Malmö Högre Läroverk För Flickor
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Maria Helena Stenkula (22 July 1842 – 8 February 1932) was a Swedish reform
pedagogue Pedagogy (), most commonly understood as the approach to teaching, is the theory and practice of learning, and how this process influences, and is influenced by, the social, political and psychological development of learners. Pedagogy, taken as ...
and pioneer on women's education. She was regarded as a local pioneer of women's education in
Malmö Malmö (, ; da, Malmø ) is the largest city in the Swedish county (län) of Scania (Skåne). It is the third-largest city in Sweden, after Stockholm and Gothenburg, and the sixth-largest city in the Nordic region, with a municipal populat ...
, Sweden. She was the founder and manager of the Malmö High School for Girls ('' Malmö högre läroverk för flickor'') from 1874 until 1899.


Biography

Maria Stenkula was the daughter of physician Zacharias Fredrik Agathon Stenkula and Hedvig Margareta Maria Borg. The second eldest of 11 children, she was the sister of professor and educational reformer Anders Oskar Stenkula.(1841-1922). She spent part of her childhood as the foster child of her maternal grandfather, who was a vicar. She never married. As a person, she is described as strict but a skillful pedagogue who devoted her life to her educational ambitions. Stenkula had educational ambitions early on, and wished to become an educated teacher rather than to support herself as a governess without formal education, as was by then most common. She was educated at the ''
Statens normalskola för flickor The Royal Seminary, fully the Royal Advanced Female Teachers' Seminary ( sv, Kungliga Högre Lärarinneseminariet, abbreviated KHLS), was a normal school (teachers' college) in Stockholm, Sweden. It was active from 1861 until 1943. It was the fi ...
'' in 1866-67 and the ''
Högre lärarinneseminariet The Royal Seminary, fully the Royal Advanced Female Teachers' Seminary ( sv, Kungliga Högre Lärarinneseminariet, abbreviated KHLS), was a normal school (teachers' college) in Stockholm, Sweden. It was active from 1861 until 1943. It was the fi ...
'' in 1867-70, from which she graduated in 1870.


Malmö

In 1874, she and her fellow student Elin Lunnerquist co-founded a girls' school in Malmö, ''Maria Stenkulas skola'' (in 1883 named ''Fröken Maria Stenkulas högre elementarskola för flickor'', and in 1884 ''Malmö högre läroverk för flickor''). She served as its principal between 1874 and 1899, and was also its teacher in German language and church history. Elin Lunnerquist married and left the school in 1878. Maria Stenkula was inspired by the progressive ideas of the time, in which females should be given a serious education to enable them to be useful to society as professionals, which had been the focus in the
Girls' School Committee of 1866 The Flickskolekommittén 1866 (Girls' School Committee of 1866), was a Swedish governmental committee established by the Swedish Parliament, the Riksdag, in 1866 to examine organization of female education in Sweden and produce suggestions of refo ...
(''Flickskolekommittén 1866'') . The school of Stenkula has been referred to as the first notable school for girls in Malmö: while there were several serious secondary education schools for girls in Stockholm and
Gothenburg Gothenburg (; abbreviated Gbg; sv, Göteborg ) is the second-largest city in Sweden, fifth-largest in the Nordic countries, and capital of the Västra Götaland County. It is situated by the Kattegat, on the west coast of Sweden, and has ...
, such opportunities had been closed to females in Malmö, the third largest city in Sweden. While this is in fact not literary true, as ''Caroline Kléens skola'' managed the first girls' school of note in Malmö between 1850 and 1870 and ''Fru Elise Mayers högre läroverk för flickor'' the second in 1857-1888, her school was nevertheless a local pioneer establishment and known and respected for its innovations. It was very successful, arguably the largest school open to females in Malmö. In 1883, it had 200-300 students with an eight-year elementary and primary school and a three-year secondary education class. She focused in humanistic subjects, offered Swedish, French, German and English, singing education, introduced home economics, daily gymnastics, education in health, school trips and school libraries.


Later life

In 1899, Stenkula resigned from her position and left Malmö for Örkelljunga in
Skåne Scania, also known by its native name of Skåne (, ), is the southernmost of the historical provinces (''landskap'') of Sweden. Located in the south tip of the geographical region of Götaland, the province is roughly conterminous with Skåne C ...
, where she founded and managed a small school from 1900 until 1917. It too became a local pioneer institution, and lay the foundation of the local high school and public secondary educational school in Örkelljunga. In 1932, her former students founded the Maria Stenkula Memorial Fund (''Maria Stenkulas minnesfond'') . In 1940, ''Malmö högre läroverk för flickor'' as well as the other girls' schools of Malmö: ''Tekla Åbergs högre läroverk för flickor'' dating from 1857 and ''Anna och Eva Bundts skola för flickor'' which dated from 1887, were all united into ''Malmö kommunala flickskola'', the governmental girls' school which was later made co-educational.


References


Further reading

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Related reading


''Malmö skolors historik 1400 till 1995''
{{DEFAULTSORT:Stenkula, Maria 1842 births 1932 deaths Swedish women's rights activists Swedish feminists 19th-century Swedish educators