The Reform Proposals of the Lower Secondary School in Italy and the Unified Perspective. 1861–1962

Simonetta Polenghi*, Stefano Oliviero*

*Corresponding author

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contribution

Abstract

The debate on the reform of lower secondary school, or rather, of the school for pupils aged between 11 and 14, has been shared by most European countries since at least the beginning of the 20th century. One of the transversal themes in these debates has been whether or not to create a unitary school channel that could delay pupils’ choice of study path rather than forcing them into early decisions through a multi-stranded post-primary school system. A debate developed in the context of the progression towards mass education and went hand in hand with the heated confrontation between defenders of humanistic culture and supporters of technical-scientific education. However, most European countries, with a few exceptions (Visalberghi, 1964), did not actually reform the schooling of pre-teens until the second half of the 20th century. Italy, too, in fact only changed its school system in 1962, creating a unitary three-year post-elementary system.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationISCHE 44. Histories of Education and Reform: Traditions, Tensions and Transitions. Abstracts
Pages601-602
Number of pages2
Publication statusPublished - 2023
EventISCHE 44. Histories of Education and Reform: Traditions, Tensions and Transitions - Budapest
Duration: 18 Jul 202321 Jul 2023

Conference

ConferenceISCHE 44. Histories of Education and Reform: Traditions, Tensions and Transitions
CityBudapest
Period18/7/2321/7/23

Keywords

  • single path
  • long term
  • premature choice
  • pre-teens

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