Why did the working poor often favor expanding the number of public schools in the first half of the nineteenth century?
A) The quality of a public education was better than that of private schools in most cities at the time.
B) The children of the working poor would be guaranteed to no longer need to labor in factories or do farmwork.
C) The South, where many of the working poor lived, had been the region initiating and leading the public school movement.
D) The working poor wanted free schools to give their children an equal chance to pursue the American dream.
E) Building public schools promised to expand the number of construction jobs and therefore greatly improve employment prospects.
Correct Answer:
Verified
Q55: Which of the following writers believed wealth
Q56: Which of the following statements accurately describes
Q57: The American Temperance Union lost many moderate
Q58: Which of the following is true of
Q59: Which of the following statements about Brigham
Q61: Which of the following did the Liberty
Q62: What was Brook Farm?
A) an attempt at
Q63: All within the context of the expansion
Q64: Why did the American Anti-Slavery Society split
Q65: Frederick Douglass
A) was the founder of the
Unlock this Answer For Free Now!
View this answer and more for free by performing one of the following actions
Scan the QR code to install the App and get 2 free unlocks
Unlock quizzes for free by uploading documents