Early Modern England with Keit.. - YaleCourses

          17/25 Videos
1
1. General Introduction
YaleCourses
00:36:09
6
6. The Structures of Power
YaleCourses
00:51:43
12
12. Economic Expansion, 1560-1640
YaleCourses
00:50:58
13
13. A Polarizing Society, 1560-1640
14
14. Witchcraft and Magic
YaleCourses
00:46:35
15
15. Crime and the Law
YaleCourses
00:46:32
16
16. Popular Protest
YaleCourses
00:46:29
17. Education and Literacy
YaleCourses
00:49:45
21
21. Regicide and Republic, 1647-1660
24
24. Refashioning the State, 1688-1714

17. Education and Literacy

4 Views
YaleCourses
YaleCourses
5 subscribers
0

Early Modern England: Politics, Religion, and Society under the Tudors and Stuarts (HIST 251)

Professor Wrightson begins by assessing the state of education in the late medieval period and then discusses the two cultural forces (Renaissance humanism and the Reformation) which lay behind the educational expansion of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. While there were distinct hierarchies of learning in the period (with women and the lower orders having far fewer educational opportunities open to them than other members of the social order), this was genuinely a revolutionary period in terms of education. Attendance at the universities and the Inns of Court expanded exponentially, educational ideals for the elite were transformed, standards of clerical education reached unprecedented heights, grammar schools and petty schools were founded across the country and, by the end of the period, literacy levels in the population were much higher. England was now a partially literate society and was well on its way to achieving mass literacy. A threshold had been crossed, and this shift had far-reaching cultural and political effects.

00:00 - Chapter 1. Education: Cultural Influences Underlying an Increase in Schooling
09:33 - Chapter 2. Elite Education
21:03 - Chapter 3. Clerical Education
22:42 - Chapter 4. Education for Commoners
26:16 - Chapter 5. Limits in the Educational Revolution
30:41 - Chapter 6. Literacy
36:59 - Chapter 7. Gender
40:18 - Chapter 8. Conclusions

Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website: http://open.yale.edu/courses

This course was recorded in Fall 2009.

Show more
100% online learning from the world's best universities, organisations and Instructors

 0 Comments sort   Sort By