Domestic Education in Brasil: Aspects of European Influence on the Performance of Tutors and Private Teachers

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  • Maria Celi Chaves Vasconcelos UERJ and the Catholic University of Petrópolis

https://doi.org/10.4471/hse.2013.01

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Abstract

In Brazil, the nineteenth century was the period in which domestic education, or home education, became widely practiced by the elites, particularly in the capital of the Empire of Brazil. The home was where the elite educated their children, by means of tutors and private teachers. The tutors were either male or female masters who lived in the family residence, hired to educate the children and youth of the home. The private teachers were those who gave lessons "in home", in the ABCs or specific knowledge, at pre-established times and days. Centered in the latter half of the nineteenth century, the study attempts to demonstrate the discussion and practices which prevailed in domestic education, copied from European models that greatly influenced Brazilian education. The sources investigated encompass, especially, newspapers and magazines of instruction and education and those meant for families and women. It may be concluded that the model for domestic education was impregnated by circumstances and a mentality of a time and a society that saw itself in European standards and that, slowly, left the final remains inherited from the colonial period, seeking the statute of an industrial capitalistic society.

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Published

2013-02-23

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How to Cite

Chaves Vasconcelos, M. C. (2013). Domestic Education in Brasil: Aspects of European Influence on the Performance of Tutors and Private Teachers. Social and Education History, 2(1), 1–22. https://doi.org/10.4471/hse.2013.01

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