James McMurtry Longo
From Classroom to White House
The Presidents and First Ladies as Students and Teachers
James McMurtry Longo
From Classroom to White House
The Presidents and First Ladies as Students and Teachers
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President Eisenhower, who was not always the best student, once wrote, "One cannot always read a man's future in the record of his younger days." Indeed, this review of the classroom experiences of presidents and first ladies from George and Martha Washington to Barack and Michelle Obama reveals that few made model students. Teachers reported that John F. Kennedy could "seldom locate his possessions," found George H.W. Bush "somewhat eccentric," and dubbed a sixth-grade Bill Clinton "a motormouth." In addition to chronicling the school days of these historic figures, this volume also relates…mehr
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President Eisenhower, who was not always the best student, once wrote, "One cannot always read a man's future in the record of his younger days." Indeed, this review of the classroom experiences of presidents and first ladies from George and Martha Washington to Barack and Michelle Obama reveals that few made model students. Teachers reported that John F. Kennedy could "seldom locate his possessions," found George H.W. Bush "somewhat eccentric," and dubbed a sixth-grade Bill Clinton "a motormouth." In addition to chronicling the school days of these historic figures, this volume also relates their teaching experiences, the educational issues they addressed during their White House years, and intricacies of education at their time in history, providing an informative overview of American schooling over time.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: McFarland
- Seitenzahl: 230
- Erscheinungstermin: 4. November 2011
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 14mm
- Gewicht: 380g
- ISBN-13: 9780786464869
- ISBN-10: 0786464860
- Artikelnr.: 33768652
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: McFarland
- Seitenzahl: 230
- Erscheinungstermin: 4. November 2011
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 14mm
- Gewicht: 380g
- ISBN-13: 9780786464869
- ISBN-10: 0786464860
- Artikelnr.: 33768652
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
James McMurtry Longo is a professor of education and chair of the Education Department at Washington and Jefferson College in Washington, Pennsylvania, and author of six other books.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Preface
Part One. Founding Fathers, Mothers, and
Martha Dandridge Custis and George Washington: "Illiterate, Unlearned and
Unread"
Abigail Smith, John Adams, and the Remarkable Smith Sisters: "We Should
Have More Learned Women"
Thomas Jefferson:"The Destinies of My Life"
Dolley Payne Todd and James Madison: "Three Hours Out of Twenty-Four for
Sleep?"
Elizabeth Kortright and James Monroe: "My Plan of Life Is Now Fixed"
Louisa Johnson and John Quincy Adams: "I Hope I Grow a Better Boy"
Part Two. The Golden Age of Education-For Some
Rachel Donelson Robards and Andrew Jackson: "He Never Stayed Throwed"
Hannah Hoes and Martin Van Buren: "The Village Academy"
Anna Symmes and William Henry Harrison: "He Can Neither Breed, Plead, nor
Preach"
Letitia Christian, Julia Gardiner, and John Tyler: "The Rebellious Former
Student, Lived and Died a Rebel"
Sarah Childress and James K. Polk: "Her Occupation as a School Teacher
Barred Her from Social Equality"
Margaret Smith and Zachary Taylor: "Of Very Ordinary Capacity"
Abigail Powers and Millard Fillmore: "A Very Rough and Uncultivated Place"
Jane Appleton and Franklin Pierce: "There Are Scores of Men in the Country
That Seem Brighter than He Is"
James Buchanan: "Misconduct, Arrogant Attitude, and Disrespect for
Teachers"
Mary Todd and Abraham Lincoln: "The Most Important Subject"
Eliza McCardle and Andrew Johnson: "If He Can Only Educate Himself, He Has
a Destiny"
Julia Dent and Ulysses S. Grant: "I Did Not Take Hold of My Studies with
Avidity"
Lucy Webb and Rutherford B. Hayes: "Elections without Education ... Must
Always and Everywhere Be a Farce"
Lucretia Rudolph and James Gar¿eld: "Outrages of the Schoolhouse"
Chester A. Arthur: "Pupils Are Altogether Separated from the Surroundings
of Savage Life"
Frances Folsom and Grover Cleveland: "As a Student, Grover Did Not Shine"
Caroline Scott and Benjamin Harrison: "Abstain from Eating Cucumbers"
Ida Saxton and William McKinley: "No Startling Tales Are Told of His
Precocity"
Part Three. The Twentieth Century
Edith Carow and Teddy Roosevelt: "We Call the Man Fanatic"
Helen Herron and William Howard Taft: "To Live and Die a Professor"
Ellen Axson, Edith Bolling Galt, and Woodrow Wilson: "To Transform
Thoughtless Boys into Thinking Men"
Florence Kling and Warren G. Harding: "Naturally Smart"
Grace Goodhue and Calvin Coolidge: "A Professionally Trained Teacher"
Lou Henry and Herbert Hoover: "A Whole New World of Ideas"
Eleanor and Franklin Roosevelt: "I Never Forgot a Damn Thing She Ever
Taught Me"
Bess Wallace and Harry S Truman: "Nobody Thought That He'd Go Far"
Mamie Doud and Dwight Eisenhower: "A Lackluster Student"
Jacqueline Bouvier and John F. Kennedy: "If You Study Too Much, You're
Liable to Go Crazy"
Claudia Taylor and Lyndon Johnson: "Scars on the Hopeful Face of a Young
Child"
Pat Ryan and Richard Nixon: "I Had a Saint of a Teacher"
Betty Bloomer and Jerry Ford: "We Do Not Need That Kind of Character in Our
Girls"
Rosalynn Smith and Jimmy Carter: "Stretching Our Minds and Stretching Our
Hearts"
Nancy Davis and Ronald Reagan: "The Last Kid Chosen"
Barbara Pierce and George H.W. Bush: "Faking His Way through Reading"
Part Four. The Twenty-First Century
Hillary Rodham and Bill Clinton: "I Want to Be a Teacher or a Nuclear
Physicist"
Laura Welch and George W. Bush: "The Absolute Profession"
Michelle Robinson and Barack Obama: "The Chance to Succeed"
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments
Preface
Part One. Founding Fathers, Mothers, and
Martha Dandridge Custis and George Washington: "Illiterate, Unlearned and
Unread"
Abigail Smith, John Adams, and the Remarkable Smith Sisters: "We Should
Have More Learned Women"
Thomas Jefferson:"The Destinies of My Life"
Dolley Payne Todd and James Madison: "Three Hours Out of Twenty-Four for
Sleep?"
Elizabeth Kortright and James Monroe: "My Plan of Life Is Now Fixed"
Louisa Johnson and John Quincy Adams: "I Hope I Grow a Better Boy"
Part Two. The Golden Age of Education-For Some
Rachel Donelson Robards and Andrew Jackson: "He Never Stayed Throwed"
Hannah Hoes and Martin Van Buren: "The Village Academy"
Anna Symmes and William Henry Harrison: "He Can Neither Breed, Plead, nor
Preach"
Letitia Christian, Julia Gardiner, and John Tyler: "The Rebellious Former
Student, Lived and Died a Rebel"
Sarah Childress and James K. Polk: "Her Occupation as a School Teacher
Barred Her from Social Equality"
Margaret Smith and Zachary Taylor: "Of Very Ordinary Capacity"
Abigail Powers and Millard Fillmore: "A Very Rough and Uncultivated Place"
Jane Appleton and Franklin Pierce: "There Are Scores of Men in the Country
That Seem Brighter than He Is"
James Buchanan: "Misconduct, Arrogant Attitude, and Disrespect for
Teachers"
Mary Todd and Abraham Lincoln: "The Most Important Subject"
Eliza McCardle and Andrew Johnson: "If He Can Only Educate Himself, He Has
a Destiny"
Julia Dent and Ulysses S. Grant: "I Did Not Take Hold of My Studies with
Avidity"
Lucy Webb and Rutherford B. Hayes: "Elections without Education ... Must
Always and Everywhere Be a Farce"
Lucretia Rudolph and James Gar¿eld: "Outrages of the Schoolhouse"
Chester A. Arthur: "Pupils Are Altogether Separated from the Surroundings
of Savage Life"
Frances Folsom and Grover Cleveland: "As a Student, Grover Did Not Shine"
Caroline Scott and Benjamin Harrison: "Abstain from Eating Cucumbers"
Ida Saxton and William McKinley: "No Startling Tales Are Told of His
Precocity"
Part Three. The Twentieth Century
Edith Carow and Teddy Roosevelt: "We Call the Man Fanatic"
Helen Herron and William Howard Taft: "To Live and Die a Professor"
Ellen Axson, Edith Bolling Galt, and Woodrow Wilson: "To Transform
Thoughtless Boys into Thinking Men"
Florence Kling and Warren G. Harding: "Naturally Smart"
Grace Goodhue and Calvin Coolidge: "A Professionally Trained Teacher"
Lou Henry and Herbert Hoover: "A Whole New World of Ideas"
Eleanor and Franklin Roosevelt: "I Never Forgot a Damn Thing She Ever
Taught Me"
Bess Wallace and Harry S Truman: "Nobody Thought That He'd Go Far"
Mamie Doud and Dwight Eisenhower: "A Lackluster Student"
Jacqueline Bouvier and John F. Kennedy: "If You Study Too Much, You're
Liable to Go Crazy"
Claudia Taylor and Lyndon Johnson: "Scars on the Hopeful Face of a Young
Child"
Pat Ryan and Richard Nixon: "I Had a Saint of a Teacher"
Betty Bloomer and Jerry Ford: "We Do Not Need That Kind of Character in Our
Girls"
Rosalynn Smith and Jimmy Carter: "Stretching Our Minds and Stretching Our
Hearts"
Nancy Davis and Ronald Reagan: "The Last Kid Chosen"
Barbara Pierce and George H.W. Bush: "Faking His Way through Reading"
Part Four. The Twenty-First Century
Hillary Rodham and Bill Clinton: "I Want to Be a Teacher or a Nuclear
Physicist"
Laura Welch and George W. Bush: "The Absolute Profession"
Michelle Robinson and Barack Obama: "The Chance to Succeed"
Bibliography
Index
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Preface
Part One. Founding Fathers, Mothers, and
Martha Dandridge Custis and George Washington: "Illiterate, Unlearned and
Unread"
Abigail Smith, John Adams, and the Remarkable Smith Sisters: "We Should
Have More Learned Women"
Thomas Jefferson:"The Destinies of My Life"
Dolley Payne Todd and James Madison: "Three Hours Out of Twenty-Four for
Sleep?"
Elizabeth Kortright and James Monroe: "My Plan of Life Is Now Fixed"
Louisa Johnson and John Quincy Adams: "I Hope I Grow a Better Boy"
Part Two. The Golden Age of Education-For Some
Rachel Donelson Robards and Andrew Jackson: "He Never Stayed Throwed"
Hannah Hoes and Martin Van Buren: "The Village Academy"
Anna Symmes and William Henry Harrison: "He Can Neither Breed, Plead, nor
Preach"
Letitia Christian, Julia Gardiner, and John Tyler: "The Rebellious Former
Student, Lived and Died a Rebel"
Sarah Childress and James K. Polk: "Her Occupation as a School Teacher
Barred Her from Social Equality"
Margaret Smith and Zachary Taylor: "Of Very Ordinary Capacity"
Abigail Powers and Millard Fillmore: "A Very Rough and Uncultivated Place"
Jane Appleton and Franklin Pierce: "There Are Scores of Men in the Country
That Seem Brighter than He Is"
James Buchanan: "Misconduct, Arrogant Attitude, and Disrespect for
Teachers"
Mary Todd and Abraham Lincoln: "The Most Important Subject"
Eliza McCardle and Andrew Johnson: "If He Can Only Educate Himself, He Has
a Destiny"
Julia Dent and Ulysses S. Grant: "I Did Not Take Hold of My Studies with
Avidity"
Lucy Webb and Rutherford B. Hayes: "Elections without Education ... Must
Always and Everywhere Be a Farce"
Lucretia Rudolph and James Gar¿eld: "Outrages of the Schoolhouse"
Chester A. Arthur: "Pupils Are Altogether Separated from the Surroundings
of Savage Life"
Frances Folsom and Grover Cleveland: "As a Student, Grover Did Not Shine"
Caroline Scott and Benjamin Harrison: "Abstain from Eating Cucumbers"
Ida Saxton and William McKinley: "No Startling Tales Are Told of His
Precocity"
Part Three. The Twentieth Century
Edith Carow and Teddy Roosevelt: "We Call the Man Fanatic"
Helen Herron and William Howard Taft: "To Live and Die a Professor"
Ellen Axson, Edith Bolling Galt, and Woodrow Wilson: "To Transform
Thoughtless Boys into Thinking Men"
Florence Kling and Warren G. Harding: "Naturally Smart"
Grace Goodhue and Calvin Coolidge: "A Professionally Trained Teacher"
Lou Henry and Herbert Hoover: "A Whole New World of Ideas"
Eleanor and Franklin Roosevelt: "I Never Forgot a Damn Thing She Ever
Taught Me"
Bess Wallace and Harry S Truman: "Nobody Thought That He'd Go Far"
Mamie Doud and Dwight Eisenhower: "A Lackluster Student"
Jacqueline Bouvier and John F. Kennedy: "If You Study Too Much, You're
Liable to Go Crazy"
Claudia Taylor and Lyndon Johnson: "Scars on the Hopeful Face of a Young
Child"
Pat Ryan and Richard Nixon: "I Had a Saint of a Teacher"
Betty Bloomer and Jerry Ford: "We Do Not Need That Kind of Character in Our
Girls"
Rosalynn Smith and Jimmy Carter: "Stretching Our Minds and Stretching Our
Hearts"
Nancy Davis and Ronald Reagan: "The Last Kid Chosen"
Barbara Pierce and George H.W. Bush: "Faking His Way through Reading"
Part Four. The Twenty-First Century
Hillary Rodham and Bill Clinton: "I Want to Be a Teacher or a Nuclear
Physicist"
Laura Welch and George W. Bush: "The Absolute Profession"
Michelle Robinson and Barack Obama: "The Chance to Succeed"
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments
Preface
Part One. Founding Fathers, Mothers, and
Martha Dandridge Custis and George Washington: "Illiterate, Unlearned and
Unread"
Abigail Smith, John Adams, and the Remarkable Smith Sisters: "We Should
Have More Learned Women"
Thomas Jefferson:"The Destinies of My Life"
Dolley Payne Todd and James Madison: "Three Hours Out of Twenty-Four for
Sleep?"
Elizabeth Kortright and James Monroe: "My Plan of Life Is Now Fixed"
Louisa Johnson and John Quincy Adams: "I Hope I Grow a Better Boy"
Part Two. The Golden Age of Education-For Some
Rachel Donelson Robards and Andrew Jackson: "He Never Stayed Throwed"
Hannah Hoes and Martin Van Buren: "The Village Academy"
Anna Symmes and William Henry Harrison: "He Can Neither Breed, Plead, nor
Preach"
Letitia Christian, Julia Gardiner, and John Tyler: "The Rebellious Former
Student, Lived and Died a Rebel"
Sarah Childress and James K. Polk: "Her Occupation as a School Teacher
Barred Her from Social Equality"
Margaret Smith and Zachary Taylor: "Of Very Ordinary Capacity"
Abigail Powers and Millard Fillmore: "A Very Rough and Uncultivated Place"
Jane Appleton and Franklin Pierce: "There Are Scores of Men in the Country
That Seem Brighter than He Is"
James Buchanan: "Misconduct, Arrogant Attitude, and Disrespect for
Teachers"
Mary Todd and Abraham Lincoln: "The Most Important Subject"
Eliza McCardle and Andrew Johnson: "If He Can Only Educate Himself, He Has
a Destiny"
Julia Dent and Ulysses S. Grant: "I Did Not Take Hold of My Studies with
Avidity"
Lucy Webb and Rutherford B. Hayes: "Elections without Education ... Must
Always and Everywhere Be a Farce"
Lucretia Rudolph and James Gar¿eld: "Outrages of the Schoolhouse"
Chester A. Arthur: "Pupils Are Altogether Separated from the Surroundings
of Savage Life"
Frances Folsom and Grover Cleveland: "As a Student, Grover Did Not Shine"
Caroline Scott and Benjamin Harrison: "Abstain from Eating Cucumbers"
Ida Saxton and William McKinley: "No Startling Tales Are Told of His
Precocity"
Part Three. The Twentieth Century
Edith Carow and Teddy Roosevelt: "We Call the Man Fanatic"
Helen Herron and William Howard Taft: "To Live and Die a Professor"
Ellen Axson, Edith Bolling Galt, and Woodrow Wilson: "To Transform
Thoughtless Boys into Thinking Men"
Florence Kling and Warren G. Harding: "Naturally Smart"
Grace Goodhue and Calvin Coolidge: "A Professionally Trained Teacher"
Lou Henry and Herbert Hoover: "A Whole New World of Ideas"
Eleanor and Franklin Roosevelt: "I Never Forgot a Damn Thing She Ever
Taught Me"
Bess Wallace and Harry S Truman: "Nobody Thought That He'd Go Far"
Mamie Doud and Dwight Eisenhower: "A Lackluster Student"
Jacqueline Bouvier and John F. Kennedy: "If You Study Too Much, You're
Liable to Go Crazy"
Claudia Taylor and Lyndon Johnson: "Scars on the Hopeful Face of a Young
Child"
Pat Ryan and Richard Nixon: "I Had a Saint of a Teacher"
Betty Bloomer and Jerry Ford: "We Do Not Need That Kind of Character in Our
Girls"
Rosalynn Smith and Jimmy Carter: "Stretching Our Minds and Stretching Our
Hearts"
Nancy Davis and Ronald Reagan: "The Last Kid Chosen"
Barbara Pierce and George H.W. Bush: "Faking His Way through Reading"
Part Four. The Twenty-First Century
Hillary Rodham and Bill Clinton: "I Want to Be a Teacher or a Nuclear
Physicist"
Laura Welch and George W. Bush: "The Absolute Profession"
Michelle Robinson and Barack Obama: "The Chance to Succeed"
Bibliography
Index







