If this sounds like socialism, let us not be afraid, but educate for five or ten years all children, so that homes may be better managed, and then it is to be hoped there will be no need for such school training. To live economically in the broad sense of wise use of time, money, and bodily strength is the great need of the twentieth century. This is practical economics. This is something which cannot today, except in rare instances, be learned at home, for conditions change so rapidly that grown people may not keep up with them. Mothers’ ways are superseded before the children are grown.
The school, if it is maintained as a progressive institution and a defense against predatory ideas, is the people’s safeguard from being crushed by the irresistible car of progress. I repeat, standards may be set by the school which will reach and influence the community in a few months. Such standards should be a means of safeguarding the people, and this leads to the most important service which a teacher of domestic economy can render to the people in giving them a sense of control over their environment, than which nothing is so conducive to stability of ideas.
To feel one’s self in command of a situation robs it of its terror. A great danger in America today is the loss of this feeling of self-confidence with which the pioneer was abundantly furnished. A certain helpless dependence is creeping over the land because of the peculiar development of resources, which must be replaced by a sense of power over one’s environment.
Home Ideals
There is no noble life without a noble aim.
The watchword of the future is the welfare and security of the child.
Love of home and of what the home stands for converts the drudgery of daily routine into a high order of social service.
The economy of right uses depends largely upon the home-maker, and brings the return in health, happiness, and efficiency.[14]
FOOTNOTES:
[11] Dr. Charles H. Chapin.