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    <title><![CDATA[Children and Youth in History]]></title>
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    <pubDate>Wed, 22 May 2013 09:42:26 +0000</pubDate>
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      <title><![CDATA[Ibn Khaldun's Study of History (1377 CE) [Literary Excerpt] ]]></title>
      <link>http://chnm.gmu.edu/cyh/items/show/461</link>
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                                    <div class="element-text"><p>Statesman, jurist, historian, scholar, and philosopher Ibn Khaldun was born in Tunis on May 27, 1332. Ibn Khaldun is an exemplary example of product of the Islamic education that children and youth received. He received a traditional early education of Qur'an, jurisprudence, and Arabic grammar. In his early 20s traveled to Fes to complete his education with the eminent scholars of his day. Ibn Khaldun wrote <em>The Muqaddimah</em> in 1377 as the preface and first book of his world history volume. It is regarded as the earliest attempt made by any historian to discover patterns in changes in political and social organization and it represents a departure from traditional historiography that merely chronicled events. The majority of the volume was prepared in the form of academic lectures to be read aloud. The text often appears repetitive, but this makes sense in light of Ibn Khaldun's new terminology the fact that he wrote before the invention of printing.</p>
	<p>Ibn Khaldun was remarkably modern and scientific in his thinking. At the same time, he was very much a part of his age in that he based his rational views on unquestioned religious, physical, and geographical assumptions. For example, in this selection, Ibn Khaldun criticizes the traditional pedagogy of rote memorization that was practiced in Islamic societies for teaching children and youth. However, he later goes on to explain that inhabitants of the eastern parts of Islamic civilization have accrued superior intelligence because of their sedentary culture (the western region consisted largely of nomadic Berber tribes). This document brings up the question of how effective memorization is as a pedagogical technique for teaching children and youth.</p>
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                                    <div class="element-text">Ibn Khaldun, <em>The Muqaddimah: An Introduction to History</em>, translated by Franz Rosenthal, edited and abridged by N.J. Dawood (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1989), 340–1. Annotated by Heidi Morrison.</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text"><p>The easiest method of acquiring the scientific habit is through acquiring the ability to express oneself clearly in discussing and disputing scientific problems. This is what clarifies their import and makes them understandable. Some students spend most of their lives attending scholarly sessions. Still, one finds them silent. They do not talk and do not discuss matters. More than is necessary, they are concerned with memorizing. Thus, they do not obtain much of a habit in the practice of science and scientific instruction. Some of them think that they have obtained (the habit). But when they enter into a discussion or disputation, or do some teaching, their scientific habit is found to be defective. Their memorized knowledge may be more extensive than that of other scholars, because they are so much concerned with memorizing. They think that scientific habit is identical with memorized knowledge. But that is not so.</p></div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">459, 460, 462, 463, 464, 465, 466, 467, 468, 469, 470, 471</div>
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      <pubDate>Mon, 12 Jul 2010 17:30:21 +0000</pubDate>
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    <item>
      <title><![CDATA[Ijazahs (Diploma) [Calligraphy]]]></title>
      <link>http://chnm.gmu.edu/cyh/items/show/460</link>
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                                    <div class="element-text"><em>Ijazahs</em> (Diploma) [Calligraphy]</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text"><p>During the medieval period, gifted children who successfully memorized the entire Qur'an left their home at the age of about 12-14 to travel to a nearby town and eventually around the Middle East to study with renowned academic authorities to hear historical, religious, philosophical, and legal texts. When the student could recite the material flawlessly, the authority issued the student an <em>ijazah</em> (diploma). The <em>ijazah</em> system was based on a system of learning that prioritized memorization, face-to-face student-teacher contact, and oral recitation. An </em>ijazah</em> could vary in length from one paragraph to a sizable volume. They contained: an opening prayer; a flattering introduction of the student; the date of issuance; the authority's biography; and a genealogy of the chain of transmission of the mastered material, reaching back to the original author.</p> 
<p>Accurate oral transmission was important in the age before printing and this is why teachers evaluated students on memorization and oral recitation. The main goal of education was to train students to be future scholars of Islamic law, which required the ability to trace long chains of transmission that proved the validity of <em>hadith</em> (sayings attributed to the Prophet). The <em>hadith</em> were used in legal decisions that did not have a clear answer in the Qur'an itself. Students seeking specialized education in medicine, astronomy, or other fields would study at the courts or centers known for these fields, or would travel to read in the libraries where collections were found, perhaps receiving the hospitality of the library’s patron or a foundation during the period of study.</p>  
<p>The quantity of acquired <em>ijazahs</em> contributed to a student's future status as a scholar. Status was largely based on the links a scholar could document to earlier generations of scholars in the Muslim community. Each time a student received an <em>ijazah</em>, it meant that he had mastered a body of material that had been transmitted through a long series of scholars. The symbolic importance of these certificates can be noted in their artistic prose and artistic appearance. One notable difference between the <em>ijazah</em> and the medieval European university degree––an individual rather than an institution.</p>  
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                                    <div class="element-text">'Ali Ra'if Efendi, Ijazah (diploma), 1206/1791, Library of Congress, <a class="external" href="http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.amed/ascs.198">http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.amed/ascs.198</a>. Ijazah, given by Abu Muhammad al-Dhihni 'Uthman Nuri al-Hanafi al-Miyawardi to his student 'Umar Lutfi ibn al-Hajj Muhammad Hilmi known as Munla Isma'ilzadah al Arkhawi. 4 Jumada al-Akhirah 1312 H / 3 Dec. 1894, Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library, <a class="external" href="http://www.library.yale.edu/neareast/exhibitions/exhibit20071.html">http://www.library.yale.edu/neareast/exhibitions/exhibit20071.html</a> (accessed May 1, 2010). Annotated by Heidi Morrison.</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text"><p><em>Translation of a certificate of proficiency in Arabic writing</em></p>
<p>Giving charity in secret extinguishes the Lord's wrath</p> 

<p>The prophet of God, may peace and blessing of God be upon him, said:<br />
"The best among you is the best to his family"<br />
Thus spoke the prophet truthfully.<br />
And Owaiss, the best of the generation of the followers said: Thus spoke the prophet truthfully.</p>

<p>I authorized and certified the author of this piece Ali Raef Effendi  may God increase his provision and knowledge, and may God grant him long life and fulfil all his wishes.
I am the humble, the guilty who seeks God's forgiveness Sayyed Mostafa Alhaleemi.</p>

<p>Dated: 1106 Hijri (1694 C.E.)</p>

<p>I authorized and certified under the writing of the author of this piece Ali Raef Effendi, may God grant him long life, increase his provision,  knowledge day and night, fulfil all his wishes.</p>
<p>I am the most humble; Sayyed Hussein Hamed, may God forgive him.</p>

<p>Dated: 1200 Hijri  (1785/1786  C,E,)</p>

<hr />
<p><em>Translation of the ijaza portion of the document</em>

<p>Praise be to God, who grew the tree of knowledge in the issuance (chest) of scholars and made (deduced from) its fruit the Shariah principles. Glory be to Him, he has the knowledge of everything whether it is in the heavens or in the earth. He knows what appears to His creatures before or after or behind them. Nor shall they compass aught of His knowledge except what He wills. And May Allah’s peace and blessings be upon his blessed messenger Muhammad and the rest of his prophets. And may peace and blessings be upon his family and his companions who gave authorization and licensing only to those who are worth of having it, as follows:<br />
<br />
I am the humble, the poor to his lord’s guidance and the guilty who seeks Allah forgiveness, Abo Mohammad Alzehny Othman Noury Alhanafy. I authorized and certified under the writing of Ibn Mohammad Ameen, may Allah forgive both of them.</p> 

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                                    <div class="element-text">459, 461, 462, 463, 464, 465, 466, 467, 468, 469, 470, 471</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
        </div><!-- end element-set --><div class="item-file image-jpeg"><a class="download-file" href="/cyh/files/download/495/fullsize"><img src="/cyh/files/display/495/square_thumbnail" class="thumb" alt="<em>Ijazahs</em> (Diploma) [Calligraphy]" width="250" height="250"/>
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      <pubDate>Thu, 08 Jul 2010 04:31:33 +0000</pubDate>
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    <item>
      <title><![CDATA[Education in the Middle East]]></title>
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                                    <div class="element-text">This teaching module provides a wide variety of sources to explore the history of schooling in the Middle East, a topic that is largely misunderstood in the west. </div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">Heidi Morrison</div>
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        </div><!-- end element-set --><div class="element-set">
    <h2>Additional Item Metadata</h2>
        <div id="additional-item-metadata-transcription" class="element">
        <h3>Transcription</h3>
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            <div id="additional-item-metadata-local-url" class="element">
        <h3>Local URL</h3>
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            <div id="additional-item-metadata-online-submission" class="element">
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    <h2>Teaching Module Item Type Metadata</h2>
        <div id="teaching-module-item-type-metadata-bibliography" class="element">
        <h3>Bibliography</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text"><ol class="bibliography">
<li>Doumato, Eleanor Abdella and Gregory Starrett, ed. <em>Teaching Islam: Textbooks and Religion in the Middle East</em>. Colorado: Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2007.<br />

<span>The contributions to this edited volume explore the political and social priorities behind religious education in nine Middle Eastern countries. The authors find vast differences in how Islam is presented in textbooks and a general lack of incitement to violence in the name of religion, or for any other reason.</span></li>  


<li>Hefner, Robert W. and Muhammad Qasim Zaman, ed. <em>Schooling Islam: The Culture and Politics of Modern Muslim Education</em>. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2007.<br />

<span>This edited volume looks at Islamic education in countries as different as Morocco, Egypt, Pakistan, India, Indonesia, Iran, and Saudi Arabia. The contributors demonstrate that Islamic education is neither timelessly traditional nor medieval, but rather complex and evolving.</span></li> 


<li>Nadwi, Mohammad Akram. <em>Al-Muhaddithat: The Women Scholars in Islam</em>. Oxford: Interface Publication, 2007.<br />   

<span>This book is an adaption of a larger 40-volume biographical dictionary of female Muslim scholars in the pre-modern period. This book can be used to understand the traditional system of transmission of knowledge and to counterbalance charges of misogyny against Islam.</span></li>  
</ol>
</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="teaching-module-item-type-metadata-document-based-question" class="element">
        <h3>Document Based Question</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text"><p>by Heidi Morrison<br />
<em>(Suggested writing time: 50 minutes)</em></p>

<p>Using the images, texts, and audio recording in the documents provided, write a well-organized essay of at least five paragraphs in response to the following prompt:</p>
<ul>
<li>Imagine you are at a dinner party and the topic of conversation turns to international politics. One person at the table makes the statement, "Since ancient times, children in the Middle East have been taught violence against infidels."  Using at least six primary sources related to the history of schooling in the Middle East, write an essay that responds to this theoretical statement.</li> 

</ul>
<p>Your essay should:</p>
<ul>
<li>have a clear thesis,</li>
<li>use at least six of the documents to support your thesis,</li>
<li>show analysis by grouping the documents into at least two groups,</li>
<li>analyze the point of view of the documents, and</li>
<li>recognize the limitation of the documents before you by suggesting an additional type of document or source to make your discussion more complete or valid.</li>
</ul>
</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="teaching-module-item-type-metadata-credits" class="element">
        <h3>Credits</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text"><p>Grateful acknowledgment is made to the following institutions for primary sources:</p>
<ul>
<li><a class="external" href="http://www.abc.net.au/rn/">ABC National Radio</a>,</li>
<li><a class="external" href="http://www.bnf.fr/fr/acc/x.accueil.html">Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris</a>,</li>
<li><a class="external" href="http://www.fethullahgulen.org/">Fethullah Gulen Website</a>,</li>
<li><a class="external" href="http://www.hmhco.com/">Houghton Mifflin Company</a>,</li>
<li><a class="external" href="http://www.loc.gov/index.html">Library of Congress</a>,</li>
<li><a class="external" href="http://www.nytimes.com/">The New York Times</a>,</li>
<li><a class="external" href="http://press.princeton.edu/">Princeton University Press</a>,</li>
<li><a class="external" href="http://www.ucpress.edu/">University of California Press</a>, and</li>
<li><a class="external" href="http://www.library.yale.edu/neareast/exhibitions/exhibit20071.html">Yale University Library: Near Eastern Collection</a>.</li>
</ul>

<h3>About the Author</h3>
<p>Heidi Morrison is an assistant professor of modern Middle East History at the University of Wisconsin- La Crosse. She is currently writing a book entitled <em>State of Children: Egyptian Childhoods in an era of Nationalism, Modernity, and Emotion</em>. Heidi is also the editor of the forthcoming <em>The History of Global Childhood Reader</em> (Routledge Press, 2011). She is working on a project on the history of boys and mental health in Palestine.</p>
</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="teaching-module-item-type-metadata-case-study-institution" class="element">
        <h3>Case Study Institution</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">University of Wisconsin-La Crosse</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="teaching-module-item-type-metadata-introduction" class="element">
        <h3>Introduction</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text"><p>In recent years, westerners have been fascinated by the education of children in the Middle East, raising concern over whether or not schools teach extreme radicalism or anti-Americanism. The Arabic word <em>madrasa</em>, which literally means "school," has come to imply in the minds of some pundits and politicians a pro-terrorism center with political or religious affiliation. The situation was very different in the pre-modern era, when schools in the Middle East were world renowned: students from as far away as Spain traveled to regions such as Iraq to study with noted teachers.</p> 
<p>In the early days of the Islamic community in the Middle East (i.e., from the death of the prophet Muhammad in 632CE through the four Islamic caliphates and the Umayyad Dynasty in 750CE), the leading Muslims of the Arabian peninsula employed tutors or owned slaves to teach their sons the basics of religion, to read and write, to use the bow and arrow, to swim, and to be courageous, just, hospitable, and generous. The elite expected their daughters to attain skills relating to the household as well as the basics of religion, and sometimes to learn music, dance, and poetry.</p> 
<p>The majority of children in rural areas learned how to work the land from their families. The only formal education they received would be from the <em>kuttab</em>, or mosque school, listening to Qur'an readers in mosques, or from informal exchange of information in the family.</p> 
<p>In urban areas, boys typically began apprenticeships at around eight years of age to master a craft or skill. In terms of higher education, if a child had memorized the Qur'an (by about 12 years of age) he would often then travel around the Islamic world in quest of a teacher who had an understanding of Islamic jurisprudence (<em>fiqh</em>). Students would gather around these teachers in mosques and master the teacher's approach to law without much questioning.</p>  
<p>With the consolidation and cultural development of the Islamic empire during the Abbasid Dynasty (750-1258CE), a systematic method of schooling was established in the Middle East for both elementary and higher education. This remained the main form of education until the 20th century.</p> 
<p>A <em>maktab</em>, or "elementary school," was attached to a mosque and the curriculum centered on the Qur'an, which was used to teach reading, writing, and grammar through recitation and memorization. Physical education was emphasized in childhood education because Islam gives importance to the training of the body as well as the mind. (Children of wealthy and prominent families continued to receive individual instruction in their houses.)</p> 
<p>After attending a <em>maktab</em>, a student could attend a <em>madrasa</em>, or "higher education institution," attached to a mosque. Individual donors, rulers, or high officials funded these through pious endowments. The endowment funds maintained the building, paid teacher salaries, and sometimes provided stipends for students.</p> 
<p>The <em>madrasa</em> founder generally set the curriculum. With a focus on <em>fiqh</em>, schools sometimes also taught secular subjects, such as history, logic, ethics, medicine, and astronomy. Memorization was a critical aspect of a student's training in law. The material memorized formed the base used by jurors to practice <em>ijtihad</em>, or the process of making a legal decision by independent interpretation of legal sources.</p> 
<p>The most famous <em>madrasas</em> in the Middle East were Cairo's Al-Azhar, founded in the 10th century, and Baghdad's Al-Nizamiyya, founded in the 11th century. (Medical schools were usually attached to hospitals.)</p>  
<p>The period of the Abbasid Dynasty is often referred to as the Golden Age of Islam, due in large part to the thriving centers of learning. Scholars during this time translated, preserved, and elaborated Greek philosophy (later used in European universities). They also made advances in algebra, medicine, trigonometry, mechanics, optics, visual arts, geography, and literature.</p> 
	<p>During the early-modern era (1500-1800), education continued to flourish under the Ottoman and Safavid Empires. One study suggests that up to half of the male population was literate in Cairo at the end of the 18th century, implying that <em>maktabs</em> were numerous.</p> 
<p>The <em>madrasa</em> continued to be constructed as part of the mosque complex, reflecting the importance of education to religion and the sense that education took place within the religious framework. Scholarship under the Ottomans and Safavids centered on the notion that the most advanced science came from Islam and that scholars before them knew best. This was in contrast to Europe during the 19th century, where higher education in new types of institutions of learning began to free itself from church control to embody the Enlightenment value of questioning religion (i.e. putting the laws of science over the laws of God), although reform of the older universities in Europe proceeded slowly.</p> 
<p>In the face of Europe's growing power from advanced technology and commercial wealth, Ottoman rulers entered the modern era (1800-present) with a series of educational reforms. The reforms aimed to modernize the empire by adapting aspects of western life. (In contrast, Iran, under the Qajars, did not undergo the same level of educational reforms.)</p> 
<p>The Ottomans sent envoys to Europe to translate their scholarship and learn new scientific discoveries. They secularized society such that educational opportunity became equal for all subjects in state schools. In cities such as Istanbul, Cairo, and Tunis, reforming governments established specialized schools to train officials, officers, doctors, and engineers. Some contesting voices in the Ottoman Empire argued, however, that the problems of the Empire were not from a lack of western ways, but from a need to return to the ways of the early age of Islam and the Golden Age.</p> 
<p>Nonetheless, by the end of WWI, almost all of the Middle East had fallen under European colonial rule. The <em>maktab</em> and <em>madrasa</em> system of education began to wane in the place of French and British schools. These schools had limited enrollment due in large part to their scarcity in number; access was restricted to a select local elite trained to enhance colonial administration. Study in the <em>maktab</em> and <em>madrasa</em> no longer led to high office in government service or the judicial system.</p> 
<p>Although the colonizing authorities introduced compulsory schooling measures of one kind or another, they often failed to include sufficient funding in colonial budgets, so the percentage of the total child population in schools remained dismally low. Children in rural areas who attended school often studied for a half day and worked the other half. In Algeria, for example, by 1939 the number of secondary school graduates was in the hundreds for the entire country.</p> 
<p>Various types of private Islamic schools existed as alternatives to government secular schools, but the colonial governments sought to exercise close control through subsidies, curriculum expansion, and inspection systems. Religious schools often served—as they did in European efforts to extend education to the middle and lower classes—as a base from which to build capacity. A small number of European and missionary schools, as well as some indigenously operated Christian schools existed alongside the government and Islamic schools. In cities, these Christian schools of various denominations sometimes gained importance as institutions where children of elites accessed European education. In this way, a two-tiered education system developed under colonialism. In all of these systems, girls were able to acquire a nominal education; if it continued, it was usually in the form of training for teaching, nursing, or midwifery.</p>
<p>Post-colonial governments in the Middle East prioritized mass popular education to build strong nations. Egypt's Gamel Abdel Nasser, for example, promoted free education and promised each graduate a position in the public sector. In countries such as Egypt, Syria, Morocco, and Algeria, schools underwent a process of "arabization." This meant a focus on teaching Arabic language and culture. Traditional schools either closed or became incorporated into the state system. Iran, in contrast, had never been colonized. It became increasingly westernized in the mid-20th century, until the Revolution and subsequent Islamization of the state and schools.</p>
	<p>While access to education has improved dramatically in the Middle East in the second half of the 20th century, the public education system tends to suffer from overcrowded classes led by poorly-trained, overworked teachers with inadequate materials. The curriculum is for the most part secular, and when the history of Islam is taught, the goal is not to incite children to violence. Many families must hire private tutors to help children with their end of the year exams, which emphasize the memorization of massive amounts of material. If children fail these exams, they can conceivably remain in the same grade level for as many years as it takes to pass, or they fail to qualify for secondary or post-secondary training of their choice. A very small percentage of families can afford to send their children to private European or American schools in the Middle East, which provide a western-style education.</p> 

</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="teaching-module-item-type-metadata-case-study-author" class="element">
        <h3>Case Study Author</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Heidi Morrison</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="teaching-module-item-type-metadata-strategies" class="element">
        <h3>Strategies</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text"><p>This teaching module provides a wide variety of sources to explore the history of
schooling in the Middle East, a topic that is largely misunderstood in the west. Schools in the Middle East today take various forms, from secular to Islamic. Current research of textbooks in the Middle East finds little in them that could be construed as incitement to violence in the name of religion, or for any other reason.  Many western pundits, politicians, and academics portray schools in the Middle East as breeding grounds for terrorists and Islamic extremists. These schools are also portrayed as unchanging institutions, which implies that they have not evolved since medieval times and that even in medieval times the schools were static.</p>
	<p>The truth is that medieval Islamic schools produced a wealth of knowledge that European scholars translated from Arabic after the 12th century, and incorporated into institutions of higher learning between the 14th and 16th centuries. Furthermore, in today's world, schools in the Middle East take various forms, from secular to Islamic. Current research of textbooks in the Middle East finds little in them that could be construed as incitement to violence in the name of religion, or for any other reason. Wherever military struggle is mentioned, it is always in the context of defense against an aggressor.</p>	
	<p>With the first four sources, encourage students to explore the various characteristics of schooling in the Middle East in medieval times. In regards to the emphasis on memorization, students should understand that there were scholars who challenged this accepted method, such as Ibn Khaldun. Likewise, students should themselves grapple with finding the strengths in a method of instruction that emphasizes memorization. Do students agree with the Ottoman reformers who thought that a modern nation must have an educational system similar to Europe's? Do students think that the various early 20th-century Middle Eastern reformers' justification for schooling girls marked a step towards modernization?</p>
	<p>They key problem governments in the Middle East face today in regards to the educational system is not extremism, but rather identity crisis, underfunding, and conflict. The article on schools in Algeria since independence shows that colonization created an abused collective psyche that initially sought to heal itself through insulation. Might the educational system in Iraq be on a similar path? What evidence do we have that people in the Middle East value education, despite the challenges they have faced in its pursuit in the 20th century?</p> 


<h3>Discussion Questions</h3>
<ul>
<li>Look at the two ijazahs (diplomas) from medieval times. Even without reading the Arabic, what stands out to you most about them?  For a system of education that emphasized rote memorization, do you discern a sense of creativity?<br />
<br />
<em>Possible answer:</em> 
<br />
Creativity can perhaps be discerned in the designs on the diplomas and the difference in appearance between the two. The annotation also mentioned that the diplomas used individualized flattery.</li>

<li>Imagine you are in a debate with Ibn Khadlun. Present an opposing argument, including in your stance some of the merits to memorization that el-Baghdadi lists in his autobiography as well as some of the achievements medieval Islamic society made for humankind as a whole.</li>

<li>Envisage yourself a student in a medieval <em>maktab</em>: Who would be in your class with you? What would you learn? How would your progress be evaluated?  To what might you aspire in terms of higher education?</li>

<li>Arguably, schools can be viewed as a means of controlling a population. Provide examples of how this has been attempted through physical and intellectual means, particularly under colonialism and the independent nation-state.<br /> 
<br />
<em>Possible answer</em>: 
<br />
Some examples to include in the answer would be: schools were funded by endowments in the medieval period and the benefactors set the curriculum; as the <em>devshirme</em> illustration indicates, when first conscripted, the boys were dressed in red to avoid their escape; and, the reform of education during the <em>tanzimat</em> was for the sake of the nation and military; education under the colonists was intended to benefit the British; education in post-independence countries had economic and social development as a main goal. Students might also point out instances of where the student is a free agent, such as in medieval times when he would travel from scholar to scholar seeking knowledge. Generally speaking, students can discuss the role that the individual student can play in thinking on his/her own and not being fully controlled.</li>  

<li>After you summarize the <em>New York Times</em> article about education in Algeria, analyze its tone. What approach does the author take to the issue? Do you notice any bias? Does the author leave out any important issues? How do you think context influences content? What information might this article reveal about modern-day US concerns regarding education in the Middle East?</li>   

<li>The podcast on young people's accounts about war in Iraq focuses almost entirely on their experiences with school. What do you think are the advantages and disadvantages to studying political issues through educational institutions?  In your answer, reflect as well on some of the other sources provided.</li>  
</ul>

</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="teaching-module-item-type-metadata-lesson-plan" class="element">
        <h3>Lesson Plan</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text"><h3>Lesson Plan: Education in the Middle East</h3>
<p>by Heidi Morrison</p>
<p><strong>Time Estimated:</strong> two to three 45-minute classes</p>
<h3>Objectives</h3>
<ol>
<li>Be able to accurately and succinctly summarize a document, in the context of the history of schooling in the Middle East.</li>
<li>Articulate how context influences content, in regard to various documents published over time about schools in the Middle East and also in regards to one's own knowledge.</li> 
<li>Gather information about the history of schooling in the Middle East in order to state characteristics that can be used when grappling with regional stereotypes.</li>
<li>Use the information about the history of education in the Middle East to formulate opinions on current-day debates about education's role in society.</li>
</ol> 


<h3>Materials</h3>

<p>Students must come to class already having read the primary documents (in the case of the podcast, listened to it and recorded notes). For this lesson, students will need a hard copy of the documents and/or their notes. A notebook, paper, and pen are also required.</p>     

<h3>Hook</h3> 
<p>Share with the students this quote from a widely-cited article in the <em>New York Times Magazine</em> reporting that in Pakistan, "There are one million students studying in the country's 10,000 or so <em>madrasas</em>, and militant Islam is at the core of most of these schools." <a href="#note1" id="fn1" class="footnote">1</a> Tell students that other commentators have suspected that an equally militant spirit pervades schools in predominately Muslim countries.</p> 
<p>Ask students what comes to mind when they think about schools in the Middle East, a predominately Muslim area of the world. Have them write down their thoughts anonymously and collect them to read out loud. They may mention variations of such terms as "jihad factories" or "backwards" or "outposts of medievalism." If these subjects come up, ask students to speculate about how and why schools in the Middle East have developed such negative associations with extremism.</p> 

<h3>Instruct</h3> 
<p>Explain to students that they will learn about the history of schools in the Middle East. They will study primary sources that will help them understand the characteristics of schools in the pre-modern Middle East as well as the contemporaneous debates around schools. They will also study primary sources that will help them understand the changes that these schools have undergone in entering the modern era. This lesson will help students formulate an informed image of schools in the Middle East, which is the ultimate goal of the <a class="external" href="http://chnm.gmu.edu/cyh/teaching-modules/459?section=dbq">Document Based Question</a>.</p> 

<p><em>First Activity</em><br /> 
The first activity will focus on piecing together information from the various sources about how schools functioned in the pre-modern Middle East.</p>

<p>Divide the class into four groups. Tell them that each group will be assigned part of the larger project that is to create an imaginary 11-year old male pupil living in the Middle East in the 10th century. After each group completes their part of the project, they will present to the entire class. Every student in the class is responsible for learning all components of the material. Assign each group one of the following topics to describe in detail about the virtual student and tell them to base their answers on the first four sources provided in this module:</p>
<ul>
<li>Why he goes to school;</li>
<li>What he learns in school;</li>
<li>How he is taught in school;</li>
<li>His aspirations for the future.</li>
</ul>
<br />
<p><em>Second Activity</em><br />Students will be challenged to advance their understanding of the history of schools in the Middle East, as well as to improve their critical reading skills.</p> 
<p>Divide the class into six groups and assign each group one source from sources 6–12 to summarize. Tell students to pay attention to what the sources say about changes schools in the Middle East have undergone in the modern era.  When the students are ready, have them present their group summaries to the class.</p> 
<p>Now tell the students that there is as much information in what sources from what they don't say as in what they say. Tell the students to return to their groups and decipher new information based on what is not included in their source. When the students are ready, have them present their ideas to the class.</p> 
<p>A final step to this activity is to have the students return to their groups and talk together about how context influences content. Students should discuss how the information they garnered from the documents was influenced by what they know about the author of the source and/or what was happening in society at the time of its production. This discussion should force students to reevaluate the information they presented to the class thus far. Each group should do one final presentation to the class about what they know from their assigned document about education in the Middle East in the modern era.</p>     
<p><em>Third Activity</em><br /> Students will synthesize what they covered in the last two activities.</p>

<p>In a general class discussion, have the students recap what they find to be the main characteristics of education in the Middle East over the pre-modern and modern eras.</p>  
<p>After this is completed, tell students there are many ways in which the history of education (as a field) contributes to current-day debates. Now that students possess a wide breadth of knowledge about the history of schools in the Middle East, ask them to articulate their opinions on the following topics:<br />
<ul> 
<li>Do you think that schools are a means of controlling a given population?</li>
<li>What do you think are the best pedagogical tools for learning?</li>
<li>How does access to education, or lack thereof, impact society?</li>
</ul></p>

<p>Many students may have a tendency to base their opinions about these questions on their experience/knowledge of schooling in the west. Ask the students to formulate opinions in the framework of their knowledge of the history of schooling in the Middle East. This exercise will force students to integrate what may have previously been foreign to them (schooling in the Middle East) into how they construct their worldview.</p> 

<p>If there is time, conclude by telling students to "shift gears" and write down all the associations that come to mind when they hear the words "women in the Middle East" or "religion in the Middle East." Listen to their responses and ask why you might conclude a lesson on schooling in the Middle East with such a question. Encourage students to take away from this module not only information about schooling in the Middle East and an exposure to larger interdisciplinary debates on education, but also an awareness that just as the texts are shaped by their context, so too is our knowledge.</p>
 <hr />   
<div id="notes">
<p><a href="#fn1" id="note1" class="footnote">1</a> Goldberg, "Inside Jihad U.; The Education of a Holy Warrior," <em>New York Times Magazine</em>, June 25, 2000.</p>
</div>
</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="teaching-module-item-type-metadata-primary-sources" class="element">
        <h3>Primary Sources</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">460, 461, 462, 463, 464, 465, 466, 467, 468, 469, 470, 471</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
        </div><!-- end element-set -->]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 08 Jul 2010 04:26:39 +0000</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title><![CDATA[New Zealand, Maoris at Their Talking House [Photograph]]]></title>
      <link>http://chnm.gmu.edu/cyh/items/show/458</link>
      <description><![CDATA[<div class="element-set">
    <h2>Dublin Core</h2>
        <div id="dublin-core-title" class="element">
        <h3>Title</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">New Zealand, Maoris at Their Talking House [Photograph]</div>
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        <h3>Description</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text"><p>The photograph shows Maori men, women, and children arranged for a group portrait on the porch of a <em>whare</em> or <em>wharenui</em> (meeting house) in New Zealand. This ceremonial structure, also called a talking house, and the <em>marae</em> (grassy area in front of it) are central to Maori social order and culture. These typical sacred structures are monuments to tribal ancestors and places that bridge past and present generations. The gathering of children shown in the photograph represents the transmission of a sense of belonging to the lineage and cultivation of that linkage in the new generation. The house represents the sheltering, physical or bodily presence of the family's ancestors in the life of their living descendants. Each part of the structure symbolizes a tribal ancestor's being. At the apex of the gable is a carving called the <em>koruru</em>, or "face of the ancestor." The ridgepole represents the spine. The carved ends of the bargeboards represent the hands of the ancestor, with its design split into fingers. The roof with its outstretched arms embraces the generations of the family within.The interior rafters holding up the roof are the ribs, and the interior space represents the chest and belly where people gather. Carvings and woven wall decorations are also symbolic of the ancestral lineage, recording history through their art. The meeting of the family in the house is an act of remembrance and solidarity extended to all of its members. In the shadow of the ancestors, children would witness important family celebrations and discussion of important decisions.</p>
<p>This historic photograph is featured on a New Zealand postage stamp because of its importance as an element of indigenous cultural heritage. It was taken between 1880 and 1920 by Frank G. Carpenter (1855-1924) or Frances Carpenter (1890-1972). He was an American traveler and writer on cultural anthropology and geography and his daughter Frances illustrated his writings with photographs. Their collection of about 16,800 photographs and 7,000 glass and film negatives is currently housed at the Library of Congress, Washington DC.</p>
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                                    <div class="element-text">Frank and Frances Carpenter Collection, Library of Congress, <a class="external" href="http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.wdl/dlc.496">http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.wdl/dlc.496</a> (accessed March 5, 2009). Annotated by Susan Douglass.</div>
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            <div id="additional-item-metadata-online-submission" class="element">
        <h3>Online Submission</h3>
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        <h3>Posting Consent</h3>
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        <h3>Submission Consent</h3>
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        <h3>Process Review</h3>
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                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Bibliographic Citation</h3>
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        <h3>Spatial Coverage</h3>
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        <h3>Rights Holder</h3>
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        <h3>Provenance</h3>
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        <h3>Temporal Coverage</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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    <h2>Still Image Item Type Metadata</h2>
        <div id="still-image-item-type-metadata-physical-dimensions" class="element">
        <h3>Physical Dimensions</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="still-image-item-type-metadata-image-description" class="element">
        <h3>Image Description</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="still-image-item-type-metadata-related-primary-sources" class="element">
        <h3>Related Primary Sources</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
        </div><!-- end element-set --><div class="item-file image-jpeg"><a class="download-file" href="/cyh/files/download/494/fullsize">Maori.jpg</a></div>]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 08 Jul 2010 01:45:34 +0000</pubDate>
      <enclosure url="http://chnm.gmu.edu/cyh/files/download/494/fullsize" type="image/jpeg" length="72875"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title><![CDATA[American Centuries]]></title>
      <link>http://chnm.gmu.edu/cyh/items/show/457</link>
      <description><![CDATA[<div class="element-set">
    <h2>Dublin Core</h2>
        <div id="dublin-core-title" class="element">
        <h3>Title</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">American Centuries</div>
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        <h3>Source</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Type</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Identifier</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Coverage</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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    <h2>Additional Item Metadata</h2>
        <div id="additional-item-metadata-transcription" class="element">
        <h3>Transcription</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-local-url" class="element">
        <h3>Local URL</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Online Submission</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Posting Consent</h3>
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        <h3>Process Review</h3>
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        <h3>Website Image</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Analyzing Sources</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Publisher</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Creator</h3>
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        <h3>Source</h3>
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                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Bibliographic Citation</h3>
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        <h3>Rights Holder</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Provenance</h3>
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                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Temporal Coverage</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Website URL</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">http://www.americancenturies.mass.edu/home.html</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-website-creator" class="element">
        <h3>Website Creator</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Memorial Hall Museum and Library, Deerfield, Massachusetts</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-date-of-review" class="element">
        <h3>Date of Review</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">May 2010</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-website-review-text" class="element">
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                                    <div class="element-text"><p><a class="external" href="http://www.americancenturies.mass.edu/home.html"><em>American Centuries</em></a> displays items from the collection of the Memorial Hall Museum and Library in Deerfield, Massachusetts.  This museum specializes in 17th-20th century artifacts of the East Coast, and its online exhibits contain many materials about children's and adolescents' lives from the Colonial period onward.</p> 
<p>The website makes its primary appeal to teachers and young students.  In addition to the usual elements of internet archives (images, texts, maps), the site offers <a class="external" href="http://www.memorialhall.mass.edu/activities/index.html">interactive activities</a> where kids can learn more about historical clothing, how to read old manuscripts, and other topics that draw from the museum's holdings.  A section of the site called <a class="external" href="http://www.americancenturies.mass.edu/classroom/index.html">"In the Classroom"</a> offers numerous lesson plans for elementary and middle-school teachers, some written by museum employees and some by schoolteachers themselves, using materials in the online exhibits.</p>  
<p>The exhibits cover multiple aspects of historical New England. Finding materials specific to the histories of youth and childhood is much easier here than in some online archives.  Using the "site search" box, which appears on every page, is not the most efficient approach; better, more focused results come from choosing the <a class="external" href="http://www.memorialhall.mass.edu/collection/search/index.jsp">"Search the Collection"</a> item off the main-page menu. There, typing "children" will yield 488 results that specifically pertain to children's histories, mainly from the 18th and 19th centuries.</p>
 
<p>Even more directly helpful for the young (or old, but impatient) site visitor is the <a class="external" href="http://www.memorialhall.mass.edu/collection/browse/index.jsp">"Highlights"</a> page, which offers artifacts in neatly arranged categories and sub-categories. The <a class="external" href="http://www.memorialhall.mass.edu/collection/browse/index.jsp?category=6">"Children"</a>  category is the obvious place to start; here, one can find images and information in the sub-categories of <a class="external" href="http://www.memorialhall.mass.edu/collection/browse/results.jsp?subcategoryid=33">children's toys</a>, <a class="external" href="http://www.memorialhall.mass.edu/collection/browse/results.jsp?subcategoryid=35">clothing</a>, <a class="external" href="http://www.memorialhall.mass.edu/collection/browse/results.jsp?subcategoryid=34">furniture</a>, <a class="external" href="http://www.memorialhall.mass.edu/collection/browse/results.jsp?subcategoryid=36">schoolbooks</a>, and even children's own <a class="external" href="http://www.memorialhall.mass.edu/collection/browse/results.jsp?subcategoryid=38">handiwork</a>.  The individual pages for each artifact all include an icon called "Look closer"; once clicked, this icon opens a second window with a sophisticated zoom feature, offering several different degrees of close-up views for the artifact.  This smart device allows site-visitors an even more detailed inspection of the artifacts than they could glean in an actual museum, where exhibits are separated from visitors by glass and several feet of space.  Many of these artifacts are so exceptionally well-preserved that the zoom feature is especially pleasurable; we can revel in the joy of inspecting the hand-painted decoration on an <a class="external" href="http://www.memorialhall.mass.edu/collection/itempage.jsp?itemid=6309">1835 baby carriage</a>, or the careful stitching on a <a class="external" href="http://www.memorialhall.mass.edu/collection/itempage.jsp?itemid=53">hand-made cloth doll</a> from 1887.</p> 

<p>Artifacts like the antique clothing and dolls are immediately charming; others can be either a bit disturbing, or darkly amusing. The 19th century <a class="external" href="http://www.americancenturies.mass.edu/collection/itempage.jsp?itemid=5189">"baby tender,"</a> for example, looks more like a packing crate for produce than a modern play-pen, while the hand-made <a class="external" href="http://www.americancenturies.mass.edu/collection/itempage.jsp?itemid=11613">"Twin Potty-Chair"</a> makes us wonder: should twins really do <em>everything</em> together?</p>
<p>The most intriguingly named sub-category, <a class="external" href="http://www.memorialhall.mass.edu/collection/browse/results.jsp?subcategoryid=38">"Children's creations,"</a> shows the woodworking and needleworking products of young people. One item—a <a class="external" href="http://www.americancenturies.mass.edu/collection/itempage.jsp?itemid=8994">stitched sampler</a>—was made by a nine-year-old girl. The other displayed items appear to have been fashioned by people in their late teens, who might not have been considered "children" at the time (1790s-1810s).  Still, the degree of skill demonstrated in these creations suggests the many hours of practice that these young artisans must have logged in their earlier years; the images therefore attest to the activities of childhood at the turn of the 19th century. </p> 
<p>Do not, however, restrict yourself to the "Children" category of the "Highlights" page; the other categories there also include materials about children, mixed-in with the larger collections of artifacts. As just one example, the <a class="external" href="http://www.americancenturies.mass.edu/collection/browse/index.jsp?category=8">"Documents"</a> category offers many texts used in children's schools (different selections from the ones displayed in the Children category). <a class="external" href="http://www.americancenturies.mass.edu/collection/itempage.jsp?itemid=11623">"Learning by Doing at Hampton"</a> allows viewers to see sixteen pages from a 1900 pamphlet about the The Hampton Institute in Virginia, a school where freed African-American and Native American children were taught the customs and values of White society as a means of acculturation.   There you can also see pages of a teenage boy's <a class="external" href="http://www.americancenturies.mass.edu/collection/itempage.jsp?itemid=12661"> "copy book,"</a> with his penmanship, scholarship, and artistic skills displayed, as well as many other documents about children's lives as young scholars. 
The Documents category also features a <a class="external" href="http://www.americancenturies.mass.edu/collection/browse/results.jsp?subcategoryid=51">"Journals and Diaries"</a> sub-category, which contains several pages of text from the <a class="external" href="http://www.americancenturies.mass.edu/collection/itempage.jsp?itemid=15412">1859-1860 diary</a> of a twelve-year-old girl.  The <a class="external" href="http://www.americancenturies.mass.edu/collection/browse/results.jsp?subcategoryid=49">"Women's Lives"</a> subcategory contains some other material relevant to the study of teenage girls, like the few pages scanned from a girls' 1830 instruction book: <a class="external" href="http://www.americancenturies.mass.edu/collection/itempage.jsp?itemid=7470"><em>The Young Ladies Book: A Manual of Elegant Recreations, Exercises, and Pursuits</em></a>, with rules for proper sitting, dancing, standing, and curtseying.</p>
<p>Nearly every section of the "American Centuries" site contains materials about children and youth, including photographs of children in school, at play, and among their families from the late 19th to early 20th centuries (<a class="external" href="http://www.americancenturies.mass.edu/collection/itempage.jsp?itemid=4068">this one</a> shows a family in 1895 playing croquet on their front lawn).</p> 
<p>With its easy navigability, superb detail in images and texts, and rich resources for students and teachers, this site is one of the best internet collections available for the study of childhood and youth in Eastern US history.</p> 
  

</div>
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            <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-website-reviewer" class="element">
        <h3>Website Reviewer</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Ilana Nash</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">Western Michigan University</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">In addition to the usual elements of internet archives (images, texts, maps), the site offers interactive activities where kids can learn more about historical clothing, how to read old manuscripts, and other topics that draw from the museum's holdings.</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
        </div><!-- end element-set --><div class="item-file image-jpeg"><a class="download-file" href="/cyh/files/download/493/fullsize"><img src="/cyh/files/display/493/square_thumbnail" class="thumb" alt="American Centuries" width="250" height="250"/>
</a></div>]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 07 Jul 2010 22:45:01 +0000</pubDate>
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      <title><![CDATA[Cartoons]]></title>
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                                    <div class="element-text">http://www.cartoons.ac.uk/</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
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        <h3>Website Creator</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">British Cartoon Archive at the University of Kent</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
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        <h3>Date of Review</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">June 2010</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
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                                    <div class="element-text"><p><a class="external" href="http://www.cartoons.ac.uk/"><em>Cartoons</em></a> is a website produced by the British Cartoon Archive, a collection based at the University of Kent (England), dedicated to cartooning in newspapers and other forms of publication in Britain over the  past century. It has a collection of around 150,000 cartoons drawn by approximately 300 cartoonists. This site provides students and teachers alike with a way of enlivening their approach to British political and social history as well as the history of children and youth. The website has a huge amount of material available, and it is well organized to help the researcher find cartoons from a particular cartoonist, or on a particular theme.</p> 

<p>The alphabetical list of cartoonists in the <a class="external" href="http://www.cartoons.ac.uk/artists">Biographies</a> section will include some names familiar to anyone brought up in Britain – and many others they will never have heard of. Fortunately the names of the most famous ones (and the most important newspapers that published them) are specified in the Search section, which helps to orientate the researcher. The site gives a brief biography of each artist, written with a nice light touch. For example, we learn that <a class="external" href="http://www.cartoons.ac.uk/artists/barryfantoni/biography">Barry Fantoni</a> was thrown out of Camberwell School of Arts and Crafts in 1958, accused of  "wrecking the home of one of the teachers in a state of drunken madness." Fortunately for him, he was able to continue at the renowned Slade School of Art, and achieve fame and fortune as a pop artist as well as a cartoonist. A particular feature of the Archive is the <a class="external" href="http://www.cartoons.ac.uk/collections/CG">Carl Giles Collection</a> donated by the artist in 2005. This reviewer must confess to looking forward to seeing his cartoon in the <em>Sunday Express</em> each week during the 1950s and 1960s. His most famous creation was the Giles Family, a "bizarre fantasy," according to the biography, "of a working-class household living a comfortable middle-class life." The outstanding character was surely Grandma Giles, a ferocious looking character whose "anarchic vitality" led to her being heavily into drinking and betting. Also familiar to many will be the figure of <a class="external" href="http://www.cartoons.ac.uk/search/cartoon_item/Andy%20Capp?personalities_text[]=Andy%20Capp">Andy Capp</a>, drawn by <a class="external" href="http://www.cartoons.ac.uk/search/cartoon_item/Reg%20Smythe">Reg Smythe</a> under orders to appeal to readers in the north of England. Andy Capp, according to the biography of Smythe, emerged as the "flat-capped, pigeon-fancying, beer-swilling, work-shy northerner," with views on marriage going back to the "Neolithic Age."</p>

<p>The <a class="external" href="http://www.cartoons.ac.uk/search-catalogue">Search</a> facility allows one to choose among numerous subjects. Each cartoon includes: a reference number, caption, embedded text (picking out detail not easily read in the reproduction), notes, the people depicted, and the subjects covered. The very abundance of the material may be a problem, especially as much of it will probably not appear useful to the modern reader. There are, for example, 6,099 entries under the heading of <a class="external" href="http://www.cartoons.ac.uk/search/cartoon_item/Children">Children</a>. In some cases, the cartoonist wishes to comment on events in contemporary society. W.K. Haselden, for example, turned out dozens of cartoons under this heading during the 1900s. Concerns over the declining birth rate in 1905 led the cartoonist to envisage a future in which babies become rare specimens, exhibited in cages and labelled "born in the managerie" (ref. WHO1490). In other cases, it is a matter of poking fun at politicians by depicting them as juveniles. "A row in the play-ground," by John Doyle, reduces politics in the 1830s to squabbling between Melbourne, Peel, Wellington and others (ref. mudyx9t). The cataloguers have provided numerous headings related to childhood and youth, such as <a class="external" href="http://www.cartoons.ac.uk/search/cartoon_item/Girls">girls</a>, <a class="external" href="http://www.cartoons.ac.uk/search/cartoon_item/childhood%20romance">childhood romance</a>, <a class="external" href="http://www.cartoons.ac.uk/search/cartoon_item/schools">schools</a>, <a class="external" href="http://www.cartoons.ac.uk/search/cartoon_item/schoolboys">schoolboys</a>, <a class="external" href="http://www.cartoons.ac.uk/search/cartoon_item/juvenile%20delinquency">juvenile delinquency</a>, and <a class="external" href="http://www.cartoons.ac.uk/search/cartoon_item/mothers">mothers</a>. Again the researcher will need to sift through the material to separate cartoons focused on that heading in particular from those with only a passing allusion.</p>

<p>The site includes advice on creating a group of cartoons as a teaching pack, to illustrate a particular theme. It provides a number of these but it is doubtless best to create your own, as the site advises. The site also points out in a section on <a class="external" href="http://www.cartoons.ac.uk/teaching-aids">Teaching Aids</a> that "sophisticated searching" allows one to see, for example, what was happening on a specific day in history, by assembling all the cartoons that appeared in the newspapers on that day, or to grasp how politicians or major personalities (such as <a class="external" href="http://www.cartoons.ac.uk/search/cartoon_item/Princess%20Diana">Princess Diana</a>, with 321 entries) were perceived. This section promises five "resource packages" linked to themes in the British schools curriculum, and resources to help in the reading and analysis of cartoons. There is a section on <a class="external" href="http://www.cartoons.ac.uk/article">Articles</a> to help the teacher or researcher, though it remained obstinately stuck on "G" whenever consulted by this reviewer.</p> 

<p>Overall, it is clear that a great deal of thought and effort has gone into making the vast collection of material available to the public, and into supporting the cartoons with relevant background information. The standard of presentation and the layout are excellent. It will need an awareness of the political stance of the newspapers involved to make much sense, and a feel for popular culture in Britain. Still, it is a cornucopia of delights.</p>
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                                    <div class="element-text">Colin Heywood</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">The University of Nottingham</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">This site provides students and teachers alike with a way of enlivening their approach to British political and social history as well as the history of children and youth. </div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
        </div><!-- end element-set --><div class="item-file image-jpeg"><a class="download-file" href="/cyh/files/download/492/fullsize">Cartoons.jpg</a></div>]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 07 Jul 2010 03:58:35 +0000</pubDate>
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    <item>
      <title><![CDATA[Hidden Lives Revealed: A Virtual Archive]]></title>
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                                    <div class="element-text">Hidden Lives Revealed: A Virtual Archive</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">http://www.hiddenlives.org.uk/</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">The Children's Society</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">June 2010</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text"><p><a class="external" href="http://www.hiddenlives.org.uk/"><em>Hidden Lives Revealed: A Virtual Archive – Children in Care 1881-1918</em></a> is an attractive and well-organized website. It bills itself as an "intriguing encounter with children who were in the care of the Children's Society in late Victorian and early 20th-century Britain."</p> 
<p>At its heart is a collection of <a class="external" href="http://www.hiddenlives.org.uk/photographs/index.html">photographs</a>, <a class="external" href="http://www.hiddenlives.org.uk/cases/index.html">case files</a>, and <a class="external" href="http://www.hiddenlives.org.uk/learning_materials/index.html">learning materials</a> from one of the many philanthropic societies dedicated to the care of children in Britain at this period. Most of the archive material was previously unavailable to the public, as might be expected with files giving personal details of children who were in care – though of course the anonymity of the children is respected. "No other Internet archive," it asserts, "gives you the opportunity to browse through such unique material – a kind of resource which has the type of information not recorded elsewhere."</p> 
<p>Perhaps this is so. In any case, it can claim quite reasonably that it offers something for those studying Victorian history or for university students interested in social work. The Waifs and Strays' Society, later known as the Children's Society, is rather overshadowed in the history books by the Barnardo Homes: further proof, if needed, of the aggressive publicity campaigns that have earned Dr. Barnardo a certain notoriety among historians. <a href="#note1" id="fn1" class="footnote">1</a></p> 
<p>A brief <a class="external" href="http://www.hiddenlives.org.uk/articles/history.html">History of the Waifs and Strays' Society</a> in a section of the website entitled <a class="external" href="http://www.hiddenlives.org.uk/articles/index.html"><em>Articles</em></a> usefully provides background information. (A link to the website of today's <a class="external" href="http://www.childrenssociety.org.uk/"><em>The Children's Society</em></a> provides further details for those interested.) The Society was founded in London in 1881 by a civil servant and Sunday school teacher named Edward Rudolf.</p> 
<p>Rudolf aimed to set up a central home for the poorest and most neglected children cared for by the Church of England. It made a particular point of integrating its homes with the local community, aided by the parish organizations of the Anglican church. Other articles, incidentally, give a short biography of the founder, and introductions to poverty, juvenile delinquency and reformatories during the Victorian era. There is a concise and reasonably up-to-date <a class="external" href="http://www.hiddenlives.org.uk/bibliography.html"><em>Bibliography</em></a> in these areas as well. <a href="#note1" id="fn2" class="footnote">2</a></p>
<p> <a class="external" href="http://www.hiddenlives.org.uk/photographs/index.html"><em>Photographs</em></a> is divided into 12 sections, covering such areas as the work, schooling, pets, clothing, illnesses and disabilities, and sporting activities. Each photograph is carefully documented with a date, location, creator, and description. <a class="external" href="http://www.hiddenlives.org.uk/homes/index.html"><em>The Homes</em></a> includes photographs and a detailed description. By 1918 the society had a total of 175 homes. These photographs inevitably look a bit grim now, though the society did have a policy of providing a family atmosphere in homes of around 10 children aged five to 14.</p> 
<p>The sample of about 150 <a class="external" href="http://www.hiddenlives.org.uk/cases/index.html"><em>Case Files</em></a> will interest those who want a feel for historical research. Each one contains the detailed application form, including information on family background, health, education, current circumstances, and reasons for application. There is also interesting supplementary material in the form of personal letters, photographs, and school reports. All of these documents are reproduced in the original, and (mercifully) transcribed in print form. They can be browsed by keyword, running from <a class="external" href="http://www.hiddenlives.org.uk/cgi-bin/childsoc-cgi.pl?csocsection=cases&query=Abandonment+">"Abandonment"</a> to <a class="external" href="http://www.hiddenlives.org.uk/cgi-bin/childsoc-cgi.pl?csocsection=cases&query=World+War+I">"World War I ."</a></p> 
<p>An example under <a class="external" href="http://www.hiddenlives.org.uk/cgi-bin/childsoc-cgi.pl?csocsection=cases&query=Running+away" >"Running Away"</a> documents a <a class="external" href="http://www.hiddenlives.org.uk/cgi-bin/displayrec.pl?searchtext=Running+away+++Croydon&record=/cases/case2716.html">girl</a> who ran away from a home in Croydon, claiming ill treatment and concerns about having her hair cut off because of lice. The file even includes a reproduction of a <a class="external" href="http://www.hiddenlives.org.uk/caseimages/2716_4_1.html">Christmas card</a> sent by her brother in 1891. Finally, there is a collection of <a class="external" href="http://www.hiddenlives.org.uk/learning_materials/index.html"><em>Learning Materials</em></a>, with exercises to find out "what it was like to be REALLY poor in Victorian and Edwardian times." A sub-section, entitled <a class="external" href="http://www.hiddenlives.org.uk/learning_materials/poverty/index.html"><em>Rescued from Poverty</em></a> has, for example, a fact file and questions for students concerning life on the streets and "who would you choose?"</p>
<p>Inevitably with this kind of website, the society responsible gives a positive view of its activities. One might wish to ask further questions such as: whether the laundries and other commercial activities in the homes risked becoming exploitative, the relations between children and those running the homes, and why the photographs suggest that all the girls became maids and the boys soldiers! All the same, the Society is to be commended for providing a very approachable educational site, and for its innovative approach to publicizing its existence.</p>            
<div id="notes">
<p><a href="#fn1" id="note1" class="footnote">1</a> See, for example: Jean Heywood, <em>Children in Care Children in Care</em>,  3rd ed. (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1978), ch. 4; Seth Koven, <em>Slumming: Sexual and Social Politics in Victorian London</em> (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2004), ch. 2.</p>
<p><a href="#fn1" id="note2" class="footnote">2</a> It might also have included Eric Hopkins, <em>Childhood Transformed: Working-Class Children in Nineteenth-Century England</em> (Manchester: Manchester University Press,1994), and Heather Shore, <em>Artful Dodgers: Youth and Crime in Early Nineteenth Century London</em> (Woodbridge, Suffolk: The Boydell Press,1999). </p>
</div> 
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            <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-website-reviewer" class="element">
        <h3>Website Reviewer</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Colin Heywood</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">The University of Nottingham</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">At its heart is a collection of photographs, case files, and learning materials from one of the many philanthropic societies dedicated to the care of children in Britain at this period. </div>
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        </div><!-- end element-set --><div class="item-file image-jpeg"><a class="download-file" href="/cyh/files/download/490/fullsize"><img src="/cyh/files/display/490/square_thumbnail" class="thumb" alt="Hidden Lives Revealed: A Virtual Archive" width="250" height="250"/>
</a></div>]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 07 Jul 2010 02:53:20 +0000</pubDate>
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      <title><![CDATA[Trust Territory Photo Archives]]></title>
      <link>http://chnm.gmu.edu/cyh/items/show/453</link>
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                                    <div class="element-text">http://libweb.hawaii.edu/digicoll/ttp/ttpi.html and http://digicoll.manoa.hawaii.edu/ttphotos/
</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">University of Hawaii</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">November 2003</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text"><p><a class="external" href="http://libweb.hawaii.edu/digicoll/ttp/ttpi.html">Trust Territory Photo Archives</a> contains 6,000 images selected from an archive of 52,000 photographs and slides documenting the American period in Micronesia between 1947 and 1988. It provides details on the Trust Territory Photograph Collection and links to information on the Trust Territories today, mostly in the form of government websites.</p>
<p>The Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands comprises three major Micronesian archipelagoes in the Pacific Ocean. These groups of islands, the Marshalls, Carolines, and Marianas, came under the control of the United States as a United Nations (UN) strategic trusteeship following World War II. This was one of 11 trusteeships established across the world by the UN at this time covering areas once controlled by defeated powers. The Trust Territory is unusual within an international context because the transitional arrangement remained in effect until 1990. The territories remain strongly tied to the United States, with the islands of the Northern Marianas designated U.S. commonwealth territory, and the other three localities (the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic Of Palau) in compacts of "free association" with the United States, which controls their defense.</p> 
<p>The images in the collection are an extensive record of American views of Micronesian peoples, society, and culture and of the interaction between the United States and the Trust Territories. The photographs were mostly taken by those either employed by the government or closely associated with it. While the photographs are extremely diverse, a sense of the focus of the collection can be gained by the "Photo Gallery Displays." This presents nine broadly defined topics from the collection as a useful introduction to the material. They include themes such as "Parades," "Dancing," "Health/Hospitals," and "Architecture." The disadvantage of this function is the lack of any caption to identify or contextualize the photographs, rendering the collection of "Leaders," for example, largely meaningless for anyone not familiar with the politics of the region. The same photographs can be accessed through the search function, however.</p> 
<p>The archive contains a large number of photographs of children. Searches of "boy" (94), "girl"(144), "child" (43), "children" (172), "infant" (2), "family" (26), "play" (7), and "school" (529).  These results are indicative of good captioning and a well designed database. The images appear as thumbnails linked to a larger version with metadata, and even a means of adding user comments that must be accompanied by a name and/or e-mail address. The search results yielded photographs of children going about their normal lives with their families, in groups in the landscape, creating crafts, and participating in community or national activities.</p>
<p>Although the photographs are captioned and dated, these captions do not provide very much context. By comparing dates, settings, and the type of activity, these photographs of children document a transformation of individual and communal life under the influence of Americans. Images of a child at a well, shelling copra, your girls weaving, or a family preparing breadfruit seem to show a life that was closer to the period before contact. Other images show hospital and school buildings, girl scout troops, a home-made processions for visiting dignitaries and a general regimentation of communal life around nascent nationhood.</p>
<p>One striking difference among the photographs, which are identified with various islands, is the transition from traditional customs of dress for boys and girls to the wearing of European-style dresses and pants for boys. The archive includes many scenes of traditional line dancing in grass or wrapped fabric skirts, flowers and jewelry, in which young girls did not wear bodices. Other images show the girls performing similar dances wearing ruffled dresses with bodices, made from imported cotton fabrics. Girl Scout uniforms, nurses' attire, and formal European dress mark other images, especially of official scenes. The images show that children's dance and song performances were incorporated into national cultural displays, to which flag processions and other symbols were added.</p>
<p>Scholarly interest in the issue of imperialism with reference to the United States has paid less attention to the question of Micronesia than to other locations, such as the Philippines. The advantage of this site is that it provides extensive primary sources related to this issue. For students of world history it provides a visual record of cultural contact in a situation of quasi-colonialism that continued well into the 20th century.</p>
<p>In this regard, Robert Aldrich and John Connell's <em>The Last Colonies</em> <a href="#note1" id="fn1" class="footnote">1</a> is a particularly useful companion to the site for teachers of world history interested in using it in this way. Aldrich and Connell situate Micronesia within a global discussion of territories formally dependent upon metropolitan powers. Given the relative unfamiliarity of many students with this topic and region, teachers may find the following resources useful: Gary Smith, <em>Micronesia: Decolonisation and U.S. Military Interests in the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands</em> takes a geopolitical perspective and argues that U.S. control over the islands of Micronesia "was the strategic equivalent to the Soviet Union's control over Eastern Europe." <a href="#note2" id="fn2" class="footnote">2</a> For Smith, local demands for self-determination were sacrificed to U.S. strategic and defense interests. Francis X. Hezel's <em>The New Shape of Old Island Cultures: A Half Century of Social Change in Micronesia</em> <a href="#note3" id="fn3" class="footnote">3</a> explores social history more broadly, is focused on the same period as the site, and makes extensive use of the Photographic Archive.</p>

<div id="notes">
<p><a href="#fn1" id="note1" class="footnote">1</a> Robert Aldrich and John Connell, <em>The Last Colonies</em> (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998).</p>
<p><a href="#fn1" id="note2" class="footnote">2</a> Gary Smith, <em>Micronesia: Decolonisation and U.S. Military Interests in the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands</em> (Canberra: Peace Research Centre, Research School of Pacific Studies, Australian National University, 1991), 3.</p>
<p><a href="#fn1" id="note3" class="footnote">3</a> Francis X. Hezel, <em>The New Shape of Old Island Cultures: A Half Century of Social Change in Micronesia</em> (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 2001).</p>
</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">Kirsten McKenzie</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">University of Sydney</div>
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                                    <div class="element-text">Trust Territory Photo Archives contains 6,000 images documenting the American period in Micronesia between 1947 and 1988. A large number include children. </div>
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        </div><!-- end element-set --><div class="item-file image-jpeg"><a class="download-file" href="/cyh/files/download/499/fullsize"><img src="/cyh/files/display/499/square_thumbnail" class="thumb" alt="Trust Territory Photo Archives" width="250" height="250"/>
</a></div>]]></description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 03 Jul 2010 01:19:20 +0000</pubDate>
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                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="dublin-core-date" class="element">
        <h3>Date</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="dublin-core-contributor" class="element">
        <h3>Contributor</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="dublin-core-rights" class="element">
        <h3>Rights</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-relation" class="element">
        <h3>Relation</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-format" class="element">
        <h3>Format</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-language" class="element">
        <h3>Language</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-type" class="element">
        <h3>Type</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-identifier" class="element">
        <h3>Identifier</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-coverage" class="element">
        <h3>Coverage</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
        </div><!-- end element-set --><div class="element-set">
    <h2>Additional Item Metadata</h2>
        <div id="additional-item-metadata-transcription" class="element">
        <h3>Transcription</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-local-url" class="element">
        <h3>Local URL</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-online-submission" class="element">
        <h3>Online Submission</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-posting-consent" class="element">
        <h3>Posting Consent</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-submission-consent" class="element">
        <h3>Submission Consent</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-process-edit" class="element">
        <h3>Process Edit</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-process-annotate" class="element">
        <h3>Process Annotate</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-process-review" class="element">
        <h3>Process Review</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-website-image" class="element">
        <h3>Website Image</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-analyzing-sources" class="element">
        <h3>Analyzing Sources</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-publisher" class="element">
        <h3>Publisher</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-creator" class="element">
        <h3>Creator</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-source" class="element">
        <h3>Source</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-date" class="element">
        <h3>Date</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-rights" class="element">
        <h3>Rights</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-bibliographic-citation" class="element">
        <h3>Bibliographic Citation</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-spatial-coverage" class="element">
        <h3>Spatial Coverage</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-rights-holder" class="element">
        <h3>Rights Holder</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-provenance" class="element">
        <h3>Provenance</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-citation" class="element">
        <h3>Citation</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-temporal-coverage" class="element">
        <h3>Temporal Coverage</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
        </div><!-- end element-set --><div class="element-set">
    <h2>Website Review Item Type Metadata</h2>
        <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-website-url" class="element">
        <h3>Website URL</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">http://www.siris.si.edu/</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-website-creator" class="element">
        <h3>Website Creator</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Smithsonian Institution</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-date-of-review" class="element">
        <h3>Date of Review</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">May 2010</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-website-review-text" class="element">
        <h3>Website Review Text</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text"><p>The <a class="external" href="http://www.siris.si.edu/">Smithsonian Institution Research Information System</a> (SIRIS) provides access through its <a class="external" href="http://collections.si.edu/search/">Collections Search Center</a> to over 2.3 million records, with 290,000 images, video and sound files from Smithsonian museums, archives, and libraries. More than 10 percent relate to children and youth.</p>

<p>The search engine, designed for researchers rather than the casual browser, is powerful and well organized, allowing both quick access to the collections and an overview of types of media. As this image shows, a user can limit the items by clicking + or –. The number of each item appears in parentheses.</p> 
<p>Three searches are representative of the material on children and youth. <a class="external" href="http://collections.si.edu/search/results.jsp?q=Children">"Children"</a> results in more than 23,000 hits, including photographs and negatives, sculptures, paintings, advertisements, video, sound recordings and texts.</p> 
<p><a class="external" href="http://collections.si.edu/search/results.jsp?view=&dsort=&date.slider=&q=Boy">"Boy"</a> returned 16455 documents, <a class="external" href="http://collections.si.edu/search/results.jsp?view=&dsort=&date.slider=&q=girl">"girl"</a> 20221, and <a class="external" href="http://collections.si.edu/search/results.jsp?view=&dsort=&date.slider=&q=youth">"youth"</a> returned 3005. Some of the results are not associated with images but refer to cataloguing data from a museum, library, or collection. Some of the thumbnail images can be magnified, while others cannot.</p> 
<p>The terms tested above returned anything titled, tagged, or captioned with one of the keywords, or in the case of books, where the word appears in the table of contents or summaries. Much of the material on children included photographs from the late 1800s to the present, most of which are not associated with much information as to provenance or subject.</p> 
<p>Quite a number of the photographs belong to collections of anthropological studies in various parts of the world. Such collections can be researched further under the photographer's name. Such collections would likely appear in books and articles on the subject.</p>
<p>A number of materials are related to soap advertisements – Ivory, Pears, Breck shampoo, and other brands. This material consists of line drawings, advertisements in magazines, trade cards and booklets. Much about the 19th- and 20th-century culture of childhood and motherhood can be learned from these images and texts. A particularly striking advertisement warns the reader that it is very difficult to find anything as pure, and features a stern patriarch leaning over to inspect socks and stacked laundry that his daughter or servant holds timidly.</p> 
<p>These ads took it upon themselves to educate mothers on raising their children, as well as capitalizing on images of sublime motherhood embedded in domestic scenes. On the other hand, an embossed paper Pears' advertising card called <a class="external" href="http://siris-archives.si.edu/ipac20/ipac.jsp?&profile=all&source=~!siarchives&uri=full=3100001~!245205~!0#focus">"You Dirty Boy"</a> features a buxom, no-nonsense woman roughly cleaning the ears of a chagrinned little boy over a basin. Dreamy, out-of-focus images of blond, blue-eyed Breck girls recall ideals of female beauty from only a few decades ago.</p> 
<p>Searching large archives using keywords related to children often brings up surprising items. Children, for example, are frequent subjects of outdoor sculpture, being featured as fountains, as symbols of the virtues, and as capricious traditional bronzes, such as the large, multi-figure statue of the game called "Crack the Whip" by J. Seward Johnson, Jr. Other items include paintings of children, sound recordings of children's songs, songs about children, toys, and ethnographic arts from the National Museum of the American Indian, such as a collection of beaded balls that were fashioned by young girls for eligible young men to whom they were betrothed.</p>
</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-image-file-name" class="element">
        <h3>Image File Name</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-website-reviewer" class="element">
        <h3>Website Reviewer</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Susan Douglass</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-website-reviewer-institution" class="element">
        <h3>Website Reviewer Institution</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">George Mason University</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-pullquote" class="element">
        <h3>Pullquote</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">The Smithsonian Institution Research Information System (SIRIS) provides access through its Collections Search Center to over 2.3 million records, with 290,000 images, video and sound files from Smithsonian museums, archives, and libraries. More than 10 percent relate to children and youth.</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
        </div><!-- end element-set --><div class="item-file image-jpeg"><a class="download-file" href="/cyh/files/download/485/fullsize"><img src="/cyh/files/display/485/square_thumbnail" class="thumb" alt="Smithsonian Institution Research Information System (SIRIS)" width="250" height="250"/>
</a></div>]]></description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 02 Jul 2010 18:56:24 +0000</pubDate>
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      <title><![CDATA[Decisions of the Superior Courts of New South Wales, 1788-1899 ]]></title>
      <link>http://chnm.gmu.edu/cyh/items/show/451</link>
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    <h2>Dublin Core</h2>
        <div id="dublin-core-title" class="element">
        <h3>Title</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Decisions of the Superior Courts of New South Wales, 1788-1899 </div>
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        <h3>Subject</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Creator</h3>
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        <h3>Publisher</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Date</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Contributor</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Rights</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Relation</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Format</h3>
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        <h3>Language</h3>
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        <h3>Type</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Identifier</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Coverage</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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    <h2>Additional Item Metadata</h2>
        <div id="additional-item-metadata-transcription" class="element">
        <h3>Transcription</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="additional-item-metadata-local-url" class="element">
        <h3>Local URL</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-online-submission" class="element">
        <h3>Online Submission</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="additional-item-metadata-posting-consent" class="element">
        <h3>Posting Consent</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="additional-item-metadata-submission-consent" class="element">
        <h3>Submission Consent</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Process Edit</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Process Annotate</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="additional-item-metadata-process-review" class="element">
        <h3>Process Review</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-website-image" class="element">
        <h3>Website Image</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-analyzing-sources" class="element">
        <h3>Analyzing Sources</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="additional-item-metadata-publisher" class="element">
        <h3>Publisher</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Creator</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Source</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Date</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="additional-item-metadata-rights" class="element">
        <h3>Rights</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="additional-item-metadata-bibliographic-citation" class="element">
        <h3>Bibliographic Citation</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="additional-item-metadata-spatial-coverage" class="element">
        <h3>Spatial Coverage</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="additional-item-metadata-rights-holder" class="element">
        <h3>Rights Holder</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Provenance</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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            <div id="additional-item-metadata-citation" class="element">
        <h3>Citation</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
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        <h3>Temporal Coverage</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
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    <h2>Website Review Item Type Metadata</h2>
        <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-website-url" class="element">
        <h3>Website URL</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">http://www.law.mq.edu.au/scnsw/</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-website-creator" class="element">
        <h3>Website Creator</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Division of Law, Macquarie University</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-date-of-review" class="element">
        <h3>Date of Review</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">May 2010</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-website-review-text" class="element">
        <h3>Website Review Text</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text"><p> <a class="external" href="http://www.law.mq.edu.au/scnsw/"><em>Decisions of the Superior Courts of New South Wales, 1788-1899</em></a> was created to publish records of the superior courts of New South Wales with the goal of recovering the records of colonial law. At present it concentrates on the decisions of the Supreme Courts and other courts of unlimited jurisdiction between 1788 and 1841.</p> 
<p>This archival site is challenging to use, but worth the effort. There are several ways to locate information relevant to children. Searches using keywords such as "boy," "girl," "child," "children," and "family," produce a few hits; this should improve as more materials become accessible in digital form.</p> 
<p>Interesting material on children is available, though, by browsing the <a class="external" href="http://www.law.mq.edu.au/scnsw/html/subject_index.htm">subject index</a>. A range of relevant topics emerge, including "child, failure to support," "children, defendants," and "children, evidence by." Other subjects include Aboriginal affairs, family law, infancy, infanticide, marriage of infants, children and oaths, Orphan School, and schools (and education laws).</p>
<p>"Other features" presents cases and groups of documents, such as <a class="external" href="http://www.law.mq.edu.au/scnsw/Correspondence/index.htm">Justice Burton's collected documents concerning Aborigines 1797-1840</a>. This includes the key law that resulted in the "Stolen Generation," <a class="external" href="http://www.law.mq.edu.au/scnsw/Correspondence/pdf/OriginalDocument5.pdf">Original Document 5</a>, "Proclamations &c Black Natives Establishment of Institution for Children Government and General Orders Government House Sydney: 10th December 1814." This law provided for the "civilizing" of the Aboriginal people by placing their children into state-run schools.</p> 
<p>Photographs, recollections, legal records and commentary tell this harrowing story. Records document the school/orphanages that housed and educated Aboriginal children, warehousing them in military-style schools where they often lost touch with their identities and families. The schools trained boys for low-skilled work and girls for domestic service. An especially interesting feature is <em>Dawn Magazine</em>, "An introduction to the public face of the Aborigines Welfare Board (1952–1969) and the photos it reproduced."</p>
<p>Two factors about the public use of the site are noteworthy. First, many of the archives on Aboriginal communities are closed for 100 years due to sensitivity about the treatment of indigenous peoples of Australia who were deprived of their rights over their culture, lands, bodies, and children. The site also offers a finding aid for genealogical searches. New South Wales was the staging ground for the settlement of Australia by convicts brought from overcrowded British prisons. Many contemporary Aussies may be able to trace their genealogy back to those original settlers through the site.</p>
<p>This is a site that will increase in usefulness on children and other topics as the archive becomes more complete. In the meantime, dedicated searching will reveal significant material on the laws and implementation of those laws affecting many aspects of the lives of children.</p>

</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-image-file-name" class="element">
        <h3>Image File Name</h3>
                    <div class="element-text-empty">[no text]</div>
            </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-website-reviewer" class="element">
        <h3>Website Reviewer</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Susan Douglass</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-website-reviewer-institution" class="element">
        <h3>Website Reviewer Institution</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">George Mason University</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="website-review-item-type-metadata-pullquote" class="element">
        <h3>Pullquote</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Interesting material on children is available, though, by browsing the subject index. A range of relevant topics emerge, including "child, failure to support," "children, defendants," and "children, evidence by." Other subjects include Aboriginal affairs, family law, infancy, infanticide, marriage of infants, children and oaths, Orphan School, and schools (and education laws).</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
        </div><!-- end element-set --><div class="item-file image-jpeg"><a class="download-file" href="/cyh/files/download/481/fullsize"><img src="/cyh/files/display/481/square_thumbnail" class="thumb" alt="Decisions of the Superior Courts of New South Wales, 1788-1899 " width="250" height="250"/>
</a></div>]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 30 Jun 2010 16:02:51 +0000</pubDate>
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