Lena_Horne
One of the Regulars
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- The Arsenal of Democracy
I remember this being discussed a few years back but not from the particular angle I am wondering about. I've become, shall we say obsessed, with the St. Grottlesex/Ivy League atmosphere of years gone by. I have bought some forty-odd yearbooks over the past year and a half, mostly focusing on the prep schools and Harvard (but I do have some Princeton and a little Yale).
And a little gnat of a question has been buzzing around in the back of my head. Is co-education really the better option?
Now, I feel as though I'm opening a can of worms. As a black American I am well aware of the advantages of Civil Rights (and wholly agree with them) but what about the sexes? Eleanor Roosevelt for instance believed in a mutual respect between the two but that each performed best within their own spheres of influence. I tend to agree with this opinion more often but it looks backwards by modern standards.
It seems that in modern society the "upper-class" schools have traded what they considered their duty to mold boys into upright, "respectable" leaders for a much more "open" community. At Harvard, for instance, in the late 70s a debate opened up surrounding the Final Clubs' (Porcellian, etc.) refusal to admit women which eventually saw them breaking all official ties with Harvard. Should they have had to go that route? The same issue came up at Princeton which led to the eating clubs (Tiger Inn, etc.) privatizing as well.
Am I talking out of both sides of my mouth when I believe that equality can be enforced between races but not necessarily the sexes? I personally have found that my education was watered down while I was in school as I couldn't take Home Economics courses or anything I might find remotely useful as they really aren't being offered anymore. (And now this ties into another thread currently on the forum about being a stay-at-home wife). Those skills would come in handy for me and other young women who would like to forgo a career and instead focus on their home and married life. Now, distinct masculinity and femininity seem to be frowned upon as the order of the day. ...Or perhaps I'm exaggerating.
I apologize if my question is somewhat out of sorts, I haven't been in the habit of posting discussion questions for some time now and I'm rather out of practice.
L_H
P.S. If anyone would like to see scans of my yearbooks just ask, I've run across many a famous name.
And a little gnat of a question has been buzzing around in the back of my head. Is co-education really the better option?
Now, I feel as though I'm opening a can of worms. As a black American I am well aware of the advantages of Civil Rights (and wholly agree with them) but what about the sexes? Eleanor Roosevelt for instance believed in a mutual respect between the two but that each performed best within their own spheres of influence. I tend to agree with this opinion more often but it looks backwards by modern standards.
It seems that in modern society the "upper-class" schools have traded what they considered their duty to mold boys into upright, "respectable" leaders for a much more "open" community. At Harvard, for instance, in the late 70s a debate opened up surrounding the Final Clubs' (Porcellian, etc.) refusal to admit women which eventually saw them breaking all official ties with Harvard. Should they have had to go that route? The same issue came up at Princeton which led to the eating clubs (Tiger Inn, etc.) privatizing as well.
Am I talking out of both sides of my mouth when I believe that equality can be enforced between races but not necessarily the sexes? I personally have found that my education was watered down while I was in school as I couldn't take Home Economics courses or anything I might find remotely useful as they really aren't being offered anymore. (And now this ties into another thread currently on the forum about being a stay-at-home wife). Those skills would come in handy for me and other young women who would like to forgo a career and instead focus on their home and married life. Now, distinct masculinity and femininity seem to be frowned upon as the order of the day. ...Or perhaps I'm exaggerating.
I apologize if my question is somewhat out of sorts, I haven't been in the habit of posting discussion questions for some time now and I'm rather out of practice.
L_H
P.S. If anyone would like to see scans of my yearbooks just ask, I've run across many a famous name.