Language Shift as a Way of Acquiring New Citizenship and a Profession: The Educational Background of the First Female Students at the Jyväskylä Teachers Seminary

Authors

  • Sofia Kotilainen University of Jyväskylä

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36368/njedh.v11i2.1057

Keywords:

female citizenship, multilingualism, professions, social motherhood, teacher training

Abstract

This article sheds light on gendered aspects of the early years of the Finnish teacher training system. It focuses on the first generation of female students at the Jyväskylä Teachers Seminary in central Finland, their educational background, and their language competences. My main sources are the students’ applications to the seminary, which I explore with the help of the collective biographical method. The Jyväskylä Teachers Seminary, the first Finnish-language teacher training college for elementary school teachers in Finland, was established in central Finland in 1863, partly in response to the increasing significance of the Finnish language to the nation. For the girls who entered the seminary, their preparatory private education and the language shift they experienced there from Swedish to Finnish were significant factors both in their training as teachers and in the opportunity to gain a public profession of their own, as well as a new kind of female citizenship. Most of these women had graduated from private schools or had only private tutoring at home.

Author Biography

Sofia Kotilainen, University of Jyväskylä

Adjunct Professor (Docent) of Family History, and Project Researcher at the Centre for Applied Language Studies, University of Jyväskylä, Finland.

Adjunct Professor (Docent) in Cultural History at University of Turku, Finland.

Adjunct Professor (Docent) in Onomastics at University of Helsinki, Finland.

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Published

2024-05-22

How to Cite

Kotilainen, Sofia. 2024. “Language Shift As a Way of Acquiring New Citizenship and a Profession: The Educational Background of the First Female Students at the Jyväskylä Teachers Seminary”. Nordic Journal of Educational History 11 (2):9-35. https://doi.org/10.36368/njedh.v11i2.1057.