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Access Of Education During The Colonial Period

Decent Essays

Access to education continued to be problematic even in the colonial time. Individuals with more resources were able to access different books, journals and magazines. Should this really be the case in America today? It is my hope the education continues to transform from the colonial times, with growth in awareness of social economy statuses and awareness of the concerns of everyday citizens. Even though, education reform as continue to change with new leadership on the federal, state and local levels some social and political injustices to access continue. It is vital that individuals in power make changes by creating conditions and spaces where everyone has fair and equal opportunity to access all books and other educational material.
Much of adult education in the early colonial period owe less to formal institutions, educational or otherwise, than to everyday living (Stubblefield and Keane, 1994). In the colonial period, communication or correspondence initially begin for commerce affairs, later it was used for personal usage. Literature relevant to the lives of ordinary people development slowly, because Harvard College housed the colonies’ only printing press for over three decade beginning in 1638 (Stubblefield and Keane, 1994). Harvard monopolized the production of almanacs by regularly assigning the task to a young mathematician, who prepared scientific and theological publications that sold for threepence (Stubblefield and Keane, 1994). The first newspaper was

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