Pictures from Google Image Search

Sheldon, Edward (18231897)

Encyclopedia of Education | 2002 | | Copyright 2002 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

SHELDON, EDWARD (18231897)


Edward Austin Sheldon was instrumental in bringing object training to the United States. As president of the Oswego Training School in Oswego, New York, from 1861 until his death, Sheldon worked to fulfill his commitment to make education accessible to all children, both in practice through free schools and in theory through a Pestalozzian teaching style.

Born in Perry Center in Genesee County, New York, Edward Sheldon grew up on the family farm. After completing a college-preparatory course of education, Sheldon fulfilled family expectations by leaving home at age twenty-one for Hamilton College in Clinton, New York. Sheldon originally intended to pursue a law career but a bout with pleurisy in his second year at Hamilton forced him to take a leave of absence, during which he returned to the family farm and dabbled in horticulture. His interest in this fieldcoupled with his fond memories of life on the farminspired him to leave college in 1847, after his junior year, to invest with a partner in a nursery in Oswego, New York. Within a year, financial mismanagement by Sheldon's partner caused the nursery to fail. However, struck by the poverty he observed in Oswego, Sheldon already was immersed in his new life: spearheading and organizing an educational system in Oswego that would serve all children.

Sheldon solicited the support of a committee of prominent community members to open the Orphan and Free School in Oswego in 1848. Although it was not his intention to take charge of the "ragged school," at least one of the most influential backers of the committee said she would pull her support without Sheldon as the teacher. Thus, Sheldon reluctantly began his short stint as a teacher. He reflected, "Nothing could ever have been farther from my thoughts than the idea of teaching school; nothing for which I considered myself so poorly adapted" (Barnes, p. 78). Sheldon struggled through this stressful year, teaching upwards of one hundred pupils at a time and witnessing the depraved conditions in which they lived when he visited their homes on Saturdays. The high point of the year was his marriage in May 1849, to Frances A. B. Stiles, whose own educational attainment enabled her to serve as a helpful partner for forty-six years as Sheldon worked to realize his vision of an educational system to serve all children. Their five children kept the Sheldon household busy.

Financial support for the school waned, and after one year Sheldon accepted a position at a private school in Oswego. But, for Sheldon, the idea of a unified educational system to serve all children lingered. After a brief time at the private school and one year as superintendent of public schools in Syracuse, New York, Sheldon returned to Oswego in 1853 and settled into his life work of reforming education, especially instruction. As secretary of the board of education (essentially, superintendent) in Oswego, Sheldon reorganized the Oswego public schools into a unified system, enacting such reforms as assigning students to schools and grades according to age and requiring all teachers to pass certification exams.

By the mid-1850s the Oswego schools were flourishing, serving as exemplars for education reformers, and Sheldon became well known in education circles. He soon realized, however, that this smooth-running system was "a machine found wanting" because the instructional methods "lacked vitality," and intensified his study of educational reforms in other school systems (Barnes, p. 116). In 1859 Sheldon was inspired to invest three hundred dollars in materials from the Home and Colonial Institute of London, in the hopes of duplicating the innovative practices he observed in classrooms in Toronto, Canada. There, teachers based lessons not on recitation and memorization, but on pictures, charts, and other objects, a teaching technique credited to Swiss educator, Johann Pestalozzi (17461827). Many people saw shades of Pestalozzi himself in Sheldon's life and workboth loved children, worked for the benefit of the poor, and maintained the courage of their convictions in reforming education. Pestalozzi developed object training out of necessity; he used field trips and actual objects as teaching tools because his students were poor and his school was inadequately funded. This active learning style was child-centered and engaged total sensory learning. Pestalozzi's belief in nurturing the natural and orderly development of the mind struck Sheldon so strongly that "he became a Pestalozzian overnight" (Snyder, p. 231).

Following his enlightening exposure to Pestalozzianism, Sheldon began, in his capacity as secretary of the board of education, to prepare teachers in this systematic objective style of teaching. He was soon frustrated, however, as he found that these teachers left for better-paying jobs in other districts. Recognizing the demand for teachers who were familiar with object training, he convinced the school board to establish a teacher training school and sought to find an appropriate teacher for the school. Because the method of teaching he had been emulating was based on the Home and Colonial Institute of London, he hired Pestalozzian expert Margaret E.M. Jones of the institute for the inaugural year of the Oswego Training School. Classes began in 1861 and Sheldon was a regular attendee during Jones's tenure. In 1865 New York made Sheldon's institution its second state-supported normal school. In 1869 Sheldon resigned as secretary of the board of education to devote himself full-time to the Oswego State Normal and Training School, which gained national attention for what rapidly became known as the Oswego method of object training. Sheldon remained as president of the school until his death in 1897.

The impact of the Oswego (Normal) Training School cannot be overstated. Teachers trained at Oswego fanned out across the country, beginning a revolution in classroom instruction. The majority of Oswego's early graduates taught in elementary and even normal schools outside of the state of New York, often in the growing pioneer West. An Oswego graduate, Sheldon's daughter Mary followed in her father's footsteps; she became a professor of history at Stanford University and was well-known for her work in developing historical teaching methods. Mary and other Oswego-trained teachers helped to transform not only the subject matter and the methods of formal education, but also the spirit of education. Sheldon's graduates took his object-training vision across the country and around the world. Oswego State Normal and Training School became synonymous with object training; many normal schools taught the Oswego method for years to come.

See also: Pestalozzi, Johann; Teacher Education, subentry on Historical Overview.

bibliography

Barnes, Mary Sheldon, ed. 1911. The Autobiography of Edward Austin Sheldon. New York: Ives-Butler.

Hollis, Andrew Phillip. 1898. The Contribution of the Oswego Normal School to Educational Progress in the United States. Boston: Heath.

Rogers, Dorothy. 1961. Oswego: Fountainhead of Teacher Education. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts.

Snyder, Charles M. 1968. Oswego: From Buckskin to Bustles. Port Washington, NY: Friedman.

internet resource

Oswego College, New York. "College History." <www.oswego.edu/library/archives/CollegeHistory.html>.

Christine E. Wolfe

Christine A. Ogren

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

WOLFE, CHRISTINE E.; CHRISTINE A. OGREN. "Sheldon, Edward (18231897)." Encyclopedia of Education. The Gale Group Inc. 2002. Encyclopedia.com. 29 Nov. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

WOLFE, CHRISTINE E.; CHRISTINE A. OGREN. "Sheldon, Edward (18231897)." Encyclopedia of Education. The Gale Group Inc. 2002. Encyclopedia.com. (November 29, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3403200557.html

WOLFE, CHRISTINE E.; CHRISTINE A. OGREN. "Sheldon, Edward (18231897)." Encyclopedia of Education. The Gale Group Inc. 2002. Retrieved November 29, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3403200557.html

Learn more about citation styles

Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research

(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)

Hitler's Forgotten Ally: Ion Antonescu and His Regime, Romania 1940-1944.(Book review)
Magazine article from: Shofar; 6/22/2009; ; 700+ words ; Hitler's Forgotten Ally: Ion Antonescu and His Regime, Romania 1940...its wartime dictator, Marshal Ion Antonescu, Following a more than forty...the indigenous historiography, Antonescu reemerged in the 1990s, promoted...
ANOTHER BUST ERECTED OF ROMANIAN WORLD WAR II DICTATOR ANTONESCU
News Wire article from: Jewish Telegraphic Agency; 11/30/1994; ; 547 words ; ...ERECTED OF ROMANIAN WORLD WAR II DICTATOR ANTONESCU. Yet another statue of World War II fascist dictator Ion Antonescu has been dedicated in Romania, the...Congress has reported. The latest bust of Antonescu was unveiled last week in the Romanian...
ROMANIA: PREMIER MAKES DOCUMENTS ON ANTONESCU'S WAR CRIMES PUBLIC.(Brief Article)(Statistical Data Included)
Newspaper article from: IPR Strategic Business Information Database; 12/11/2001; 638 words ; ...role of wartime Nazi ally Marshal Ion Antonescu in Romanian history must "be treated...U.S. visit that the cult of Antonescu will be curbed, showed the prefects...meeting of November 1941, when Antonescu asked whether his orders to execute...
ROMANIA: ANOTHER ANTONESCU STATUE FOR ROMANIA.(Brief Article)
Newspaper article from: IPR Strategic Business Information Database; 6/12/2000; 379 words ; ...Romania's wartime leader and Hitler ally, Marshal Ion Antonescu. The statue is located in Iasi's Letcani military cemetery, which is called the "Marshal Ion Antonescu Cemetery of Heroes," Romanian Radio reported. MS...
Romanians cherish memories of their genocidal dictator
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 8/23/1994; ; 700+ words ; ...overthrown in a coup d'etat, Marshal Ion Antonescu is the object of a posthumous personality...democracy. The rehabilitation of Antonescu, who was executed as a war criminal...implicated in the restoration of Antonescu to official favour. It thus becomes...
Romania takes steps to remove statues of dictator who killed Jews
News Wire article from: Jewish Telegraphic Agency; 4/22/2002; ; 700+ words ; ...bronze bust of Marshal Ion Antonescu, the Romanian fascist...along with five other Antonescu monuments around this...and Romanian President Ion Iliescu are sincerely...right-wing extremists. Antonescu remains a national hero...
Hitler's Ally Hailed As Hero to Some
News Wire article from: AP Online; 4/11/2002; ; 700+ words ; ...Jews. Yet busts and portraits of Ion Antonescu adorn public places, and many...rights and tolerance. The cult of Antonescu transcends social standing. Blue...running the country, the cult of Antonescu has suddenly become an affair of...
A nation's soul-searching reveals deep veneration for Hitler's Romanian ally
News Wire article from: AP Worldstream; 4/11/2002; ; 700+ words ; ...Jews. Yet busts and portraits of Ion Antonescu adorn public places, and many...rights and tolerance. The cult of Antonescu transcends social standing. Blue...running the country, the cult of Antonescu has suddenly become an affair of...
ROMANIA: RUSSIANS ANGERED BY COURT APPROVAL OF '41 INVASION
News Wire article from: Inter Press Service English News Wire; 3/9/2007; ; 700+ words ; ...the country was led by Marshal Ion Antonescu from September 1940. In June 1941...with only a few towns in Romania. Antonescu did not stop after conquering Bassarabia...Romania was an ally of the Axis. "Antonescu admitted during his trial that...
ROMANIA: RUSSIANS ANGERED BY COURT APPROVAL OF '41 INVASION.
News Wire article from: Interpress Service; 3/9/2007; 700+ words ; ...the country was led by Marshal Ion Antonescu from September 1940. In June 1941...with only a few towns in Romania. Antonescu did not stop after conquering Bassarabia...Romania was an ally of the Axis. "Antonescu admitted during his trial that...

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

Ion Antonescu
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Ion Antonescu , 1882-1946, Romanian marshal and dictator. He...with revolution and German intervention, appointed Antonescu premier with dictatorial powers. On Sept. 6, Antonescu forced the king to abdicate in favor of Carol's...
Antonescu, Ion
Book article from: World Encyclopedia Antonescu, Ion (1882–1946) Romanian general...of German aggression, Carol appointed Antonescu premier. Carol was forced to abdicate in favour of his son Michael , and Antonescu assumed dictatorial powers. Romania...
Antonescu, Marshal Ion
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to World War II Antonescu, Marshal Ion (1886–1946),Romanian...September 1940. Carol then abdicated and Antonescu, modelling himself on Mussolini...Army suffered terrible casualties and Antonescu's popularity waned. He started to...
Romanian Americans
Encyclopedia entry from: Gale Encyclopedia of Multicultural America ...1893-1953) was named General Ion Antonescu (1882-1946) premier of Romania...I (1921 – ). Under Antonescu's influence, Romania became...Soviets and, after the war ended, Antonescu was executed. In national elections...
Romania
Book article from: World Encyclopedia ...1940, Michael returned as king. Ion Antonescu became dictator and, in June 1941...Soviet troops occupied Romania: Antonescu was overthrown and Romania surrendered...escu and his wife were executed. Ion Iliescu , a former communist official...

Find thousands of answers for hundreds of subjects at Smart QandA .

All answers verified by trusted sources at Encyclopedia.com

Try Smart QandA now!

For students and teachers!

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including:

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including: