Education and Economic Decline in Britain, 1870 to the 1990s
Since the 1870s the British economy has steadily declined from its position as the 'workshop of the world' to that of a low-ranking European power. Michael Sanderson examines the question of how far defects in education and training have contributed to this economic decline. By looking at issues such as literacy, the quality of scientific and technical training, the supposed anti-industrial bias of public schools and the older universities, the neglect of vocational and technical training and the neglect of the non-academic teenager, Michael Sanderson demonstrates that education was far from the sole cause of economic decline, but that its deficiencies have certainly played a part. This book offers an accessible and concise analysis of a topic of current importance, interest and debate and will be of interest to students and teachers of the history of education and its impact on British economic development in the twentieth century.
- Focuses specifically on the role education has played in Britain's relative economic decline since the 1870s
- Examines issues such as literacy, public schools and the older universities, and the inadequacy (or not) of scientific and technical education
- No general survey of British economic development focuses specifically on the role which education has played
Reviews & endorsements
"Sanderson's book provides an excellent overview of educational developments as they relate to the economy in Britain between 1870 and the present." David Mitch, EH.NET
Product details
April 1999Paperback
9780521588423
140 pages
216 × 140 × 8 mm
0.19kg
15 tables
Available
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- 1. Literacy and schooling
- 2. Was technical education to blame?
- 3. The counterarguments
- 4. The education of the elite, 1870–1914
- 5. 1914–44: missed opportunities
- 6. Postwar decline: the betrayed teenager?
- 7. Higher education and the public schools: privilege and relevance?
- Conclusion.