Schools nowadays are so much different than they used to be. Where there were once chalkboards, there are now computer screens, where students used to pass notes, they now send text messages. Looking back at some of these schoolhouses and classrooms from the past, we can be reminded of just how our schools have evolved.
1. A teacher from Grundy County waves goodbye to her students from the steps of a one-room schoolhouse.
2. This one-room schoolhouse in rural Marshall County was where students went to get their education.
3. With no hot-lunch program, these schoolchildren in Grundy County eat their lunch on the schoolhouse lawn.
4. These children from a Catholic school in Dubuque take a break for recess, and run around in the churchyard.
5. High school students from across the state came to Iowa State College in Ames to participate in the Iowa High School Agricultural Congress. At the congress, they participated in livestock judging contests, discussions, and a banquet.
6. Goose Creek School was a one-room schoolhouse in Rough Woods Hill where students of all ages were taught. For recess, there was a rope-swing behind the shed.
7. These fourth-graders at Longfellow School in Council Bluffs practice their reading during library time.
8. This group of high school students at Abraham Lincoln High School in Council Bluffs gather up for a class photo in 1943.
9. These elementary school students in Iowa City study astronomy for the school open house in 1930.
10. While waiting for the new, consolidated school to be built in Rolf, the one-room schoolhouses were moved from their locations and lined up next to each other.
11. With no playground or equipment, these students in Rolf played games with each other instead.
12. This school bus driver took rural students to school in the 1930s. The buses then look a lot different than our buses today.
It is incredible how much things have changed in such a small amount of time. What are some of your school experiences here in Iowa? We'd love to hear about them in the comments section!
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