首页> 外文OA文献 >Holy Cross College Woollahra 1908-2001: a micro-study of Catholic education in the Archdiocese of Sydney in the twentieth century
【2h】

Holy Cross College Woollahra 1908-2001: a micro-study of Catholic education in the Archdiocese of Sydney in the twentieth century

机译:Woollahra圣十字学院1908-2001:二十世纪悉尼总主教管区的天主教教育微观研究

摘要

Holy Cross College, Woollahra, was established in the newly formed parish of Holy Cross by Cardinal Moran and the Parramatta Sisters of Mercy in 1908 as a select high school for middle class Catholic girls in the northern section of the Eastern Suburbs of Sydney. Moran made it clear, and it was obvious that the sisters agreed, that the primary purpose of the College was the imparting of the Catholic Faith integrated with a suitable middle class education equal to, but preferably excelling, that provided by the secular state schools. This thesis is informed by two questions: Why did Holy Cross College close in 2001? Did the College achieve the objectives of the founding pioneers of the school, including Cardinal Moran? This strongly contextualised thesis demonstrates that for almost a century Holy Cross College was a microcosm of a complex world, one which was influenced by many factors, at local, state, federal and international levels. These factors, in the early days, included the rapid response of Catholic educators to Peter Boardu27s u27New Syllabusu27, the first wave womenu27s movement; and the dubious rationalising argument of Cardinal Moran to extract aid for Catholic schools from the state, which remains an ongoing problem for Catholic education in Australia. While the College in the 1920s was enjoying a growing reputation for highly successful music and academic tuition, it was challenged, through to the 1950s, by such factors as: Pope Pius XIu27s call to Catholic Action as interpreted for the Archdiocese of Sydney by Archbishop Kelly; participation in the various public displays of Catholic faith; the rigours of the Great Depression; and the dangers of being in an especially vulnerable location during World War Two. The community of the College which inhabited this complex u27miniu27 world was strongly bonded by common goals and values for the first fifty years of the schoolu27s existence.;This was a community which aspired to the fullest possible development of the spiritual, intellectual, cultural and physical attributes of girls through a Catholic education inspired by the Mercy Vision, but always constrained by the reality of finances, staffing, physical resources, and imposed authority. The somewhat idyllic existence of the College with its relatively small numbers and homely atmosphere was disrupted in the 1960s when Holy Cross was selected by the Sydney archdiocesan educational authorities to be a regional school. This study reveals the increasing complexity of the various levels at which authority was exerted over Holy Cross College as a regional school. Regionalisation was a central element in the Sydney Archdioceseu27s wide ranging plan to cope with the enormous strains on the Catholic educational system caused by such post-war challenges as the influx of Catholic migrants and the implementation of the Wyndham comprehensive secondary education scheme. There followed the success of the state aid campaigns and the challenges of Vatican II Council, movements which impacted upon the personal and communal lives of the women religious who staffed the College, as well as their students. Also impacting upon the College was the cultural revolution and the second wave womenu27s movement of the 1960s and 1970s. Throughout this study the geographical setting of the school in Sydneyu27s Eastern Suburbs and the regionu27s socio-economic characteristics are explored and emerge as significant factors in both the creation and maintenance of a unique school culture and the decline of Holy Cross College in the 1990s. Finally this decline is mapped in terms of the erosion of the Collegeu27s unique identity, which was forged by religious, cultural, geographical, political and pedagogical forces, and eroded by a complex of factors including demography, centralised authority, class, and international economic downturns.;It is concluded that the founding sisters and Moran would have mixed and nuanced responses to the question: Did the College achieve the objectives of the founding pioneers?
机译:乌拉拉(​​Woollahra)的圣十字学院(Holy Cross College)由红衣主教莫兰(Moran)和帕拉马塔慈悲姐妹会(Parramatta Sisters of Mercy)于1908年在新成立的圣十字教区成立,是悉尼东部郊区北部中产阶级天主教女孩的精选中学。莫兰清楚地表明了这一点,并且姐妹们显然也同意,学院的主要目的是将天主教信仰与适当的中产阶级教育相结合,这种教育等于但最好是世俗国立学校所提供的。该论文有两个问题:为什么圣十字学院在2001年关闭?学院是否实现了包括Cardinal Moran在内的学校创始者的目标?这一具有很强背景意义的论文表明,近一个世纪以来,圣十字学院是一个复杂世界的缩影,这个世界受到了地方,州,联邦和国际各级许多因素的影响。在早期,这些因素包括天主教教育者对第一波妇女运动彼得·波德的新课程纲要的迅速反应。以及枢机主教莫兰(Cardan Moran)提出的合理化论点,即从该州获得对天主教学校的援助,这仍然是澳大利亚天主教教育的一个持续问题。尽管1920年代学院在成功的音乐和学费方面享有很高的声誉,但直到1950年代,它一直受到以下因素的挑战:教皇庇护十一世呼吁天主教徒行动,由悉尼大主教管区解释为凯利大主教;参加各种天主教信仰的公开展示;大萧条的严峻考验;以及在第二次世界大战期间处于特别脆弱的位置的危险。在这个复杂的世界中居住的学院社区在学校存在的头五十年里就受到共同的目标和价值观的强烈束缚。通过天主教教育的启发,女孩的智力,文化和身体属性受到仁慈远见的启发,但始终受到财务,人员配备,物质资源和施加的权威的现实的制约。 1960年代,圣十字勋章被悉尼大主教区教育主管部门选为地区学校,这所学院的数量相对较少,家庭氛围相对田园诗般的存在就被打乱了。这项研究揭示了在圣十字学院作为地方学校施加权力的各个层次上越来越复杂。区域化是悉尼大主教管区广泛计划中的核心要素,以应对由于战后挑战如天主教移民涌入和温德姆综合中学教育计划的实施而对天主教教育体系造成的巨大压力。随后是国家援助运动的成功以及梵蒂冈第二委员会的挑战,这些运动影响了为学院工作的宗教女性及其学生的个人和公共生活。文化革命和1960年代和1970年代第二波妇女运动也对学院产生了影响。在整个研究过程中,对悉尼东部郊区学校的地理环境和该地区的社会经济特征进行了探索,并成为创建和维护独特学校文化以及圣十字学院在澳大利亚衰落的重要因素。 1990年代。最终,这种下降是根据学院独特身份的侵蚀来描绘的,该独特身份是由宗教,文化,地理,政治和教育力量锻造而成,并受到人口统计学,中央权威,阶级和国际影响等多种因素的侵蚀经济不景气;得出的结论是,创始姐妹和莫兰(Moran)对以下问题的回答是混合而细致的:学院是否实现了创始先驱者的目标?

著录项

  • 作者

    Garaty Janice Royaline;

  • 作者单位
  • 年度 2008
  • 总页数
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种
  • 中图分类

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号