Salvato in:
Dettagli Bibliografici
Autore principale: Yancey, Kathleen Blake
Natura: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lingua:en
Pubblicazione: 2005
Soggetti:
Accesso online:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ711661
Tags: Aggiungi Tag
Nessun Tag, puoi essere il primo ad aggiungerne!!
_version_ 1867181256043659264
author Yancey, Kathleen Blake
author_facet Yancey, Kathleen Blake
Yancey, Kathleen Blake
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents The "People's University": Our (New) Public Libraries as Sites of Lifelong Learning Yancey, Kathleen Blake Foreign Countries Public Libraries Lifelong Learning Citizenship Education Andrew Carnegie was born in 1835 in Dunfermeline, Scotland. Forty-six years later and on his way to becoming $400 million richer, he returned to the home of his birth and provided it with a new kind of library. Unlike the popular subscription libraries of the time that required patrons to rent books, this new library would lend them for free. It was the first of the 2,509 libraries that Carnegie would help create throughout the English-speaking world--in the British Isles, Australia, New Zealand, Hawaii, and Samoa, as well as on the U.S. mainland. Carnegie was a robber baron--of that there can be no doubt. But the institution of the free library that he did so much to encourage has contributed uniquely and by design to public literacy in this country, both paralleling and complementing the contributions made by schools and colleges. In the United States, libraries, like schools, have served as "information equalizers." Historically, if you were a person of color, a person without means, or a person new to the country, you went to the library to learn to read, to become socialized into a local version of American life, and to acquire the skills and knowledge required to become a citizen.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ711661
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2005
record_format eric
spellingShingle The "People's University": Our (New) Public Libraries as Sites of Lifelong Learning
Yancey, Kathleen Blake
Foreign Countries
Public Libraries
Lifelong Learning
Citizenship Education
The "People's University": Our (New) Public Libraries as Sites of Lifelong Learning Yancey, Kathleen Blake Foreign Countries Public Libraries Lifelong Learning Citizenship Education Andrew Carnegie was born in 1835 in Dunfermeline, Scotland. Forty-six years later and on his way to becoming $400 million richer, he returned to the home of his birth and provided it with a new kind of library. Unlike the popular subscription libraries of the time that required patrons to rent books, this new library would lend them for free. It was the first of the 2,509 libraries that Carnegie would help create throughout the English-speaking world--in the British Isles, Australia, New Zealand, Hawaii, and Samoa, as well as on the U.S. mainland. Carnegie was a robber baron--of that there can be no doubt. But the institution of the free library that he did so much to encourage has contributed uniquely and by design to public literacy in this country, both paralleling and complementing the contributions made by schools and colleges. In the United States, libraries, like schools, have served as "information equalizers." Historically, if you were a person of color, a person without means, or a person new to the country, you went to the library to learn to read, to become socialized into a local version of American life, and to acquire the skills and knowledge required to become a citizen.
title The "People's University": Our (New) Public Libraries as Sites of Lifelong Learning
topic Foreign Countries
Public Libraries
Lifelong Learning
Citizenship Education
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ711661