Kartini Schools

From The Right Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
File:COLLECTIE TROPENMUSEUM De Kartinischool een lagere school voor meisjes te Jakarta Java TMnr 10002290.jpg
Kartini School in Jakarta
File:COLLECTIE TROPENMUSEUM De opening van de Kartinischool op 2 mei 1915 in Buitenzorg in het huurhuis Panaragan 19. TMnr 60002656.jpg
Opening of the Kartini School in Buitzenborg (Bogor) May 1915
File:COLLECTIE TROPENMUSEUM Het gebouw van de Kartinischool geopend op 22 juli 1918 aan de Feitweg in Buitenzorg TMnr 60002657.jpg
Kartini School building in Buitenzorg (opened 1918)
File:COLLECTIE TROPENMUSEUM Mejuffrouw Avelingh en leerlingen met spelmateriaal in de laagste klas van de Kartinischool. TMnr 60002670.jpg
Class
File:COLLECTIE TROPENMUSEUM De Kartinischool te Malang. TMnr 60005910.jpg
Kartini school in Malang

Kartini Schools, named for the Javanese women's rights advocate Raden Ajeng Kartini (Lady Kartini), were opened to educate indigenous girls in the Dutch East Indies in the wake of the Dutch Ethical Policy.

About

The first Kartini School was opened in Batavia in 1907. It was supported by Governor General Abendanon and Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands. Additional Kartini Schools were opened in Malang, Cirebon, Semarang, Bogor (then called Buitzenborg), and Surabaya. The schools served indigenous students who had already received a primary education.[1] Efforts to create opportunities for upper-class Javanese women struggled against opposition from Conservative Dutch officials and the Javanese regent class (bupatis). The Dutch language boarding schools were staffed by women.[2]

Curriculum

The curriculum included:[3]

  • Continuing Dutch language instruction
  • Javanese language and literature
  • geography and history
  • drawing and aesthetics
  • home economics and gardening
  • arithmetic and simple bookkeeping
  • practical and fine needlework
  • principles of hygiene and first aid
  • principles of education
  • singing and principles of musical theory

See also

References

  1. Introduction, Letters of a Javanese Princess by Kartini (Raden Adjeng)
  2. Women in the Netherlands East Indies. Part 2: The Kartini-schools for Girls: The Archive of the Kartini Fund, 1912-1960, National Archives of the Netherlands, The Hague
  3. Women in the Netherlands East Indies. Part 2: The Kartini-schools for Girls: The Archive of the Kartini Fund, 1912-1960 National Archives of the Netherlands, The Hague