A 'common school' was a
public school in
United States in the
nineteenth century. The term 'common school' was coined by
Horace Mann, and refers to the fact that they were meant to serve individuals of all social classes and religions.
Students often went to the common school from ages six to fourteen (predecessor of grades 1-8), although this could vary widely.
The duration of the school year was often dictated by the
agricultural needs of particular communities, with children being off when they would be needed on the family farm.
Common schools were funded by
local taxes, did not charge
tuition, and were open to all children, at least all white children. Typically, with a small amount of state oversight, each district was controlled by an elected local
school board; traditionally a county school superintendent or regional director was elected to supervise day-to-day activities of several common school districts.
Since common schools were locally controlled, and the United States was very rural in the nineteenth century, most common schools were small
one-room schools. They typically had a single teacher (usually female) and all the students were taught together, regardless of age. Common school districts were nominally subject to their creator, either a county
commission or a
state regulatory agency.
Rural common schools of the nineteenth century differed from urban "charity" schools of the same period both in terms of organizational structure and funding sources.
Curriculum
Common schools typically taught
The three Rs (reading, writing, and arithmetic),
history,
geography, and
math. Evaluation of students was very varied (from 0-100 grading to no grades at all), but an end-of-the-year
recital was a common way that parents were informed about what their children were learning.
Although common schools were designed by Mann to be
nonsectarian, there were several fierce battles, most notably in
New York and
Philadelphia, where
Roman Catholic immigrants and Indians objected to the use of the
King James Version of the Bible. Even without Bible readings, most common schools taught children the general
Protestant values (e.g.,
work ethic) of nineteenth-century America.
Common School Era
The 'common school era' is viewed by many education scholars to have ended around
1900. In the early
twentieth century, schools generally became more regional (as opposed to local), and control of schools moved away from elected school boards, and towards professional control. Because common schools were not a
special-purpose district, voters often decided in called
elections to join independent or
unified school district.
Reference
Pillars of the Republic: Common schools and American society, 1780-1860, , Carl, Kaestle, Hill and Wang, 1983,