Culture & Customs
Songs,
Postcards, MuseumsDatabases Haller's
Army, PNA Lodges... Geography &
Maps Slownik
Geograficzny, Galicia Heraldry
Herbarz Polski History Military,
Belarus, Detroit,
Prussia Immigration
& Ships Ellis
Island, Hamburg,
Pier 21
News Gen
Dobry!, Polish Forum, VolunteersReference Archives,
Libraries, Surnames
Regional Countries,
Regions, US States |
| |
|
| The Educational
Process in Prussian Poland |
The main idea of
the government was to "Germanize" the Polish community
and education was one of the means used. In Prussia, for
instance, the most advanced of the German states in this respect,
the village schools seem to have remained wretched in most cases
until after the end of the century. From official report of an
inspection made in 1802 and 1803 in Cleve, a Prussian province
where conditions were favorable, it appears that Frederick the
Great's admirable General-Landschul-Reglement of 1763 had
remained a dead letter. Theoretically, attendance at school for
six hours a day was compulsory for all children between the ages
of five or six and thirteen. For the poor no fee was charged. The
qualifications necessary for a teacher were defined, classes were
to be duly graded and uniform textbooks to be used. But at their
inspection it was found that forty-three teachers out of
sixty-seven were incompetent. Hardly any had attended the
training school set up for Cleve in 1784, they had usually been
appointed without being examined and once in office they had
neither the leisure nor the books they required to improve
themselves. They were so wretchedly paid that all had some other
occupation. Many were organists or vergers or both, some were
tailors or exercised some other craft, some sold brandy or
collected tolls. The school buildings, where regular buildings
existed, were almost always in bad repair. Often a room had to be
hired for the purpose in a house, and sometimes the teacher slept
in the schoolroom. There were often no separate classes. Each
child came up book in hand and said its lesson. The curriculum
was extremely narrow, reading, writing and perhaps a little
arithmetic, and a good deal of religion. Little was read beyond
the Bible and catechism. Attendance was extremely irregular. In
summer the schools were empty. If these were the conditions in an
enlightened state, it can be imagined what they were like in the
average small state. But in the second half of the century a
considerable number of peasants could at least read and write, as
is indicated by the large sales of the calendars and so forth
that were written for them.
From
"Germany In The XVIII Century", by W. H. Bruford,
Cambridge Press 1935
|