Constructing a CultureMain MenuConstructing a CultureIntroduction: A Snapshot in TimeSensible SchoolingSetting the Stage for Visual CultureSee and Hear!Incorporating Audio-Visual Education into the ClassroomLife Adjustment MovementPhilosophy of education in which students are "adjusted" to American life.Films in the ClassroomNew Film Helps GirlsCreating a Visual Culture through Print MediaIn the Beginning: A Brief History of LIFE MagazinePost War Teen TuningThe Building Blocks of Visual CultureAboutThis page describes the methodology behind the developed. Team member introductionBibliographyMaureen Kudlik07ec8ebdd0fbeaba49b25d2b198d84b9712cd0d6Micah Ariela1e838a35a85c5d3e09b44fd8da4e45888d7b1efJessica Martineze6106ba1d3fdd6a087256fecb73a84263965399aVince Sandrif1c5ba0a4f7b96b251ed23b27f5bd5ddc781e56b
Student Project Screenshot "Freedom to Learn"
12016-03-06T14:11:58-08:00Vince Sandrif1c5ba0a4f7b96b251ed23b27f5bd5ddc781e56b83364Students work on Labor and Management project in "Freedom to Learn."plain2016-03-06T19:43:18-08:00Media History Digital Library Non-Theatrical Film Collection (1918-1973)1954Summer 1954ImageStudent project screenshot from "Freedom to Learn" revieweducational mediaacademic freedomaudio-visual educationeducational filmsSandri, VinceEnglishPublic DomainImageAmerican Education 1950sMcCarthyism in education 1950sEducational Screen: The Audio-Visual Magazine 1950seducational films 1950sEducational Screen - The Audio Visual MagazineVince Sandrif1c5ba0a4f7b96b251ed23b27f5bd5ddc781e56b
This page has paths:
12016-03-06T19:58:38-08:00Vince Sandrif1c5ba0a4f7b96b251ed23b27f5bd5ddc781e56bPrimary Source GalleryVince Sandri7A gallery of the primary source material used for this project.structured_gallery2016-03-06T21:42:58-08:00Vince Sandrif1c5ba0a4f7b96b251ed23b27f5bd5ddc781e56b
This page is referenced by:
1media/background-texture-1014963_1280.jpgmedia/Kids in Class screenshot.png2016-03-06T14:00:41-08:00Life Adjustment Movement13Philosophy of education in which students are "adjusted" to American life.image_header2016-03-06T18:55:28-08:00American education was facing a dilemma immediately after WWII as the ideas of progressive education from the 1930s clashed with the paranoia of the early Cold War. As the fear of Communism grew, so did a general feeling that Americans were too immature to resist the ideas of Communism.[1] Therefore, it became the duty of secondary education to instill maturity in the nation’s youth to resist Communism through therapeutic education.[2]
The fear of the spread of Communist ideas, particularly among the youth through misguided education, led to the creation of the Commission of Life Adjustment in 1947.[3] The Commission on Life Adjustment was created by the U.S. Office of Education to redefine progressive education in the atmosphere of the Cold War.
The principles of the “life adjustment movement” became the major force behind American education. According to Andrew Hartman in his book Education and the Cold War: The Battle for the American School, the life adjustment movement was a reversal of the “radically reformist ideas of the educational reconstructionists of the 1930s, those ‘frontier thinkers’ who wanted to use the schools as means to a social democratic ends.”[4] In accordance with the life adjustment movement, American education no longer focused on “adjusting society to the child, in the hopes of creating a socialist society, the child was to be mentally adjusted to the decidedly un-socialist society already in existence.”[5]
The life adjustment movement emphasized four interrelated principles which were believed to be the ends to therapeutic adjustment: relevance, instrumentalism, social order, and patriotism.[6] Instilling patriotism in American youth was especially important to protect national security and ensure that teenagers became adults that believed in the power of the U.S. and its democratic way of life.[7] There was also a shift in the way many secondary educators approached their jobs as they believed their schools should be run like a business to help support the industrial economy of the U.S.[8] Therefore, it also became important for secondary education to help students fit into the American economy with a degree of vocational training.[9]
It is quite clear that the life adjustment movement was a coercive movement that tried to guide teenagers into pre-determined societal roles through therapeutic education. The role of secondary schools had been shifted by this movement to help teenagers find their relevant places within American society and they worked under the assumption that the American way of life did not need adjustments. It was the students that needed to be adjusted and therapeutically coerced into their ideal roles within a predetermined U.S. society and economy.
[1] Andrew Hartman, Education and the Cold War: The Battle for the American School (New York: Palgrave MacMillan, 2008), 58.