Tuesday, May 19, 2020
The Discovery Of The Scientist s The Technologists, Along...
Before MIT was founded in 1861, the common take on knowledge was quite different than that of our modern day. Education was primarily for a wealthy upper class, who regardless of work ethic or true intelligence, had safety nets of incredibly well off families often with money to spare. As noted in Matthew Pearlââ¬â¢s The Technologists, along with Bruce Sinclair and Merritt Roe Smiths articles on MITââ¬â¢s foundation, Harvard and other schools for this elite class focused on a purely knowledge based learning system; while MIT attempted to introduce a more technical education combining pure science along with practical applications of technology, thus ushering in a new style of technical education. In 1861, founder William Rodgers, chartered one of the first technical schools in MIT. While growing up a geologist, in 1831, Rodgers began ââ¬Å"contemplation the connections between pure science and its applications to engineeringâ⬠(Smith 16), which little to his knowledge, would be the basis of a new institution. When Rodgers decided to introduce the idea for a technical institute, he had already mapped out a path for the curriculum and its basis. Introduced and now known as the ââ¬Å"New Educationâ⬠, Rodgersââ¬â¢s idea, set forth by Charles W. Eliot, brought on an entirely new technical education that had almost never been seen before. Rodgersââ¬â¢s idea, along with Eliotââ¬â¢s, changed the way many viewed education of the sciences and applied technologies. With a majority of the wealthy population attending
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