Geelong: Deakin University.
Beresford, Q., & Partington, G. (Eds.). (2003). Reform and resistance in Aboriginal education: the Australian experience. Perth: University of Western Australia Press.
Bessant, B. (1991). «Progress» and revision in the history of education in the 1980s. Discourse, 12(1), 67-84.
Bessant, B. (Ed.). (1987). Mother state and her little ones: Children and youth in Australia 1860s-1930s. Melbourne: Phillip Institute of Technology.
Bessant, B. (1972). The emergence of state secondary education. In Cleverley, J., & Lawry, J., Australian education in the twentieth century: Studies in the development of state education (pp. 124-141). Melbourne: Longman.
Brennan, D. (1994). The politics of Australian child care: From philanthropy to feminism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Brook, J., & Kohen, J. L. (1991). The Parramatta Native Institution and the Black Town: A history. Sydney: New South Wales University Press.
Bygott, U., & Cable, K. J. (1985). Pioneer women graduates of the University of Sydney 1881-1921. Sydney: University of Sydney.
Campbell, C. (2014). Adelaide school of social history: childhood, family and education. In Dictionary of Educational History in Australia and New Zealand. Accessed 26 April 2016, http://dehanz.net.au/entries/adelaide-school-social-history-childhood-family-education/
Campbell, C., & Proctor, H. (2014). A history of Australian schooling. Sydney: Allen & Unwin.
Campbell, C., & Sherington, G. (2013). The comprehensive public high school: Historical perspectives. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
Campbell, C., Proctor, H., et al. (2009). School choice: How parents negotiate the new school market in Australia. Sydney: Allen & Unwin.
Campbell, C. (2005). Changing school loyalties and the middle class: A reflection on the developing fate of state comprehensive high schooling. The Australian Educational Researcher, 32(1), 3-24.
Campbell, C., & Sherington, G. (2002). History of education: The possibility of survival. Change: Transformations in Education, 5(1), 46-64.
Campbell, C. (1999). The social origins of Australian state high schools. In Campbell, C., Hooper, C., & Fearnley-Sander, M., Toward the state high school in Australia (pp. 9-27). Sydney: ANZHES.
Campbell, C. (1999). Pioneering modern adolescence. In Campbell, C., Hooper, C., & Fearnley-Sander, M., Toward the state high school in Australia (pp. 55-77). Sydney: ANZHES.
Campbell, C., Hooper, C. et al. (Eds.). (1999). Toward the state high school in Australia: Social histories of state secondary schooling in Victoria, Tasmania and South Australia, 1850-1925. Sydney: ANZHES.
Connell, W. F. (1987). Research and writing in the history of education. In Keeves, J. P., Australian education: Review of recent research (pp. 29-65). Sydney: Allen and Unwin.
Crane, A. R., & Walker, W. G. (1957). Peter Board: His contribution to the development of education in New South Wales. Melbourne: ACER.
Crotty, M. (2001). Making the Australian male: Middle-class masculinity 1870-1920. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press.
Dow, G. M. (1964). George Higinbotham: Church and state. Melbourne: Pitman.
Ely, M. J. (1978). Reality and rhetoric: An alternative history of Australian education. Sydney: Alternative Publishing Cooperative.
Fletcher, J. J. (1989). Clean, clad and courteous: A history of Aboriginal education in New South Wales. Sydney: the author.
Fogarty, R. (1959). Catholic education in Australia, 1806-1950. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press.
Forsyth, H. (2014). Knowing Australia: A history of the modern university. Sydney: New South Publishing.
Goodman, R. (1968). Secondary education in Queensland, 1860-1960. Canberra: Australian National University Press.
Grundy, D. (1972). Secular, compulsory and free: The Education Act of 1872. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press.
Holbrook, A. (1995). Methodological developments in oral history: A multi-layered approach. Australian Educational Researcher, 22(3), 21-44.
Hunter, I. (1994). Rethinking the school: Subjectivity, bureaucracy, criticism. Sydney: Allen and Unwin.
Hyams, B., Trethewey, L., et al. (1988). Learning and other things: Sources for a social history of education in South Australia. Adelaide: South Australian Government Printer.
Hyams, B. K. (1979). Teacher preparation in Australia: A history of its development from 1850 to 1950. Melbourne: ACER.
Jones, H. (1985). Nothing seemed impossible: Women's education and social change in South Australia 1875-1915. Brisbane: University of Queensland Press.
Johnson, L. (1993). The modern girl: Girlhood and growing up. Sydney, Allen & Unwin.
Kirk, D. (1998). Schooling bodies: School practice and public discourse, 1880-1950. London: Leicester University Press.
Kociumbas, J. (1997). Australian childhood: A history. Sydney: Allen & Unwin.
Kyle, N. (1986). Her natural destiny: The education of women in New South Wales. Sydney: NSWU Press.
Macintyre, S. (2010). The poor relation: A history of social sciences in Australia. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press.
Mackinnon, A. (1997). Love and freedom: Professional women and the reshaping of personal life. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Mackinnon, A. (1986). The new women: Adelaide's early women graduates. Adelaide: Wakefield Press.
Mackinnon, A. (1984). One foot on the ladder: Origins and outcomes of girls' secondary schooling in South Australia. Brisbane: University of Queensland Press.
May, J. (2013). Reel schools: Schooling and the nation in Australian cinema. Bern: Peter Lang.
McCallum, D. (1990). The social production of merit: Education, psychology and politics in Australia 1900-1950. London: Falmer Press.
McCalman, J. (1993). Journeyings: The biography of a middle-class generation 1920-1990. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press.
McLeod, J., & K. Wright (2015). The promise of the new and genealogies of education reform. Oxford: Routledge.
Miller, P. (1989). Historiography of compulsory schooling: What is the problem? History of Education, 18(2), 123-144.
Miller, P., & Davey, I. (1988). The common denominator: Schooling the people. In Burgmann, V., & Lee, J., Constructing a culture (pp. 18-35). Melbourne, McPhee Gribble.
Miller, P. (1986). Long division: State schooling in South Australian society. Adelaide: Wakefield Press.
O'Brien, A. (2005). God's willing workers: Women and religion in Australia. Sydney: UNSW Press.
O'Donoghue, T. A. (2001). Upholding the faith: The process of education in catholic schools in Australia, 1922-1965. New York: Peter Lang.
Portus, G. V. (1937). Free, compulsory and secular: A critical estimate of Australian education. London: Oxford University Press.
Prochner, L. (2009). A history of early childhood education in Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press.
Ramsland, J. (1986). Children of the backlanes: Destitute and neglected children in colonial New South Wales. Sydney: New South Wales University Press.
Rusden, G. W. (1853). National education. Melbourne: The Argus.
Selleck, R. J. W. (1991). History of Education Review, 20(2), 92-93.
Selleck, R. J. W. (1982). Frank Tate: A biography. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press.
Sherington, G., & Jeffery, C. (1998). Fairbridge: Empire and child migration. Perth: University of Western Australia Press.
Sherington, G. (1990). Families and state schooling in the Illawarra, 1840-1940. In Theobald, M. R., & Selleck, R. J. W., Family, school and state in Australian history (pp. 114-133). Sydney: Allen and Unwin.
Sherington, G., & Jeffery, C. (1998). Fairbridge: Empire and child migration. Perth: University of Western Australia Press.
Sherington, G., Petersen, R. C. et al. (1987). Learning to lead: A history of girls' and boys' corporate secondary schools in Australia. Sydney: Allen & Unwin.
Smith, B. (1990).William Wilkins's saddle-bags: State education and local control. In Theobald, M. R., & Selleck, R. J. W., Family, school and state in Australian history (pp. 66-90). Sydney: Allen and Unwin.
Spaull, A. D. (1985). A history of federal teachers unions in Australia: 1921-1985. Melbourne: Australian Teachers' Federation.
Teese, R. (2014). For the common weal: The public high school in Victoria 1910-2010. Melbourne: Australian Scholarly Publishing.
Teese, R. (2000). Academic success and social power: Examinations and inequity. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press.
Teese, R. (1989). Gender and class in the transformation of the public high school in Melbourne, 1946-85. History of Education Quarterly, 29(2), 237-259
Theobald, M. (1998). Educational history. In Davison, G., Hirst, J., & Macintyre, S., The Oxford companion to Australian history (pp. 206-208). Melbourne: Oxford University Press.
Theobald, M. (1996). Knowing women: Origins of women's education in nineteenth-century Australia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Theobald, M. (1989). The PLC mystique: Reflections on the reform of female education in nineteenth century Australia. Australian Historical Studies, 23(92), 241-259.
Theobald, M. (1991). «Mere accomplishments»? Melbourne's early ladies schools reconsidered. In Prentice, A., & Theobald, M., Women who taught: Perspectives on the history of women and teaching (pp. 71-91). Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
Theobald, M. R., & Selleck, R. J. W. (Eds.). (1990). Family, school and state in Australian history. Sydney: Allen and Unwin.
Thiele, C. (1975). Grains of mustard seed. Adelaide, South Australia: Education Department.
Trimingham, J. (2003). Growing good Catholic girls. Melbourne, Melbourne University Press.
Turney, C. (1992). William Wilkins: His life and work. Sydney: Hale & Iremonger.
Vick, M. (1994). Schooling and the production of local communities in mid-Nineteenth-Century Australia. Historical Studies in Education, 6(3), 19-37.
Weiss, G. (Ed.). (2000). Trying to get it back: Indigenous women, education and culture. Waterloo (Ont.): Wilfrid Laurier University Press.
Whitehead, K. (2003). The new women come along: Transforming teaching in the nineteenth century. Sydney, Australian and New Zealand History of Education Society.
Windschuttle, E. (1980). Discipline, domestic training and social control. Labour History, 39, 1-14.