Abbreviation | I.K.U. |
---|---|
Successor | Childhood Education International |
Founder | Sarah Stewart |
Founded at | Saratoga Springs, New York, U.S. |
Fields | Kindergarten |
International Kindergarten Union (I.K.U.) (successor, Childhood Education International) was an American organization established at Saratoga Springs, New York, in 1892, in the interests of concerted action among the supporters of the kindergarten cause. [1] in 1924, the organization was reorganized as Childhood Education International.
July 1892, at Saratoga Springs, at the 32nd Annual Meeting of the National Education Association, a number of the Kindergarten teachers of the U.S. met together to consider a proposal of Sarah Stewart of Philadelphia to form an organization which should have two purposes. The immedia purpose was to arrange for and organize an exhibit for the World's Columbian Exposition to be held the next year in Chicago and the boarder and more permanent purpose was to extend and build up Kindergarten education, to raise the professional standard, and to stabilize and deepend the work. [2]
Mrs. Hughes of Toronto, Miss Brooks of New York, Mary McCulloch of St. Louis, Missouri, Annie Laws of Cincinnati, Mary B. Page of Chicago, and Lucy Wheelock of Boston were among those who organized the association. Not more than 50 members were there at the first meeting. [2]
As a beginning, four distinct aims were stated: [1]
The principles underlying the kindergarten system were the groundwork of modern primary education. An intelligent interpretation of the philosophy and method was presented by many independent workers in various parts of the world. Something like a complete system of primary education was slowly evolved from the repeated experiments of these investigators. There was a loss of value to world from the lack of coördinate effort and some common channel of communication. [1]
The I.K.U. was formed to meet this need. It sought to unite in one stream the various kindergarten activities which already existed. Its function was to supplement, not to compete with, to coördinate, not to supplant, the agencies which were already at work. It combined the advantages of central council and suggestion with local independence and control. Its mission was to collect, collate, and disseminate the valuable knowledge already attained, and to inspire to greater and more intelligent efforts in the future. It fell naturally into the spirit and method of the times, which was no longer that of isolated effort, but of concentrated, harmonious action. [1]
In most of the States, the kindergartens were outside of the public school system, and in the hands of private societies. It was obvious that an I.K.U. could deal only with large units. It was hoped that all of the kindergarten societies in each State, whether public or private, would unite to form one State organization for representation in the I.K.U.. The great advance which was made in the growth of kindergartens made it hopeful that there would be no State without such an organization. The I.K.U. was pledged to promote such organizations, and to the establishment of kindergartens. It invited coöperation from public and private schools, churches, and benevolent societies of every kind and grade, which had for their object the educational interests of young children. [1]
The establishment of a high standard of training for the position of kindergarten teacher was long felt to be a necessity by those intimately connected with the work. It was of first importance that some standard be reached that would direct the future action of training schools in the preparation of teachers. The time was deemed to be past when "anybody can teach little children". [1]
It was the work of the I.K.U. to prepare an outline of study, to advise its adoption, and to give aid and counsel whenever it was sought. The executive committee included the leading kindergarten experts of the U.S. and of Europe. Their experience and knowledge gave ample security that wise counsel would be given to all issues of importance to the cause. [1]
A provisional constitution was adopted, the terms of which were very simple and very elastic. Each local center retained complete autonomy, and continued the activities which were begun before joining the general union. [1]
The immediate aim of the I.K.U. in its second year was to prepare a fitting representation of kindergarten progress at the World's Columbian Exposition at Chicago in 1893. This event would furnish an opportunity for an interchange of views and an organization of forces for future growth. An international congress was planned for this time, where questions of importance to the cause would be discussed by the eminent kindergartenn experts of the world. It was hoped that not only finished products would be displayed, in well-graded sequence, but that practical illustrations of method would be given with the young children present. [1]
It was discovered early on that certain important changes had to be made in membership and in dues. At a meeting of the executive board, held in Chicago in December 1894, it was decided to recognize only cities as members in the I.K.U., with the exception of the original charter members, and that dues for membership should be fixed as follows: Each city branch should pay into the general treasury US$.25 for each of its members. [1]
By 1894, 16 of the largest cities in the U.S. joined the union. All the kindergarten societies in each city united to form a membership in the I.K.U.. The cities were the following: Boston, Philadelphia, Washington, D.C., Providence, Rhode Island, Wilmington, Delaware, Albany, New York, Buffalo, New York, Chicago, Indianapolis, Cincinnati, Toledo, Ohio, Cleveland, St. Louis, Missouri, Des Moines, Iowa, San Francisco, and Smyrna, Turkey. These were city branches of the I.K.U. Indications were given that foreign countries would also join the union. Most of them responded promptly to the invitation to give reports of kindergarten progress in their countries, and expressed hearty sympathy with the movement. [1]
No one had time to read the mass of literature which was put forth upon the subject. The I.K.U. wanted to put out a journal, which would collect and disseminate the products of the best evidence of the world in the direction of the child's education, and make it possible for every mother, kindergarten expert, and teacher to have this journal for US$1. Each would also have the published proceedings of all general meetings, the papers and discussions of live educational topics by the leaders in this department of thought, and so keep in touch with the most recent thought and latest discoveries. Each would have the motive and opportunity to contribute to the general fund their latest and best thought, and so it became a training in writing and literary skill. [1]
The regular annual meeting of the I.K.U. was called for July 12, 1895, in Denver, and brought together a representative group of sixty kindergarten experts for a discussion of the intent and purposes of such a union. Lucy Wheelock was selected to fill the vacancy of president, made by the resignation of Mrs. Sarah Cooper, at the spring meeting held in Washington in connection with the National Woman's Council. Wheelock spoke of the great movement of the time being that of federation. As in other departments of the world's work, so in education; much was being accomplished by the united action of the workers in different fields. The many kindergarten clubs and unions could accomplish far more if their efforts were combined, while the chief gain to the several clubs would be an increased interest, enthusiasm, and fellowship. Of all classes of educators, the kindergartners would profit most by a unification of interests. One of the purposes of the I.K.U. would be that of sustaining a standard for training-class work. It would define the conditions of work, where inadequate efforts were attempted, and also encourage prolonging the time of professional training. Wheelock recommended that a committee be named from among the active workers, which would consider this question of a recognized standard for normal work. She also urged increased social intercourse between the workers. [3]
By 1918, there were more than 18,000 members. There were nineteen committees, working in the interest of Hygiene, Child Study, Experimental tests, Arts, Science, Home and School Philanthropy, and Social Service. there was an Advisory Committee working in harmony with the Federal Bureau of Education at Washington, D.C. In addition, there was a preservation in the Annual Reports of a complete record of the growth of the Kindergarten principal and practice in the U.S. These reports contained a long series of articles and discussions by experts within and without the professional on every phase of Kindergarten. That year, the organization's convention was held in Chicago. [2]
The Women's Trade Union League (WTUL) (1903–1950) was a U.S. organization of both working class and more well-off women to support the efforts of women to organize labor unions and to eliminate sweatshop conditions. The WTUL played an important role in supporting the massive strikes in the first two decades of the twentieth century that established the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union and Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America and in campaigning for women's suffrage among men and women workers.
Wheelock College was a private college in Boston, Massachusetts, United States from 1888 to 2018. The college was founded in 1888 as the Miss Wheelock's Kindergarten Training School and was merged into Boston University as part of the university's Wheelock College of Education and Human Development in 2018.
Maria Kraus-Boelté (1836–1918) was a pioneer of Fröbel education in the United States, and helped promote kindergarten training as suitable for study at university level.
Communist propaganda is the artistic and social promotion of the ideology of communism, communist worldview, communist society, and interests of the communist movement. While it tends to carry a negative connotation in the Western world, the term propaganda broadly refers to any publication or campaign aimed at promoting a cause and is/was used for official purposes by most communist-oriented governments. The term may also refer to political parties' opponents' campaign. Rooted in Marxist thought, the propaganda of communism is viewed by its proponents as the vehicle for spreading their idea of enlightenment of working class people and pulling them away from the propaganda of who they view to be their oppressors, that they claim reinforces exploitation, such as religion or consumerism. Communist propaganda therefore stands in opposition to bourgeois or capitalist propaganda.
Woman's Missionary Union (WMU) is an auxiliary of the Southern Baptist Convention that was founded in 1888. It is the largest Protestant missions organization for women in the world.
Lucy Wheelock was an American early childhood education pioneer within the American kindergarten movement. She began her career by teaching the kindergarten program at Chauncy-Hall School (1879–89). Wheelock was the founder and head of Wheelock Kindergarten Training School, which later became Wheelock College in Boston, Massachusetts, and is now the namesake of Boston University's college of education BU Wheelock. She wrote, lectured, and translated on subjects related to education.
The European Association of Urology (EAU) is a non-profit organisation committed to the representation of urology professionals worldwide. All active urology professionals, including urology nurses, are eligible for membership of the EAU.
The World's Congress of Representative Women was a week-long convention for the voicing of women's concerns, held within the World's Congress Auxiliary Building in conjunction with the World's Columbian Exposition. At 81 meetings, organized by women from each of the United States, 150,000 people came to the World's Congress Auxiliary Building and listened to speeches given by almost 500 women from 27 countries.
Childhood Education International, a nonprofit organization with membership, is a global community of educators and advocates who advocate for desirable conditions, programs, and practices affecting children, infancy through adult.
The New York Workers School, colloquially known as "Workers School", was an ideological training center of the Communist Party USA (CPUSA) established in New York City for adult education in October 1923. For more than two decades the facility played an important role in the teaching of party doctrine to the organization's functionaries, as well as offering a more general educational program to trade union activists.
The Labor Party of the United States was a short-lived political party formed by several state-level labor parties upon the encouragement of Chicago Federation of Labor leader John Fitzpatrick. It was formed in the immediate aftermath of World War I, due in large part to deterioration in the condition of the country's workers due to the imbalance between static workers' wages and rapidly escalating prices for necessities and consumer goods.
The Malta Union of Teachers (MUT) is the longest established trade-union in Malta.
Pan-American Conference of Women occurred in Baltimore, Maryland in 1922. It was held in connection with the third annual convention of the National League of Women Voters in Baltimore on April 20 to 29, 1922. Cooperating with the League in bringing the Pan American Women's conference to the United States were the US Secretary of State, Charles Evans Hughes, the US Secretary of Commerce, Herbert Hoover, and Dr. Leo Stanton Rowe, Director General of the Pan American Union (PAU). The conference was meant to strengthen and carry a step forward the initiative undertaken at the Second Pan American Scientific Congress, when a woman's auxiliary committee was formed to develop closer cooperation between the women of the American continent.
The International Association of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail, and Transportation Workers (SMART) is a North American labor union headquartered in Washington, DC, which was chartered by the AFL–CIO in 2013. The product of a merger between the Sheet Metal Workers’ International Association (SMWIA) and the United Transportation Union (UTU), SMART represents over 210,000 sheet metal workers, service technicians, bus operators, engineers, conductors, sign workers, welders, and production employees, among others, throughout the United States, Puerto Rico, and Canada. The Transportation Division represents employees on Class I railroad, Amtrak, and regional and short line railroads; bus and mass transit employees on some 45 transit systems; and airline pilots, flight attendants, dispatchers and other airport personnel. The Division's 500 local unions organize conductors, brakemen, switch men, ground service personnel, locomotive engineers, hostlers, and railroad yard masters, as well as bus drivers and mechanics.
Alice H. Putnam was an educator who opened the first private kindergarten in Chicago in 1874, and was described as "the pioneer of the Kindergarten" in that city.
Mary Allen West was an American journalist, editor, educator, philanthropist, superintendent of schools, and temperance worker. A teacher in her early career, she served as superintendent of schools in Knox County, Illinois, being one of the first women to fill such a position in Illinois. An active supporter of the temperance movement, West served as president of the Illinois Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU), and editor of the national paper, Union Signal. Her other roles within the WCTU included superintendent of the Training School for Temperance Workers, Illinois State Superintendent of Temperance in Schools of Higher Education, as well as Stockholder, Director, and Secretary of the Woman's Publication Association. She was the first president of the Illinois Woman's Press Association, a member of the Chicago Woman's Club, and director of the Protective Agency for Women and Children. West was the author of Childhood: Its Care and Culture (1887). She died in Japan, in 1892, while training temperance workers in organization and promotion reform efforts.
The National Kindergarten Association (NKA) was a philanthropic organization, based in the United States, which promoted universal acceptance of the public-school kindergarten. It existed between 1909 and 1976, and its headquarters was in New York City. According to the New York Times, the association was founded to "promote the establishment of kindergartens throughout the United States for the purpose of promoting the physical, moral and intellectual development" of the children in attendance.
University of Chicago Settlement was a settlement of the University of Chicago. It was established January, 1894, by the Philanthropic Committee of the Christian Union of the University of Chicago. Initially, two graduate students were in residence "to provide a center for educational, religious and philanthropic work." Mary McDowell became head resident September 15, 1894.
Amity Church Settlement was an American settlement house founded in 1896 and auxiliary to Amity Baptist Church. It was located at 314 West 54th Street in the Manhattan borough of New York City, New York. Its purpose included the religious and social well-being of the neighborhood. Services included educational classes, lectures, and poor relief. The director was Rev. Leighton Williams, Pastor. The undenominational spirit and able management of the House attracted confidence and financial assistance from outside Baptist lines. Its basal function was that of establishing residence in the crowded neighborhood where its work lay and bringing to bear upon the labor in hand the influence of the home. It sought to unite the idea of the Church and of the social settlement. The settlement was unincorporated, and was maintained by Amity Baptist Church and by voluntary contributions. The work was classified as (1) religious, including the various church services; (2) educational, including kindergarten, industrial school, evening classes, public lectures under the board of education; (3) medical, including dispensary and nursing work; (4) social, including Workingmen's Institute, social clubs and entertainments; (5) relief work; and (6) neighborhood work, including visitation and all work outside of the building, as well as promotion of neighborhood interests.
Anna "Annie" Laws was an American educator, clubwoman, and philanthropist based in Cincinnati, Ohio. She was president of the International Kindergarten Union from 1903 to 1905.