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The study of adult education at UBC, 1957-1985Damer, Eric John 11 1900 (has links)
In 1957, The University of British Columbia launched Canada's first degree-granting
program in adult education. It subsequently grew to be one of the largest departments in the
Faculty of Education, and recognized internationally for its work. As it grew, however, the
program lost its initial administrative privilege. This study asks why UBC had the honour of
this Canadian "first," and how the program flowed and ebbed. It shows the relations between the
department's administrative and intellectual activities, and how the program fit British
Columbia's social development more generally. The study concludes that the successes were
largely opportunistic, as the program profited from the changing face of higher education more
generally and privileges secured under an early administrative regime. The program's failure was
that it did not create a stable identity independent of these opportunities: it failed to gain
recognition from academic outsiders as the home of distinct adult education research and
knowledge, and it failed to become the gatekeeper of a controlled profession. / Education, Faculty of / Educational Studies (EDST), Department of / Graduate
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Gender and mission : the founding generations of the Sisters of Saint Ann and the Oblates of Mary Immaculate in British Columbia, 1858-1914Gresko, Jacqueline 11 1900 (has links)
Most scholars who have researched on missionaries in British Columbia have not
taken gender into account. This dissertation narrates and analyzes the biographies of
the two founding generations of the Sisters of Saint Ann and the Oblates of Mary
Immaculate. It compares their origins in Quebec and Europe, their life histories, their
experiences teaching school, and their formation of the next generation of their religious
communities in British Columbia. The role of gender in shaping these individuals' lives
and identities can be seen in each aspect of the comparison.
Both the Oblates and the Sisters experienced the asymmetry of the female and
male organizations within the larger church. Over time two Roman Catholic
missionary systems evolved in British Columbia: the Sisters' system of educative and
caring institutions for the peoples of the province and the Oblates modified reduction
system for Aboriginal peoples, known in academic literature as the Durieu system.
School teaching, particularly work in residential schools for Aboriginal children, linked
the two systems. The French Oblate leaders aimed to masculinize the missions and
feminize school teaching. The Canadian Sisters of Saint Ann, however, set most of the
educational policies within both their own institutions and those they ran at Oblate
Aboriginal missions. Case studies of Oblate brothers and Sisters of Saint Ann work as
teachers in 1881 show that the nuns, as members of a separate religious congregation,
could negotiate with the patriarchs of the Roman Catholic church, whereas the Oblate
brothers could not. Such factors affected generational continuity. The Canadian
sisterhood reproduced itself in the region as a local family 'dynasty,' whereas the
French Oblate order did not.
Taking gender into account in a study of pioneer missionaries in British
Columbia does not simply reverse the standard history where the Oblates, as men,
appear central, and the Sisters of Saint Ann, as women, appear on the margins. Rather
the evidence of gender widens the range of discussion and increases awareness of the
complexity of the province's social and educational history.
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Gender and mission : the founding generations of the Sisters of Saint Ann and the Oblates of Mary Immaculate in British Columbia, 1858-1914Gresko, Jacqueline 11 1900 (has links)
Most scholars who have researched on missionaries in British Columbia have not
taken gender into account. This dissertation narrates and analyzes the biographies of
the two founding generations of the Sisters of Saint Ann and the Oblates of Mary
Immaculate. It compares their origins in Quebec and Europe, their life histories, their
experiences teaching school, and their formation of the next generation of their religious
communities in British Columbia. The role of gender in shaping these individuals' lives
and identities can be seen in each aspect of the comparison.
Both the Oblates and the Sisters experienced the asymmetry of the female and
male organizations within the larger church. Over time two Roman Catholic
missionary systems evolved in British Columbia: the Sisters' system of educative and
caring institutions for the peoples of the province and the Oblates modified reduction
system for Aboriginal peoples, known in academic literature as the Durieu system.
School teaching, particularly work in residential schools for Aboriginal children, linked
the two systems. The French Oblate leaders aimed to masculinize the missions and
feminize school teaching. The Canadian Sisters of Saint Ann, however, set most of the
educational policies within both their own institutions and those they ran at Oblate
Aboriginal missions. Case studies of Oblate brothers and Sisters of Saint Ann work as
teachers in 1881 show that the nuns, as members of a separate religious congregation,
could negotiate with the patriarchs of the Roman Catholic church, whereas the Oblate
brothers could not. Such factors affected generational continuity. The Canadian
sisterhood reproduced itself in the region as a local family 'dynasty,' whereas the
French Oblate order did not.
Taking gender into account in a study of pioneer missionaries in British
Columbia does not simply reverse the standard history where the Oblates, as men,
appear central, and the Sisters of Saint Ann, as women, appear on the margins. Rather
the evidence of gender widens the range of discussion and increases awareness of the
complexity of the province's social and educational history. / Education, Faculty of / Educational Studies (EDST), Department of / Graduate
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