
Before Head Start
The Iowa Station and America's Children
Hamilton Cravens(Author)
The University of North Carolina Press
Published on 30. July 2002
Book
Paperback/Softback
348 pages
978-0-8078-5432-7 (ISBN)
Description
Between the 1920s and the 1950s, the child welfare movement that had originated as a moral reform effort in the Progressive era evolved into the science of child development. In Before Head Start , Hamilton Cravens chronicles this transformation, both on the national level and from the perspective of the field's best-known research center, the University of Iowa's Child Welfare Research Station. Addressing the changing role played by women and the importance of Rockefeller philanthropy, he shows how a women's reform movement became a male-dominated, conservative profession and demonstrates how lay pressure groups can influence the structures and processes of science. Animated by the reformist goals of the child welfare movement, scientists at the Iowa Station challenged the pervasive idea that an individual's development was determined by such group traits as race, class, and gender. Instead, their research suggested that early social intervention could rescue a child from a grim future. Cravens argues that this individualistic perspective, rejected in the 1940s by a scientific community that mirrored society's deterministic notions, anticipated the national social reforms of the post-1950s era, including Head Start.
More details
Edition
New edition
Language
English
Place of publication
Chapel Hill
United States
Edition type
New edition
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
Thickness: 21 mm
Weight
596 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-8078-5432-7 (9780807854327)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
11/2000
The University of North Carolina Press
€29.49
Available for download
Person
Hamilton Cravens, professor of history at Iowa State University, is author of The Triumph of Evolution: The Heredity-Environment Controversy, 1900-1941.