The 1877 Regulation for the Learned School in Iceland

In the 19th century, only one learned school existed in Iceland, where the population was 47,000 in 1801 and 72,000 in 1880. Considering the circumstances, the Learned School enjoyed excellent mathematics teaching in the period 1822–1862, when the school was served by Björn Gunnlaugsson, a gold meda...

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Main Authors: Bjarnadóttir, Kristín, Furinghetti, Fulvia, Kajser, Sten, Tzanakis, Constantinos
Other Authors: Menntavísindasvið
Format: Book Part
Language:Icelandic
Published: 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11815/4889
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spelling ftopinvisindi:oai:opinvisindi.is:20.500.11815/4889 2024-06-02T08:08:33+00:00 The 1877 Regulation for the Learned School in Iceland Bjarnadóttir, Kristín Furinghetti, Fulvia Kajser, Sten Tzanakis, Constantinos Menntavísindasvið 2004 6 911027 36-41 https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11815/4889 is ice Proceedings: HPM2004 & ESU4; () Bjarnadóttir , K 2004 , The 1877 Regulation for the Learned School in Iceland . í F Furinghetti , S Kajser & C Tzanakis (útg.) , Proceedings: HPM2004 & ESU4 : ICME Satelite Meeting of the HPM Group & Fourth European Summer University, History and Epistomology in Mathematics Education. . bls. 36-41 , ICME Satelite Meeting of the HPM Group & Fourth European Summer University, History and Epistomology in Mathematics Education. , Uppsala , Svíþjóð , 12/07/04 . conference 221779153 c8656b71-c4b6-4332-af6e-b158bf62ea04 https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11815/4889 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Stærðfræði (allt) /dk/atira/pure/researchoutput/researchoutputtypes/contributiontobookanthology/chapter 2004 ftopinvisindi https://doi.org/20.500.11815/4889 2024-05-06T02:20:07Z In the 19th century, only one learned school existed in Iceland, where the population was 47,000 in 1801 and 72,000 in 1880. Considering the circumstances, the Learned School enjoyed excellent mathematics teaching in the period 1822–1862, when the school was served by Björn Gunnlaugsson, a gold medallist in mathematics from the University of Copenhagen. In the 1860s, discussions about teaching modern languages intensified in Denmark and other Nordic countries. In 1871, Denmark’s learned schools were divided into two streams, specializing in languages and history on one side and mathematics and natural sciences on the other side. Regulations were prepared for the sole Icelandic learned school in 1876, suggesting that the Icelandic school would continue as a onestream school, while Hebrew would be eliminated and Greek reduced to make room for the modern languages, French and English. German and Danish had previously been taught during the first four years. Mathematics would continue throughout the school as previously. Immediately after the proposals for the new regulation were introduced, the governor of Iceland sent them to the Minister of Iceland in Copenhagen along with a long letter, containing his own proposals, suggesting a clear language-history stream in the Icelandic school, as it would overload the pupils to study Latin and mathematics at the same time. He proposed that mathematics be reduced. The Minister for Iceland forwarded the original proposals to King Christian IX, suggesting that Danish and exegetics replaced mathematics in the last two years of the school. This became the conclusion of the matter and the mathematics-science stream was first established in 1919. Over the next couple of years the teachers of the school tried to influence this decision, while it seems that the headmaster, who was a philologist, had lobbied his way through the official system with his emphasis on languages. Letters from the governor, the minister and the teachers are preserved at the National Archives in Iceland. ... Book Part Iceland Opin vísindi (Iceland)
institution Open Polar
collection Opin vísindi (Iceland)
op_collection_id ftopinvisindi
language Icelandic
topic Stærðfræði (allt)
spellingShingle Stærðfræði (allt)
Bjarnadóttir, Kristín
Furinghetti, Fulvia
Kajser, Sten
Tzanakis, Constantinos
The 1877 Regulation for the Learned School in Iceland
topic_facet Stærðfræði (allt)
description In the 19th century, only one learned school existed in Iceland, where the population was 47,000 in 1801 and 72,000 in 1880. Considering the circumstances, the Learned School enjoyed excellent mathematics teaching in the period 1822–1862, when the school was served by Björn Gunnlaugsson, a gold medallist in mathematics from the University of Copenhagen. In the 1860s, discussions about teaching modern languages intensified in Denmark and other Nordic countries. In 1871, Denmark’s learned schools were divided into two streams, specializing in languages and history on one side and mathematics and natural sciences on the other side. Regulations were prepared for the sole Icelandic learned school in 1876, suggesting that the Icelandic school would continue as a onestream school, while Hebrew would be eliminated and Greek reduced to make room for the modern languages, French and English. German and Danish had previously been taught during the first four years. Mathematics would continue throughout the school as previously. Immediately after the proposals for the new regulation were introduced, the governor of Iceland sent them to the Minister of Iceland in Copenhagen along with a long letter, containing his own proposals, suggesting a clear language-history stream in the Icelandic school, as it would overload the pupils to study Latin and mathematics at the same time. He proposed that mathematics be reduced. The Minister for Iceland forwarded the original proposals to King Christian IX, suggesting that Danish and exegetics replaced mathematics in the last two years of the school. This became the conclusion of the matter and the mathematics-science stream was first established in 1919. Over the next couple of years the teachers of the school tried to influence this decision, while it seems that the headmaster, who was a philologist, had lobbied his way through the official system with his emphasis on languages. Letters from the governor, the minister and the teachers are preserved at the National Archives in Iceland. ...
author2 Menntavísindasvið
format Book Part
author Bjarnadóttir, Kristín
Furinghetti, Fulvia
Kajser, Sten
Tzanakis, Constantinos
author_facet Bjarnadóttir, Kristín
Furinghetti, Fulvia
Kajser, Sten
Tzanakis, Constantinos
author_sort Bjarnadóttir, Kristín
title The 1877 Regulation for the Learned School in Iceland
title_short The 1877 Regulation for the Learned School in Iceland
title_full The 1877 Regulation for the Learned School in Iceland
title_fullStr The 1877 Regulation for the Learned School in Iceland
title_full_unstemmed The 1877 Regulation for the Learned School in Iceland
title_sort 1877 regulation for the learned school in iceland
publishDate 2004
url https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11815/4889
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation Proceedings: HPM2004 & ESU4; ()
Bjarnadóttir , K 2004 , The 1877 Regulation for the Learned School in Iceland . í F Furinghetti , S Kajser & C Tzanakis (útg.) , Proceedings: HPM2004 & ESU4 : ICME Satelite Meeting of the HPM Group & Fourth European Summer University, History and Epistomology in Mathematics Education. . bls. 36-41 , ICME Satelite Meeting of the HPM Group & Fourth European Summer University, History and Epistomology in Mathematics Education. , Uppsala , Svíþjóð , 12/07/04 .
conference
221779153
c8656b71-c4b6-4332-af6e-b158bf62ea04
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11815/4889
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/20.500.11815/4889
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