Early Educational Instititutions for Women in Ottoman Turkey |
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The Tanzimat or Reform Period of 1839-1876 marks the beginning of westernisation in Turkey.
One of the important innovations of these years was the establishment of vocational schools for girls who had graduated from primary or junior high schools, the first being the Dârülmuallimât or Teacher Training College for Girls which opened in 1870, followed shortly afterwards by the Girls College of Art. An important turning point had been the Regulations for Public Education of 1869 which made primary education compulsory for boys and girls. To train women teachers for girls' schools, Minister of Education Saffet Pasa decided to establish a teacher training college, and an entrance examination was held on 8 February 1870. Thirty-two girls won places at the new school, whose curriculum was to consist of religion and morality, grammar, arithmetic, domestic science, embroidery, drawing, calligraphy, Ottoman history and geography. music lessons would be introduced at a later date. The school's first headmaster was an elderly intellectual named Emin Efendi, and the teaching staff, consisting of both men and women, included Musa Efendi (religion and morality), Haci Râsid Efendi (calligraphy), Ismail Efendi (history and geography), Zalker Efendi and Madame Palker (art), Hatice Hanim, Madame Eliza Maynok and Madame Arnik (embroidery). A large house in the neighbourhood of Yerebatan in Istanbul was rented to house Istanbul Teacher Training College for Girls, which was opened by Saffet Pasa on 26 April 1870. At the opening ceremony he delivered a long speech about the respect and esteem owing to girls and women, the importance of their education and training, and the adverse consequences resulting from the neglect of female education in eastern countries. The opening of this school was an important landmark for the education of women in Turkey. Initially the course lasted one year, and in 1871 Turkey's first 17 women teachers graduated and were appointed to teaching posts at girls' schools in Istanbul. They were the pioneers of Turkish women teachers, who today number hundreds of thousands.
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