Beyond “Progressive” Reform: Bodies, Discipline, and the Construction of the Professional Teacher in Interwar America

Author:

Perrillo Jonna

Abstract

Rose Freistater was twenty-six years old when the New York City Board of Examiners denied her a teaching license. She had been teaching at James Monroe High School, first as a student teacher and then as a substitute teacher for five years, and her work was characterized by the chairman of the biology department in which she taught as “difficult to overstate in its excellence.” But in 1931, Rose stood five feet and two inches and weighed 182 pounds. When she applied for her teaching license that year, she weighed thirty pounds more than the maximum weight allowed by the Board for her height. She was given six months to lose thirty pounds; when she lost only twenty in that time, she was rejected by the Board altogether. Although a number of overweight and underweight teachers were rejected by the Board of Education in the ten years that the standards had existed, Rose was the first to appeal to the state that the qualifications were unfair. When her case reached the State Commissioner of Education in 1935, it was rejected again, and the city board issued a statement claiming, “Other things being normal, a person of abnormal weight is likely to have more absences because of ill health and be less efficient as a teacher than a person of average weight.” Furthermore, it added, “Teachers must climb stairs, take part in fire drills, and be able to handle all real school emergencies. Overweight teachers are less likely to stand the strain of teaching…. Teachers should [be]… acceptable hygienic models for their pupils in the manner of weight.” Finally, overweight teachers, who represented greater health risks than others, “constitute[d] a drain on the teachers' pension fund.” In response, the Freistater family contended that Rose walked the five flights of steps to their apartment several times a day, but her case was closed.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

History,Education

Reference73 articles.

1. R.I.P. “On Becoming a Teacher,” 51.

2. Doherty Agnes “The Health of the Teacher,” National Education Association Journal 62 (November 1924): 364–370, 365.

3. Marjorie Murphy shows that the first ten years of the AFT (the time in which Linville wrote), in fact, privileged male leadership, something that may have bearing here. This would change in 1926 with the “revolt” of women in the AFT, but, as Murphy argues, teachers unions in New York, especially, were not nearly as powerful or popular before World War II as they would be after. Murphy Blackboard Unions, 84–5 and 117 and following.

4. Felter William “Easy Markers, Hard Markers,” HP 4 (September 1923): 3–4, 3.

5. “A Review of Our Health, Our Honesty, Our Income, Our Art, and Our Safety,” Educational Review (April 1927): 175–177, 175.

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