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True/False
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1
The education of girls in Colonial America was influenced by the fifth-century beliefs of Augustine.
A)True
B)False
2
Liberal educators promoted women's education for the purpose of making women more effective in the roles of wife, mother, teacher of the young, and moral exemplar.
A)True
B)False
3
Those who subscribed to the liberal ideological perspective demanded gender equality for women.
A)True
B)False
4
Emma Willard's perspectives on female education made her a pioneer of the radical women's movement.
A)True
B)False
5
Emma Willard's normal school was heavily influenced by Horace Mann and his schools.
A)True
B)False
6
Catharine Beecher believed that as administrators of the household, females should receive the broadest and deepest education possible.
A)True
B)False
7
Educators believed that the daughters of immigrants and the working class especially needed domestic science instruction to teach them how to adequately prepare food and manage a home.
A)True
B)False
8
Anna Julia Cooper was primarily concerned with the elementary education of all African-American children.
A)True
B)False
9
Secondary education for females in early nineteenth-century America primarily prepared females for their domestic duties.
A)True
B)False
10
Vocational training for females was comprised solely of domestic science, preparing females for their roles in homemaking and motherhood.
A)True
B)False







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