
The book opens with a vivid portrait of the Bureau of Educational Experiments, a coalition of teachers, social scientists, and reformers determined to rethink how schools nurture children’s growth. Their latest inquiry, led by Helen Marot, proposes a concrete experiment that bridges the gap between classroom learning and the real‑world demands of industry. Readers are invited into the early stages of this ambitious project, where data‑driven methods aim to reshape educational environments.
Marot then turns to the broader cultural clash between entrenched academic ideas and the relentless drive of industrial efficiency. She argues that schools have long been shackled by institutionalized thinking, while business interests often seek to co‑opt education for profit. The tension creates a stalemate, especially evident during the wartime period, as society grapples with how to prepare citizens for a post‑war economy.
Looking ahead, the author suggests that the coming era of reconstruction will demand a new partnership between educators and industry. By examining the early findings of the experiment, listeners gain insight into how a more collaborative, life‑oriented approach to schooling might emerge—offering a hopeful glimpse of education that truly serves both individual development and the needs of a modern industrial world.
Language
en
Duration
~3 hours (187K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-06-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1865–1940
A writer, librarian, and labor organizer, she used books and research as tools for social change. Her work focused on child labor, women’s working conditions, and the growing American labor movement.
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