Skip to product information
1 of 1

Destined to Rule the Schools

Regular price £25.50
Sale price £25.50 Regular price £25.50
Sale Sold out
Tells the story of women and school leadership in America from the common school era to the present. Offers an historical account of how teaching became women's work and the school superintendency ...
Read More
  • Format:
  • 02 April 1998
View Product Details

Tells the story of women and school leadership in America from the common school era to the present. Offers an historical account of how teaching became women's work and the school superintendency men's.

Winner of the 1998 American Educational Studies Association Critics' Choice Titles

In 1909, when she became the superintendent of the Chicago schools, Ella Flagg Young proclaimed that women were "destined to rule the schools of every city." After all, women accounted for nearly eighty percent of all teachers by 1910 and their ascendance into formal school leadership positions could not be far behind. After World War II, however, a backlash against single women educators and a rigid realignment of gender roles in schools contributed to a rapid decline of women school administrators across the country, a decline from which there has been little recovery to the present.

Destined to Rule the Schools tells the story of women and school leadership in America from the common school era to the present. In a broad sense, it offers an historical account of how teaching became women's work and the school superintendency men's. Blount explores how power in school employment has been structured unequally by gender. It focuses on the superintendency because an important component of the effort to establish control of schools has occurred in contesting the definition of this position. Unique and important contributions of this volume include: the only published comprehensive statistical study describing the number of women superintendents throughout the twentieth century, an analysis suggesting that the superintendency may have become an appointive position in part to remove it from the influence of newly enfranchised women voters, a discussion of the role of homophobia in creating and perpetuating rigid gender divisions in school employment, and a broad analysis that integrates the histories of teaching and school administration.

files/i.png Icon
Price: £25.50
Pages: 264
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Imprint: SUNY Press
Series: SUNY series, Educational Leadership
Publication Date: 02 April 1998
ISBN: 9780791437308
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

REVIEWS Icon

"Jackie Blount's work is both painstakingly researched and originally conceptualized, as it mines a field historians may have thought they knew. This important book on women who administered schools discusses identity, sexuality, power, authority, and educational practice. And it's a first-rate read!" — Sari Biklen, Syracuse University

"Jackie Blount's intellect, scholarship, writing skill, and sensitivity to gender inequity and its tenacious hold on our society combine to give us a powerful book that is unparalleled in the literature on the topic to date." — Sandra L. Gupton, University of Southern Mississippi

List of Figures


List of Tables


Acknowledgments


Introduction


1. Their First Great Public Profession


2. A Distinctly Higher Walk


3. Out of Politics


4. A Change in Fashion


5. The Way of the Buffalo


6. Is This All?


7. Conclusion


Appendix: Historical Data on Women's Representation in the School Superintendency

Notes


Index