- Uno Cygnaeus
Uno Cygnaeus (
1810 -10-12 Hämeenlinna –1888 -01-02 Helsinki ) was a Finnishclergyman ,educator , and chief inspector of the country'sschool system. He is considered the father of the Finnish public school system. His accomplishments also include the initiation of high class teacher training, emphasizing the importance of women's education and most importantly introducing the use of crafts ("veisto" in Finnish,sloyd /sløyd in Norwegian,slöjd in Swedish, and "sløjd" in Danish), as a mandatory subject in the school curriculum. He was born inHämeenlinna , October 12, 1810. His father died early in his childhood when he was at the age of 8. Uno studied natural sciences and theology at the University of Turku and continued in Helsinki when the university moved over toHelsinki . In 1837 he was ordained as a priest and started serving inViipuri till 1839. In Viipuri he served as assistant pastor and prison chaplain in addition to teaching at a private school. This experience and his study of the work of the educational philosophersJohann Heinrich Pestalozzi andFriedrich Froebel led to formulation of Cygnaeus’s own educational philosophy and ideas.Then he was sent off to serve for five years in the far off Lutheran parish of New Archangel, Russian America now
Sitka inAlaska as a punishment for an extramarital affair. This place was a trading post, where Cygnaeus got a chance to observe the barter exchanges between the educated people and the native people. Upon his return, he spent twelve years as a superintendent of a Finnish parish school inSt. Petersburg .In 1855 the Russian senate was commissioned to advance the educational system in Finland after
Tsar Alexander II ascended to the throne. The senate collected proposals from different sources. Uno Cygnaeus also sent a proposal which gained the senate’s support and Cygnaeus was appointed to develop a folk school system. He travelled via Sweden and Denmark to the German States and to Switzerland to collect information about different educational systems. He was most influenced by the kindergartens in Hamburg and the Swiss school system. Cygnaeus drew up a plan on the basis of notes, which he took during his journeys and the senate approved his plan in 1861.Cygnaeus advocated separating schools from the supervision of the church and establishing a teacher training college. Cygnaeus’s plan formed the basis for the folk school regulation, which was laid down in 1866. The
Sloyd system became compulsory for boys in all rural schools (it still is all over the country-2007) and for all male teachers in teacher training institutions. Students learned about metals, about fabrication techniques, about selecting appropriate wood samples from the forests, about the care necessary for working with materials and finally the need for collaborative efforts to accomplish tasks. Sweden adopted these ideas a few years after Finland. A 'Sloyd Training School' was set up in Nääs, Sweden in the 1870's by Otto Salomon. Thousands of teachers from all over the world attended classes at Nääs. Some of the countries in which Sloyd was successfully introduced were the UK, the US, Japan, Brazil, Argentina, Cuba, the Scandinavian Countries. Currently, Sloyd is still part of the compulsory school curriculum in Finland, Sweden and Norway.The influence of Cygnaeus also reached the United States (Bennet 1937) when Larsson, trained by Otto Salomon, moved to the U.S. and founded the ‘Boston Sloyd School’ in 1888. This institution is still regarded as an important step in American technological education (Phillips 1985). The views of the American educator
John Dewey were based on then current global trends, one of the most important one being theSloyd movement begun by Cygnaeus. D.W. Olson, the first American researcher writing about technology education, values Cygnaeus quite high.Finnish general education still has educative handicraft [“käsityö“] as a school subject. It is divided into two separate subjects: textile work [“tekstiilityö“] and technical work [“tekninen työ“] . They are taught as compulsory subjects from the third grade of primary education. Students can choose either “tekninen työ“ or “tekstiilityö“.
From 1863 until his death in 1868, Cygnaeus served as the director of a Finnish seminary at
Jyväskylä .His brother,
Fredrik Cygnaeus , was a Swedish-languagepoet .References
* [http://www.jyu.fi/tdk/museo/unoe.html Jyväskylä University Museum Site on Uno Cygnaeus]
* [http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9028391/Uno-Cygnaeus Short article in Encyclopaedia Britannica]
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