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    • Delaware. December 7, 1787. (ratified)
    • Pennsylvania. December 12, 1787. (ratified)
    • New Jersey. December 18, 1787. (ratified)
    • Georgia. January 2, 1788. (ratified)
  1. Oct 29, 2013 · This annotated bibliography concentrates on the history of education in the United States. This history can be divided into two distinct areas: teacher training, and scholarship and research. Well before 1860, history of education, as a course of study, was associated with the professional education training of American teachers.

  2. Dec 8, 2021 · By the mid-1800s, most states had accepted three basic assumptions governing public education: that schools should be free and supported by taxes, that teachers should be trained, and that children should be required to attend school.

  3. The academy movement in the US in the early nineteenth century arose from a public sense that education in the classic disciplines needed to be extended into the new territories and states that were being formed in the new western states.

  4. Jul 11, 2024 · From the earliest colonial settlements to the present day, the establishment of state capitals across the United States marks a variety of pivotal moments in the nation's growth, changes in control of governance and regional identity.

  5. This is a list of United States state capital cities. Each has a capital building that acts as the center of government for its state. The capital city with the fewest people is Montpelier, Vermont, [1] while the capital city with the most people is Phoenix, Arizona.

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  7. Twenty other state names derive from European languages: seven come from Latin (mostly from Latinized forms of English personal names, one of those coming from Welsh), five from English, five from Spanish, and three from French (one of those via English).