Category:Education
Education has always been important to Ohioans. The Land Ordinance of 1785 set aside land for the support of a public school in every township. The Ohio Constitution of 1803 did not establish a public school system, but it encouraged residents to provide educational opportunities to the state's children.
Despite this support for education, there were limited educational opportunities in the Northwest Territory and Ohio once it became a state. Mothers primarily educated their children at home. At this time, there were no public schools. Parents had to pay tuition for their children to attend school or work out a trade of some kind. The type of education that children received in these schools was limited. The schools taught basic skills in reading, writing, and mathematics.
Teachers also usually stressed deportment. Because boys were needed to help in the fields, schools were open for a few months a year, usually in the summer. Most students did not obtain any more than an eighth-grade level of education, and many never graduated. There were no laws requiring students to go to school during this era, and parents often needed their children to help with farm chores.
It was not until 1825 that the Ohio General Assembly established public schools in the state. The first schools were known as common schools, and the state financed them with a half-mil property tax. Since the creation of public schools, Ohioans have debated how best to fund public education in the state. Property taxes have been a major means to finance public schools, but many people claim that such a system is not fair to all students in Ohio. Poorer districts usually contend that school systems in areas with higher property values can much more easily meet the needs of and provide more opportunities to their students, while students in poorer areas suffer. Since 1825, Ohioans have struggled to implement a process to finance public education that satisfies all residents.
Initially, attendance in school was not mandatory for Ohio's children. This changed in 1921, when the Ohio government implemented the Bing Act. This law required all children between six and eighteen years of age in the State of Ohio to attend school. The legislature made two exceptions. First, children who had already graduated from high school did not have to remain enrolled in school. Second, once a child reached the age of sixteen years and had passed the seventh grade, the student could work as a farmer rather than attend school.
To learn more about education in Ohio's history, please browse these entries at your leisure.
Pages in category "Education"
The following 200 pages are in this category, out of 403 total.
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- Academy of Medicine
- Adelbert College
- Akron School Law
- Alfred P. Sandles
- Alice M. Williams
- Allegheny Wesleyan College
- Allen R. Foote
- Allen Trimble
- Alma College
- Americanization Committee
- Ameriflora
- Angie I. Cohon
- Annunciation Church School
- Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church
- Antioch College
- Archaeology
- Archie Griffin
- Art Academy of Cincinnati
- Arthur E. Morgan
- Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute
- Arthur H. Compton
- Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr.
- Arthur S. Flemming
- Asa Mahan
- Ashland College
- Ashland Theological Seminary
- Ashland University
- Association of Ex-Pupils
B
- B'nai B'rith-Hillel Foundation
- Baldwin-Wallace College
- Baptist Church
- Barn Gang
- Belmont College
- Benjamin Hanby
- Bevo Francis
- Big Ear Radio Observatory
- Bing Act of 1921
- Black and White Schoolhouse
- Bluffton University
- Bonebrake Theological Seminary
- Borromeo College of Ohio
- Bowling Green State Normal College
- Bowling Green State University
- Boys' Industrial School
- Brothers of Christian Instruction
- Brown v. the Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas (1954)
- Brumbaugh Act
- Bryant & Stratton Chain of Business Schools
- Buchanan-Clark Bible Bill
- Buchtel College
C
- Caleb Atwater
- Campbellites
- Campus Martius
- Capital University
- Caroline L. Harrison
- Carrie W. Clifford
- Case Institute of Technology
- Case School of Applied Science
- Case Western Reserve University
- Cedarville College
- Cedarville University
- Central Mennonite College
- Central Ohio Technical College
- Central State University
- Charles Finney
- Charles Reemelin
- Charles W. Chesnutt
- Chatfield College
- Churches of Christ in Christian Union
- Churches of God, General Conference
- Cincinnati Bible College and Seminary
- Cincinnati Christian University
- Cincinnati College
- Cincinnati Independent Colored School System
- Cincinnati State Technical and Community College
- Cincinnati, Ohio
- Circleville Bible College
- Civil Rights Movement
- Clara E. Weisenborn
- Clarence Francis
- Clark County Technical Institute
- Clark State Community College
- Cleveland Bible College
- Cleveland College of Jewish Studies
- Cleveland Institute of Art
- Cleveland Institute of Music
- Cleveland State University
- Cleveland University
- Cleveland, Ohio
- Cleveland, Ohio, Public Schools' Near-Bankruptcy
- Cleveland, Ohio, School Voucher Program
- College of Mount St. Joseph
- College of Saint Mary of the Springs
- College of Wooster
- Collinwood School Fire
- Columbus College of Art & Design
- Columbus State Community College
- Columbus Zoo and Aquarium
- Congregation of the Sisters, Servants of the Immaculate Heart of Mary
- Congregationalist Church
- Cuyahoga Community College
D
E
F
- Fenn College
- Fifty-Star U.S. Flag
- Findlay College
- First Junior High School in the United States
- Folsom's Business College
- Franciscan College of Steubenville
- Franciscan University of Steubenville
- Frank Duveneck
- Franklin College
- Franklin College (New Athens)
- Franklin Museum of New Athens, Inc.
- Franklin University
- Freedmen's Bureau
- French Fry Bus
- Frontier Education
G
- G.I. Bill of Rights
- General Eldership of the Church of God
- Geneva College
- George N. Carruthers
- George R. Stibitz
- George-Deen Vocational Law
- German Reformed Church
- Gillette Hayden
- Girls' Industrial Home
- God's Bible School and College
- Goodrich House
- Grave-robbing
- Greek American Progressive Association School
H
- Hallie Q. Brown
- Hamilton County
- Hamma School of Theology
- Harveysburg Free Black School
- Hebrew Union College
- Heidelberg College
- Helen G. Edmonds
- Helen G. McClelland
- Helen N. Smith
- Henry F. Farny
- Hillel Foundation
- Hiram College
- Hiram House
- Hocking College
- Horace Mann
- Hortense Parker
- Howard Cassady
- Hsiang-his K'ung
- Hudson, Ohio
J
- James A. Garfield
- James A. Rhodes State College
- James L. Fergason
- James Logan
- James M. Thomas Telephone Museum
- James M. Trotter
- Jared Kirtland
- Jarvis F. Hanks
- Jefferson Community College
- Jefferson County Technical Institute
- Jesse Harvey
- Jesse Owens
- Jesuits
- Jim Tressel
- John B. Johnston
- John Carroll University
- John Cooper
- John F. Kennedy
- John H. Patterson
- John Harris
- John J. Gilligan
- John J. Jessing
- John Locke
- John R. Bowles
- John R. Buchtel
- John Shipherd
