Social women's school

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Social women's schools were the name given to certain educational institutions established in Germany between the turn of the century and the beginning of the 1920s.

In the course of the women's movement , they pursued the goal of gender-based professional training in the welfare sector. Another goal was to overcome the hardship of the First World War , which particularly affected women, who should be supported by qualified female workers.

Examples of such facilities:

current name of the school place Establishment date Founder
Alice Salomon University of Applied Sciences Berlin Berlin-Schöneberg , later Berlin-Hellersdorf October 15, 1908 Alice Salomon
Friedrich-Froebel-Schule
Technical school for social education
Mannheim 1916 Marie Bernays
Elisabeth Altmann-Gottheimer
Alice Bensheimer
Julie Bassermann
University of Applied Sciences Munich
formerly Social Women's School Munich
Technical School for Social Pedagogy
Munich 1919 Frieda Duensing
from 1921 Anna Heim-Pohlmann
Catholic University of North Rhine-Westphalia
Aachen Department
Cologne
later Aachen
November 8, 1916 Catholic German Women's Association by Hedwig Dransfeld or Helene Weber

Individual evidence

  1. Klaus Burger: Examining severity instead of blind soft-heartedness. On the history of poverty and the social institutions in Freiburg in: Heiko Haumann , Hans Schadek (Hrsg.): Geschichte der Stadt Freiburg im Breisgau,, Volume 3, Theiss, Stuttgart 1996, ISBN 3-8062-0857-3 , p. 621
  2. Speech by Alice Salomon at the opening of the Social Women's School ( Memento of the original from January 17, 2012 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (PDF; 61 kB) @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.alice-salomon-archiv.de
  3. ^ Adriane Feustel / Gerd Koch (eds.): 100 years of social teaching and learning: From the social women's school to the Alice Salomon University of Berlin. Schibri, 2008.
  4. ^ Gundula Pauli: Marie Bernays (1883–1939) and the "Social Women's School" in Mannheim. A contribution to the history of social work in Germany. Unpublished thesis. Freiburg 2004, p. 4
  5. Festschrift of the Social Women's School Aachen . Schwann, Düsseldorf undated [1930]
  6. ^ History of the Aachen Department , katho-nrw.de, accessed on May 18, 2013
  7. Social Women's School Aachen / Women's School for People's Care (PDF; 341 kB) , lambertus.de, accessed on May 18, 2013