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Horace Mann's Theories Of American Education

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Who was Horace Mann? Horace Mann was a Massachusetts politician before he became the Secretary of Education; he is most known for being the father of American Education. The most influential …… he did for education was his seven theories. His theories are value, knowledge, human nature, transmission, society, opportunity, and consensus. Most of Mann’s theories are “correct” because they all were beneficial to American Education. In today’s society most of his theories still hold true. The three most powerful theories are knowledge, human nature, and transmission. Knowledge, according to Mann, was power and he also believed that once a person obtained knowledge they had a “destiny” that they could do anything they set their mind to. I agree with his beliefs that knowledge is how a person improves their life and can obtain power. A quote from Mann is; “Every addition to true knowledge is an addition to human power” he truly believed in this and believed people should acquire power with …show more content…

Transmission is how Mann thought females are more caring and have a more motherly instinct. While men had a significance on training teachers to teach and teaching adolescents. Mann wrote in his First Annual Report that "teaching is the most difficult of all arts and the profoundest of all sciences." And in Mann's Fourth Annual Report he stated that " they need to have a repertoire of teaching techniques, not only common methods for common minds, but also peculiar methods for pupils of peculiar dispositions and temperaments." In that quote he was referencing how women are ‘better” for teaching in this society. I don’t believe this to be one of the quotes that still apply to today’s education. I believe how a person is with teaching children depends all on their personality not sex. Although women are more likely to have a more mild and gentle persona that is not always the

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