Harvard Educational Review, Volume 38Howard Eugene Wilson Harvard University, 1968 "The Harvard Educational Review is a journal of opinion and research in the field of education. Articles are selected, edited, and published by an editorial board of graduate students at Harvard University. The editorial policy does not reflect an official position of the Faculty of Education or any other Harvard faculty."-- Volume 81, Number 2, Summer 2011 |
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Page 8
... economic units was relatively low . If the son of a neighbor was allowed to become a ne'er - do - well , it had little real effect on families other than his own . The second important element is that the family , as a unit of economic ...
... economic units was relatively low . If the son of a neighbor was allowed to become a ne'er - do - well , it had little real effect on families other than his own . The second important element is that the family , as a unit of economic ...
Page 9
... economic supports if he became dependent . During this stage of development in eighteenth - century England , for instance , communities had laws preventing immigration from another community because of the potential economic burden of ...
... economic supports if he became dependent . During this stage of development in eighteenth - century England , for instance , communities had laws preventing immigration from another community because of the potential economic burden of ...
Page 11
... economic sources of inequality of op 1 . portunity . Free schools , however , do not mean that the costs of a child's educa- tion become reduced to zero for families at all economic levels . When free educa- tion was introduced , many ...
... economic sources of inequality of op 1 . portunity . Free schools , however , do not mean that the costs of a child's educa- tion become reduced to zero for families at all economic levels . When free educa- tion was introduced , many ...
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