"Living a Philosophical Contradiction?": Progressive Education in the Archdiocese of Vancouver's Catholic Schools, 1936-1960

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Abstract

Progressive education swept across Canada in the early to mid-twentieth century, restructuring schools, introducing new courses, and urging teachers to reorient the classroom to the interests and needs of the learner. The women religious who taught in Vancouver's Catholic schools negotiated the revised public school curriculum, determined to utilize the latest methods and meet public school standards in hopes of receiving government funding. But they were equally adamant about preserving Catholic beliefs regarding human life and resisting false philosophy. Despite their caution, progressive education began to transform Catholic pedagogy in this period, most notably in religious education. Looking back over the decades, Catholic educators in the early 1960s would observe that progressive education had brought about a shift in schools that emphasized process over content and self-expression over discipline. They found themselves questioning whether the curriculum undermined revealed knowledge by overemphasizing empirical science as the foundation for all knowledge.

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Gemmell, K. M. (2019, August 1). “Living a Philosophical Contradiction?”: Progressive Education in the Archdiocese of Vancouver’s Catholic Schools, 1936-1960. History of Education Quarterly. Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/heq.2019.18

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