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Educational Historical Timeline

Jasmin Senn
EDU 201
5 November 2018
Dr. Ce Isbell
U.S Supreme Court Cases
1850 – Roberts v. City of Boston
1950 – Ohman v. Board of Education
1954 – Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka
1959 – West v. Board of Education of City of New York
1962 – Engel v. Vitale
1963 – School District of Abington Township v. Schempp
1966 – Alvin Independent School District v. Cooper
1967 – New Jersey v. Massa
1968 – Epperson v. Arkansas
1969 – Morrison v. State Board of Education
1969 – Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District
1969 – Zucker v. Panitz
1969 – Sullivan v. Houston Independent School District
1970 – Scoville v. Board of Education of Joliet Township High School District 204
1971 – Mailloux v. Kiley
1971 – Lemon v. Kurtzman
1972 – Wisconsin v. Yoder
1972 – Fagen v. Summers
1972 – Shanley v. Northeast Independent School District
1972 – Karr v. Schmidt
1972 – Hold v. Sheldon
1972 – Davis v. Meek
1972 – Moran v. School District No. 7
1972 – Romans v. Crenshaw
1974 – Station v. Travelers Insurance Co.
1975 – Burton v. Cascade School District Union Highschool No. 5
1975 – Goss v. Lopez
1976 – Peter Doe v. San Francisco Unified School District
1977 – Gaylord v. Tacoma School District No. 10
1977 – Ingraham v. Wright
1981 – Doe v. Renfrow
1982 – Simonetti v. School District of Philadelphia
1983 – Mueller v. Allen – Court upheld Minnesota’s tax deduction
1983 – Marcus v. Rowley
1985 – Wallace v. Jaffree
1985 – New Jersey v. T.L.O.
1986 – Unified School District No. 241 v. Swanson
1987 – Edwards v. Aguillard
1987 – Mozert v. Hawkins Country Board of Education
1987 – Smith v. Board of School Commissioners of Mobile County
1987 – Burch v. Barker
1987 – Patchogue-Medford Congress of Teachers v. Board of Education of Pathogue-Medford
Union Free School District
1987 – Ray v. School District of DeSoto County
1988 – Hazelwood School District v. Kuhlmeier
1988 – Schaill v. Tippecanoe School Corp.
1989 – Krizek v. Cicero-Stickney Township High school District No. 201
1992 – Franklin v. Gwinnett County Public Schools
1993 – Jeglin v. San Jacinto Unified School District
1993 – Alfonzo v. Fernandez
1993 – Null v. Board of Education
1993 – State v. Rivera
1995 – Dubuclet v. Home Insurance Company
1995 – Picarella v. Terrizzi
1995 – Acton v. Vernonia School District
1995 – Curtis v. School Committee of Falmouth
1996 – Murray v. Pittsburgh Board of Public Education
1996 – Brown v. Hot, Sexy, and Safer Productions, Inc.
1996 – Battles v. Anne Arundel County Board of Education
1998 – Gebser v. Lago Vista Independent School District
1998 – Brunelle v. Lynn Public Schools
1998 – Swanson v. Guthrie Independent School District No. 1
1999 – Lipsman v. New York City Board of Education
2000 – Falvo v. Owasso Independent School District
2002 – Owasso Independent School District v. Falvo
2003 – Flores v. Morgan Hill Unified School District
2004 – Yap v. Oceanside Union Free School District
2005 – Harry A. v. Duncan
2005 – Mohammed ex rel. Mohammed v. School District of Philadelphia
2005 – Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District
2009 – J.C. v. Beverly Hills Unified School District

1600’s
1620 – Emphasis on basic skills, needed to learn religious catechisms and read prayers.
Curriculum also included surveying, navigation, and housekeeping
1635 – Boston Latin School was established
1636 – Harvard, Yale Latin Grammar Schools established
1642 – Massachusetts Act of 1642 - Determined whether young people could read or write
1647 – Massachusetts Act of 1647 – Mandated the establishment and support of schools
1648 – Court revised the Massachusetts Act of 1642
1690 – First printed copy of the New England Primer

1700’s
1700 – Public schools teach reading, writing, and basic mathematics to prepare students for jobs
1704 – Elias Neau was established – School for African Americans
1712 – Jean Jacques Rousseau, father of modern child psychology
1743 to 1826 – Thomas Jefferson
1745 – Arithmetic was introduced
1746 to 1827 – Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi
1750 – Academies teach secondary students a practical curriculum
1751 – Philidelphia Academy was established by Benjamin Franklin
1758 – Noah Webster
1767 – Sarah Pierce
1770 – Anthony Benezet – Best African American School
1776 to 1841 – Johann Fredrich Herbart
1778 to 1838 – Joseph Lancaster
1779 – Thomas Jefferson proposed his Bill for the More General Diffusion of Knowledge
1782 – Fredrick Froebel
1783 – Noah Webster, Spelling Book
1785 – Passage of Northwest Ordinance
1787 to 1870 – Emma Willard, women’s first college
1796 – Horace Mann

1800’s
1800 – Reverend William Holmes McGuffey
1804 – Elizabeth Palmer Peabody
1819 – Federal funds for reservation schools were 1st granted
1821 – Troy Seminary, first women’s college (Emma Willard)
1821 – First public high school teaches basic skills, history, geography, health
and physical training
1824 – First Common School
1832 – Margarethe Schurz
1837 – First Kindergarten founded
1837 – Horace Man became secretary of the Massachusetts State Board of Education
1839 – First public normal school
1843 – Horace Mann published Seventh Report
1843 – Susan Blow
1848 – Horace Mann resigned as secretary
1849 - Electa Lincoln Walton became first woman to administer a state normal school
1850 – First recorded official ground for school segregation
1852 – Massachusetts was the first state to pass compulsory education laws
1855 – Margarethe Schurz opened the first U.S Kindergarten
1856 – Frederick W. Taylor, engineer and founder of scientific method
1856 – Booker T. Washington
1857 – Nation Education Association founded (NEA)
1859 – John Dewey
1860 – Elizabeth Palmer Peabody opened first private English-speaking kindergarten in Boston
1860 – Jane Addams, founded Hull House
1862 – Morrill Land-Grant Act
1865 – African American leaders formed an education association
1868 – William E. Burghardt DuBois
1869 – More than 9,500 teachers taught at freedmen’s schools
1870 – 4,329 freedmen’s schools had been established with more than 247,000 total students
1873 – Susan Blow established the first successful kindergarten in the United States
1874 – Free public schooling places a strong emphasis on vocational education
1875 – Mary McLeod Bethune
1879 – 131 teachers were working in 53 kindergarten classes
1890 – A second Morrill Act provided more federal funds for land-grant colleges
1892 - Committee of Ten was appointed by NEA
1893 - Committee of Fifteen was appointed by NEA
1894 – Dewey served as head of the departments of philosophy, psychology, and pedagogy at
the University of Chicago
1896 – Dewey and his wife Alice established the Laboratory School

1900’s
1900 – Compulsory education laws were passed in 32 states.
1900 – Women's influence on teaching started.
1900 – Demand for teachers expanded dramatically.
1902 – Democracy and Social Ethic published social worker.
1909 – Ella Flagg Young, superintendent of Chicago schools until 1915
1913 – NEA appointed the commission on the reorganization of secondary education
1916 – American Federation of Teachers was founded
1918 – Cardinal Principles of Secondary Education was released (commission’s report)
1919 – Progressive Education Association was founded
1919 to 1920 – 78% of children attended school.
1924 – Native Americans were granted U.S citizenship
1925 – John Scopes
1930 – Compulsory education laws were passed in all states
1930 – Two-thirds of Native Americans had attended boarding schools
1930 – Progressive education movement stresses curriculum based on
student’s needs & interests.
1931 – Jane Addams won Nobel Peace Prize
1932 – Willard Waller
1941 – Laham Act
1944 – G.I. Bill of Rights

1950 to Present
1954 – U.S Supreme Court rejected the “separate but equal” doctrine
1955 – Progressive Education Association ceased operation
1957 – Sputnik sparks emphasis on science, math, and language
1958 – National Defense Education Act
1960 to 1970 – Back to Basics Movement
1964 – Congress extended the National Defense Education Act for 3 years expanded Title III
1964 – Civil Rights Act
1965 – Congress passed the Elementary and Secondary Education Act
1968 – Elementary and Secondary Act was amended with Title VII, the Bilingual Education Act
1971 – Lemon Test
1972 – Title IX Education Amendment
1972 – Indian Education Act
1974 – Buckley Amendment Passed (FERPA)
1975 – Education for All Handicapped Children Act
1975 – Indochina Migration and Refugee Assistance Act
1976 – Copyright Act
1982 – Mortimer Adler’s Paideia Proposal
1983 – Ernest Boyer’s High school: A Report on Secondary Education in America
1983 – Nation at Risk: The Imperative for Educational Reform (5 New Basics)
1985 – Efforts to increase standards
1989 – The Carnegie Council; Turning points
1990 – George H. W. Bush; Identifying educational goals
1994 – President Bill Clinton; Educate America Act
1995 – President Bill Clinton; Information Superhighway
1996 – President Bill Clinton; President’s Educational Technology Initiative
1998 – Digital Millennium Copyright Act
1999 – President Bill Clinton; Educational Excellence for All Children Act & ESEA
2001 – Kansas Board of Education voted to restore evolution of state science standards
2002 – President George W. Bush; No Child Left Behind Act
2009 – NGA and CCSSO organize the common core standards (CCSSI)
2010 – President Barrack Obama; Proposes changes to NCLB
2011 – Congress fails to act on the call to reauthorize ESEA
2012 – Race to the Top expanded; 55 Districts receive a total of $400 million
2013 – Forty-five states submit plans for ESEA; 42 are approved
2013 – Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA)
2014 – All students will leave high school “college or career ready”
2015 – States collaborate to develop common assessments aligned to Common Core Standards

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