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“From Moral Aristocracy to Christian Social Democracy”: The Transformation of Character Education in the Hi-Y, 1910–1940

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 February 2017

David P. Setran*
Affiliation:
Wheaton College in Illinois

Extract

In the early twentieth century, many American educators pinned their hopes for a revitalized nation on the character education of “youth,” especially adolescent boys. Although the emphasis on student morality was far from novel—nineteenth-century common and secondary schools operated as bastions of Protestant republican virtue—new perceptions of moral decay, institutional failure, and general cultural anomie prompted a marked increase in urgency. Among the many agencies confronting this impending moral crisis, the Young Men's Christian Association (YMCA) had perhaps the most comprehensive program of regeneration for American youth, encompassing a carefully articulated system extending from boyhood to collegiate and employed young men. Despite this expansive role, historians have produced only cursory glimpses of this organization, neglecting in particular the YMCA's work in developing an extracurricular program of moral education in public high schools.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2005 by the History of Education Society 

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References

1 See, for example, McClellan, B. Edward Moral Education in America: Schools and the Shaping of Character From Colonial Times to the Present (New York: Teachers College Press, 1999), 4647.Google Scholar

2 The standard work on the YMCA continues to be Charles Howard Hopkins, History of the YMCA in North America (New York: Association Press, 1951). For an excellent analysis of the work among boys in general, see Macleod, David Building Character in the American Boy: The Boy Scouts, YMCA, and Their Forerunners, 1870–1920 (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1983). Macleod's work, however, includes few references to the Hi-Y. The Hi-Y has also been neglected by many historians of the high school extracurriculum, but see Meyer, Harold A Handbook of Extracurricular Activities in the High School (New York: A.S. Barnes and Company, 1926), 373–377 and Charles Foster, Extracurricular Activities in the High School (Richmond: Johnson Publishing Company, 1925), 37–40 for helpful information.Google Scholar

3 I borrow chiefly from Robert Church and Michael Sedlak who defined conservative and liberal progressivism as the two central reform impulses of the early twentieth century. Conservative progressives, according to these authors, were characterized by a desire for social efficiency, predictability, managed expertise, and a willingness to impose values on the general public. Liberal progressives, on the other hand, prized participatory democracy, joint deliberation, and a brand of social justice that would ensure the maintenance of these values. See Church, Robert and Sedlak, Michael, Education in the United States: An Interpretive History (New York: Free Press, 1976), 255260. Here I part company with Paula Fass who, in her wonderful treatment of youth in the 1920s, labels two competing ideological forces as “traditional” and “progressive.” Early Hi-Y leaders shared many of the qualities of Fass's traditionalists: a pessimism about youth, a desire to stem the winds of change, and a longing for adult-controlled expertise in providing explicit moral direction for young people. However, to label this group “traditional” would be to deny the movement's emphasis on efficiency and its orientation towards the present and future rather than the past. While conservatives were concerned with maintaining a moral heritage, they were far more concerned with the inculcation of virtues and trait actions necessary to ensure social stability in the modern world. See Fass, Paula The Damned and the Beautiful: American Youth in the 1920s (New York: Oxford University Press, 1977).Google Scholar

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32 Ibid., 2–3. The task of describing the meaning of these four domains fell upon Edwin Hoffman, a YMCA secretary in New York with a reputation for his unflinching support of the four-fold program. In his 1919 work, The High Calling, Hoffman articulated the vision of each area of living in terms of a series of lessons for boys. See Hoffman, Edwin The High Calling (New York: Association Press, 1919).Google Scholar

33 Porter, The Work, 24. Club meetings were typically held in local YMCA buildings rather than schools. Leaders noted that they did not want to mar the good relationships with school leaders by demanding the use of school facilities.Google Scholar

34 Porter, The Work, 24. See also The Texas State Young Men's Christian Associations, “Manual: Texas Hi-Y Clubs” (Dallas: Texas State Boys’ Work Committee, 1922), Hi-Y Box 2, Kautz YMCA Archives. Boards of trustees for these clubs, later called advisory councils, generally consisted of a city or country YMCA secretary, a principal or teachers from the school, and Christian laymen from the community. See McKown, Harry C. Extracurricular Activities (New York: The Macmillan Company, 1927), 487–488.Google Scholar

35 Porter noted that, “No boy should be included merely because he is a good athlete unless he has already a positive moral influence.” Porter, The Work, 23–24.Google Scholar

36 See Chambers, William S.About Hi-Y Clubs,Association Boys’ Work Journal 1, no. 6 (November 1, 1928): 67.Google Scholar

37 Hall, Donald F. The Kokomo Ritual (Kokomo, IN: The Kokomo Hi-Y Club, 1924), pp. 34, Hi-Y Box 2, Kautz YMCA Archives.Google Scholar

38 Porter, The Work, 39.Google Scholar

39 “Ibid., 22–23.Google Scholar

40 Robinson, Arthur G.The Inner Circle of the High School Movement,American Youth (March 1909): 183.Google Scholar

41 Ibid. Robinson suggested that a maximum of 10–12 students would be recruited for this group in a particular school. Porter warned clubs to be careful of spiritual pride as well. He noted that they should banish all vestiges of the holier-than-thou sentiment and avoid exclusivity and selfishness. He actually suggested that the identity of inner circle members be kept secret. See Porter, The Work, 37–41.Google Scholar

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60 Cotton, High School Work Results,5. The Hi-Y clubs of Detroit offered a “little brown jug” to the team with the best sportsmanship in the city.Google Scholar

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63 See, for example, Foster, Extracurricular Activities, 38.Google Scholar

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68 At the same time, college YMCA chapters were producing collegiate handbooks containing similar information. See Hopkins, History of the YMCA, 284.Google Scholar

69 “Report of the Discussion Group on Service Projects,” 4.Google Scholar

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74 See, for example, “Vocational Tests” (1920), Hi-Y Box 1, Kautz YMCA Archives.Google Scholar

75 “Find Yourself Campaigns” (1921), Hi-Y Box 3, Kautz YMCA Archives.Google Scholar

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77 “Rating Sheet - Standardized Hi-Y Clubs” (1921–1922), Hi-Y Box 1, Kautz YMCA Archives.Google Scholar

78 The Texas State Young Men's Christian Associations, “Manual: Texas Hi-Y Clubs,” 5–6.Google Scholar

79 Kliebard, The Struggle for the American Curriculum, 89.Google Scholar

80 The athletic and military emphases here are closely linked to the broader cultural desire for authentic experience in a culture of weightless “banality.” See Lears, No Place of Grace, particularly chapters 1, 3, and 4.Google Scholar

81 Adams, Hi-Y Ceremonials,13.Google Scholar

82 On the themes of specialization and unification in the comprehensive high school, see Joel Spring, Education and the Rise of the Corporate State (Boston: Beacon Press, 1972), 108–125. The 1918 Cardinal Principles report also gave conscious attention to these themes. Noting that specialization could be achieved through differentiated curricula, guidance, adaptation of teaching methods and content to individual students, and flexible organization and administration, the report also urges the “unifying function” through course studies in “social studies and the mother tongue, with its literature” and student social mingling and participation in common activities “in which they should have a large measure of responsibility.” The report also mentions school assemblies, group activities, and loyalty to the school as important forces for unification. Report cited in Raubinger, Frederick M. Rowe, Harold G. Piper, Donald L. West, Charles K. The Development of Secondary Education (London: Macmillan Company, 1969), 102–130. For the original report, see “Cardinal Principles of Secondary Education,” Bureau of Education Bulletin, No. 35. Washington, D.C.: Department of the Interior, 1918. For a recent re-interpretation of this report that highlights some of these factors, see Wraga, William G.A Progressive Legacy Squandered: the Cardinal Principles Report Reconsidered,History of Education Quarterly 41:4 (Winter 2001): 494519.Google Scholar

83 “The Thirty-Seventh Annual Older Boys’ Conference, Lowell, Massachusetts, Official Program” (December 3–5, 1926), p. 18, Boys’ Work Box 2, Kautz YMCA Archives.Google Scholar

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101 Expanding commerce, the growth of political democracy, and the renewed interest in the child in education led Dewey to optimistically declare that “political, domestic, and industrial institutions have become in fact an organized Kingdom of God on earth, making for the welfare of the individual and the unity of the whole.” The democratic community of shared experience, he noted, was leading individuals and societies towards “the spiritual unification of humanity, the realization of the brotherhood of man, all that Christ called the Kingdom of God.” See Dewey, John Reconstruction in Philosophy (New York: Henry Holt and Co., 1920), 98100.Google Scholar

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104 This point is quite nicely expressed by Dewey when he suggests that, “The extension in space of the number of individuals who participate in an interest so that each has to refer his own action to that of others, and to consider the action of others to give point and direction to his own, is equivalent to the breaking down of those barriers of class, race, and national territory which kept men from perceiving the full import of their activity.” Dewey, Democracy and Education, 87.Google Scholar

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111 Eaton, E.E.Have We Lost Our Way?Association Boys’ Work Journal 1, no. 6 (November 1, 1928): 15. In that same issue, another commented that those who lived under this democratic premise seemed no more “free” than others. Many, in fact, seemed similarly cynical, self-absorbed, and intolerant of opposing points of view. Thus, for some, personal example seemed to belie the “freeing” process of democratic inquiry. See “Does the Democratic Process Release?” (8).Google Scholar

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118 Ibid, 5–7. The authors also noted that continued use of ritual might cause friction with the lodges and other fraternal organizations for men because of the duplication of rituals (6). In 1936, 38 percent of the clubs nationally still performed rituals and “rough-house initiation.” See “Resource Material, Series B Discussions, Group no. III. Who Shall Be a Member of the Hi-Y?” (1936), Hi-Y Box 2, Kautz YMCA Archives.Google Scholar

119 Lee, Wither Bound,11. See also Religious Work Department, Young Men's Christian Association, “Christian Character Building With Boys and Young Men” (1924), pp. 85–88, Boys’ Work Box 2, Kautz YMCA Archives.Google Scholar

120 YMCA Boys’ Work Committee, “The Challenge” (1932), pp. 2, 17, Boys’ Work Box 2, Kautz YMCA Archives.Google Scholar

121 See Watson, Goodwin B.Virtues Versus Virtue,School and Society 26: 662 (1927): 288.Google Scholar

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123 “Needs of American Youth and the Functions of General Agencies” (July 17, 1926), Hi-Y Box 1, Kautz YMCA Archives.Google Scholar

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137 Ibid., 1–4.Google Scholar

138 Christian Youth Council, Youth Action in Personal Living (Chicago: International Council of Religious Education, 1929), 15.Google Scholar

139 “Christian Youth Council Platform,” 1–2.Google Scholar

140 “Resource Material, Series B Discussions, Group no. V. Program: Methods and Content in Relation of the Hi-Y Purpose” (1936), Hi-Y Box 2, Kautz YMCA Archives.Google Scholar

141 Pugh, What Can a Hi-Y Club Do?14.Google Scholar

142 Ibid., 3.Google Scholar

143 Michigan Hi-Y Manual (Detroit: State YMCA, 1933-1934), pp. 34–35, Hi-Y Box 2, Kautz YMCA Archives.Google Scholar

144 Watson, Goodwin Case Studies for Teachers of Religion (New York: Association Press, 1930). Each case came complete with a vividly described scenario, a set of questions to stir thinking about situational dynamics, and a set of “resource quotations” (most authored by Dewey and Coe) to serve as theoretical fodder.Google Scholar

145 “Spade Work for the Hi-Y Congress,” National Hi-Y Ways (April 1936): 1–6.Google Scholar

146 “Case Studies for use with Hi-Y Groups,” National Hi-Y Ways (December 1934): 1–2.Google Scholar

147 On these themes in the schools, see Jonathan Zimmerman, Whose America? Culture Wars in the Public Schools (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2002), 55–80. One difference within the Hi-Y context was the degree of attention given to racial issues. Zimmerman notes that economics was superceding race and ethnicity in this era's text book controversies. For the Hi-Y, both issues received about equal attention. Importantly, such themes had also captured the college YMCA movement. For a description of this shift, see Clarence Shedd, Two Centuries of Student Christian Movements (New York: Association Press, 1934), 375–422.Google Scholar

148 Zimmerman, Whose America? 66-67. Zimmerman notes that by 1941, more than five million students had probably used one of Rugg's texts. See also Tyack, David Lowe, Robert and Hansot, Elizabeth, Public Schools in Hard Times, 65–66.Google Scholar

149 “How Democratic is Your Hi-Y?” (1932), Hi-Y Box 2, Kautz YMCA Archives.Google Scholar

150 Ibid. See also “Check List For Democratic Practice” (1932), Hi-Y Box 2, Kautz YMCA Archives.Google Scholar

151 For a discussion of the failure of social reconstructionists to change schools in the 1930s, see Tyack, David Lowe, Robert, and Hansot, Elizabeth, Public Schools in Hard Times; Kliebard, The Struggle for the American Curriculum, 199.Google Scholar

152 Lee, C.E.Boys’ Work and Social Reconstruction,Association Boys’ Work Journal 6: 5 (May 1933): 13.Google Scholar

153 Ibid.Google Scholar

154 Fass, The Damned and the Beautiful, 374375.Google Scholar

155 On the drivers’ education theme, see, for example, “Learn the Skills of the Road,” National Hi-Y Ways (February 1935): 1–2.Google Scholar

156 Church and Sedlak, Education in the United States, 255–260.Google Scholar

157 “Perfecting Personality: An Outline of Lectures by Dr. Louis Norris for Hi-Y Periods” (1939), pp. 13, Hi-Y Box 2, Kautz YMCA Archives; “For a Better Hi-Y Club: Official Report of the YMCA of Pittsburgh's Hi-Y Officers Training School,” Camp Laurel Ridge (May 24–26, 1940), pp. 1–11, Hi-Y Box 2, Kautz YMCA Archives. On the “custodial” practices of high schools in retaining youth at this time, see especially Angus and Mirel, The Failed Promise, 57–99.Google Scholar

158 Hopkins, History of the YMCA, 722.Google Scholar

159 Corwin, GeorgeProposal for a Nation-Wide Program to Help Make Democracy Effective in High Schools and Communities Through the Agency of the Hi-Y Movement“ (1939), Hi-Y Box 1, Kautz YMCA Archives. Corwin worked with U.S. Superintendent of Education J. W. Studebaker on this project.Google Scholar