Dictionary Definition
schooling
Noun
1 the act of teaching at school
2 the process of being formally educated at a
school; "what will you do when you finish school?" [syn: school]
3 the training of an animal (especially the
training of a horse for dressage)
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
-
- Rhymes with: -uːlɪŋ
Noun
- training or instruction
- education
- the training of a horse at dressage
Verb
schooling- present participle of school
Extensive Definition
A School (from Greek
σχολεῖον - scholeion) is an institution designed to
allow and encourage students (or "pupils") to learn,
under the supervision of teachers. Most countries have
systems of formal education, which is commonly
compulsory.
In these systems, students progress through a series of schools.
The names for these schools vary by country (discussed in the
Regional section below), but generally include primary
school for young children and secondary
school for teenagers who have completed primary
education.
In addition to these core schools, students in a
given country may also have access to and attend schools both
before and after primary and secondary education. Kindergarten
or pre-school provide
some schooling to very young children (typically ages 3-5).
University,
vocational
school, college or
seminary may be
available after (or in lieu of) secondary school. A school may also
be dedicated to one particular field, such as a school of economics
or a school of dance. Alternative
schools may provide nontraditional curriculum and
methods.
There are also non-government schools, called
private schools. Private schools may be for children with special
needs when the government does not supply for them; religious, such
as Christian
Schools, Khalsa
Schools, Torah
Schools and others; or schools that have a higher standard of
education or seek to foster other personal achievements.
In homeschooling and online schools,
teaching and learning take place outside of a traditional school
building.
Regional Terms
The use of the term school varies by country, as
do the names of the various levels of education within the
country.
United Kingdom and Commonwealth of Nations
In the United
Kingdom, the term school refers primarily to pre-university institutions, and
these can, for the most part, be divided into pre-schools or
nursery
schools, primary
schools (sometimes further divided into infant
school and junior
school), and secondary
schools. There are various types of secondary schools which
include grammar
schools, comprehensives,
secondary
moderns and city
academies. In Scotland school performance is monitored by
Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Education. Ofsted reports on
performance in England and Wales.
In the United Kingdom, most schools are publicly
funded and known as state
schools or maintained schools in which tuition is provided
free. There are also private schools or independent
schools that charge fees. Some of the most selective and
expensive private schools are known as public
schools, a usage that can be confusing to speakers of North
American English. In North American usage, a public
school is one that is publicly funded or run.
In much of the Commonwealth
of Nations, including Australia,
New
Zealand, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh,
Sri
Lanka, Kenya, and Tanzania, the term
school refers primarily to pre-university
institutions.
Europe
In much of continental Europe, the term
school usually applies to primary
education, with primary schools that last between six and nine
years, depending on the country. It also applies to secondary
education, with secondary schools often divided between
Gymnasiums
and vocational
schools, which again depending on country and type of school
take between three and six years. The term school is rarely used
for tertiary
education, except for some upper or high schools (German:
Hochschule) which are used to describe colleges and universities.
North America and the United States
In North
America, the term school can refer to any educational
institution at any level, and covers all of the following: preschool (for toddlers), kindergarten, elementary
school, middle
school (also called intermediate school or junior high school,
depending on specific age groups and geographic region), senior
high school, college, university, and graduate
school.
In the US, school
performance through high school is monitored by each state's
Department
of Education. Charter
schools are publicly funded elementary or secondary schools
that have been freed from some of the rules, regulations, and
statutes that apply to other public schools. The terms grammar
school and grade school are sometimes used to refer to a
primary school.
Universal Terms
In many countries, Business Schools are colleges providing instruction in business, business administration, and management.Boarding
schools are schools where where students live full-time
amongst their peers in dormitories. Some boarding
schools are separated by gender.
School ownership and operation
Many schools are owned or funded by states. Private schools are those which are operated independently from the government. Private schools usually rely on fees from families whose children attend the school for funding; however, sometimes such schools also receive government support (for example, through School vouchers). Many private schools are affiliated with a particular religion; these are known as parochial schools.Components of most schools
Schools are organized spaces purposed for
teaching and learning. The classrooms, where teachers
teach and students learn, are of central importance, but typical
schools have many other areas which may include:
- cafeteria (Commons), dining hall or canteen where students eat lunch.
- athletic field, playground, gym, and/or track place where students participating in sports or physical education practice
- auditorium or hall where student theatrical or musical productions can be staged and where all-school events such as assemblies are held.
- office where the administrative work of the school is done.
- library where students consult and check out books.
- Specialized classrooms including laboratories for science education.
- A Computer lab where computer-based work is done
History and development of schools
The concept of grouping students together in a
centralized location for learning has existed since Classical
antiquity. Formal schools have existed at least since ancient
Greece (see Academy). The
Byzantine
Empire had an established schooling system beginning at the
primary level. According to Traditions and Encounters, the founding
of the primary education system began in 425 A.D. and
"… military personnel
usually had at least a primary education …". The Byzantine
education system continued until the empire's collapse in 1453
AD.
Islam was another culture to develop a schooling
system in the modern sense of the word, largely brought about by
conquests of Greek, Roman and Persian cultures, revealing a wealth
of knowledge. Emphasis was put on knowledge and therefore a
systematic way of teaching and spreading knowledge was developed in
purpose built structures. At first, mosques combined both religious
performance and learning activities, but by the tenth century, the
Seljuks introduced the Madrassa, a proper
school built independently from the mosque. They were also the
first to make the Madrassa system a public domain under the control
of the caliph. The
Nizamiyya madrasa is considered by consensus of scholars to be the
earliest surviving school, built towards 1066 CE by Emir Nizam
Al-Mulk.
Under the Ottomans, the
towns of Bursa and Edirne became the
main centers of learning. The Ottoman system of Kulliye, a building
complex containing a mosque, a hospital, madrassa, and public
kitchen and dining areas, revolutionized the education system,
making learning accessible to a wider public through its free
meals, health care
and sometimes free accommodation.
The nineteenth century historian, Scott holds
that a remarkable correspondence exists between the procedure
established by those institutions and the methods of the present
day. They had their collegiate courses, their prizes for
proficiency in scholarship, their oratorical and poetical contests,
their commencements and their degrees. In the department of
medicine, a severe and prolonged examination, conducted by the most
eminent physicians of the capital, was exacted of all candidates
desirous of practicing their profession, and such as were unable to
stand the test were formally pronounced incompetent.
In Europe during the
Middle
Ages and much of the Early Modern
period, the main purpose of schools (as opposed to universities)
was to teach the Latin language. This
led to the term grammar
school which in the United States is used informally to refer
to a primary school but in the United Kingdom means a school that
selects entrants on their ability or aptitude. Following this, the
school curriculum has gradually broadened to include literacy in
the vernacular language as well as technical, artistic, scientific
and practical subjects.
Many of the earlier public schools in the United
States were one-room
schools where a single teacher taught seven grades of boys and
girls in the same classroom. Beginning in the 1920s, one-room
schools were consolidated into multiple classroom facilities with
transportation increasingly provided by kid hacks and
school
buses.
School security
The safety of staff and students is increasingly
becoming an issue for school communities, an issue most schools are
addressing through improved security. After mass shootings such as
the
Columbine High School massacre and the Virginia
Tech incident, many school administrators in the United States
have created plans to protect students and staff in the event of a
school
shooting. Some have also taken measures such as installing
metal
detectors). Others have even taken measures such as having the
children swipe identification cards as they board the school bus.
For some schools, these plans have included the use of door
numbering to aid public safety response.
Other security concerns faced by schools include
bomb
threats and the presence of gangs. Bullying is of
major concern in many schools.
School health services
Online schools/classes
Some schools offer remote access to their classes over the Internet. Online schools also can provide support to traditional schools, as in the case of the School Net Namibia. Some online classes provide experience in a class so that when you take it you have already been introduced to the subject and know what to expect, and even more classes provide High School/College credit allowing you to take the class at your own pace. Many online classes cost money to use but some are offered free.Schools in the Media
Schools and schoolchildren are frequently portrayed in fiction and the media, ranging from Harry Potter and Grange Hill to Battle Royale. See List of fictional schoolsStress
As a profession, teaching has very high levels of Work-Related Stress (WRS) which are listed as amongst the highest of any profession in some countries, such as the United Kingdom. The degree of this problem is becoming increasingly recognised and support systems are being put into place. Teacher education is increasingly recognizing the need for new entrants to the profession to be aware of and trained to overcome the challenges that they will face on the 'mental health' front.Discipline
Schools and their teachers have always been under pressure — for instance, pressure to cover the curriculum, to perform well in comparison to other schools, and to avoid the stigma of being "soft" or "spoiling" toward students. Forms of discipline, such as control over when students will and will not speak, and normalized behaviour, such as raising one's hand to speak, are imposed in the name of greater efficiency. Practitoners of critical pedagogy point out that such disciplinary measures have no positive effect on student learning; indeed, some would argue that disciplinary practices actually detract from learning since they undermine students' individual dignity and sense of self-worth, the latter occupying a more primary role in students' hierarchy of needs.References
Bibliography
- Dodge, B. (1962). ‘Muslim Education in the Medieval Times’, The Middle East Institute, Washington D.C.
- Education as Enforcement: The Militarization and Corporatization of Schools, edited by Kenneth J. Saltman and David A. Gabbard, RoutledgeFalmer 2003.review
- Makdisi, G. (1980). ‘On the origin and development of the college in Islam and the West’, in Islam and the Medieval West, ed. Khalil I. Semaan, State University of New York Press
- Nakosteen, M. (1964). ‘History of Islamic origins of Western Education AD 800-1350’, University of Colorado Press, Boulder, Colorado,
- Ribera, J. (1928). ‘Disertaciones Y Opusculos’, 2 vols. Madrid
- Spielhofer, Thomas, Tom Benton, Sandie Schagen. “A study of the effects of school size and single-sex education in English schools.” Research Papers in Education Jun. 2004:133 159, 27.
- Toppo, Greg. "High-tech school security is on the rise." USA Today 9 Oct 2006.
- Traditions and Encounters, by Jerry H. Bentley and Herb F. Ziegler
See also
sisterlinks School- List of colleges and universities by country
- List of schools by country
- List of songs about school
- List of television series about school
- Music school
- Prep school
- School and university in literature
- Teaching for social justice
schooling in Arabic: مدرسة
schooling in Aymara: Yatiña uta
schooling in Azerbaijani: Məktəb
schooling in Bulgarian: Училище
schooling in Catalan: Escola
schooling in Chuvash: Шкул
schooling in Cebuano: Ecole
schooling in Czech: Škola
schooling in Welsh: Ysgol (addysg)
schooling in Danish: Skole
schooling in German: Schule
schooling in Estonian: Kool
schooling in Spanish: Escuela
schooling in Esperanto: Lernejo
schooling in Basque: Eskola
schooling in French: École
schooling in Korean: 학교
schooling in Indonesian: Sekolah
(institusi)
schooling in Interlingua (International
Auxiliary Language Association): Schola
schooling in Inuktitut:
ᐃᓕᓐᓂᐊᕈᑎᒃᓴᓕᐅᕐᕕᒃ/ilinniarutiksaliurvik
schooling in Icelandic: Skóli
schooling in Italian: Scuola
schooling in Hebrew: בית ספר
schooling in Georgian: სკოლა
schooling in Latin: Schola
schooling in Lithuanian: Mokykla
schooling in Malayalam: വിദ്യാലയം
schooling in Malay (macrolanguage):
Sekolah
schooling in Dutch: Schoolgebouw
schooling in Japanese: 学校
schooling in Norwegian: Skole
schooling in Low German: School
schooling in Polish: Szkoła (oświata)
schooling in Portuguese: Escola
schooling in Romanian: Şcoală
schooling in Quechua: Yachay wasi
schooling in Russian: Школа
schooling in Scots: Schuil
schooling in Albanian: Shkolla
schooling in Sicilian: Scola
schooling in Simple English: School
schooling in Slovenian: Šola
schooling in Serbian: Школа
schooling in Finnish: Koulu
schooling in Swedish: Skola
schooling in Tamil: பள்ளிக்கூடம்
schooling in Thai: โรงเรียน
schooling in Turkish: Okul
schooling in Ukrainian: Школа
schooling in Vlaams: Schole
schooling in Yiddish: שולע
schooling in Contenese: 學校
schooling in Samogitian: Muokīkla
schooling in Chinese: 学校
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
book learning, booklore, catechization, coaching, didactics, direction, edification, education, enlightenment, guidance, illumination, indoctrination, information, instruction, knowledge, learning, pedagogics, pedagogy, preparation, private
teaching, programmed instruction, reeducation, research, self-instruction,
self-teaching, spoon-feeding, study, teaching, training, tuition, tutelage, tutorage, tutoring, tutorship