"Household Education" by Harriet Martineau is an exploration of how homes can be places of learning for everyone who lives there. Looking back on twenty years of watching families, Martineau thinks that education isn't just for kids or in schools. Instead, she suggests that everyone in a household—parents, children, and even servants—learns from each other. She wants people to rethink old ideas about education and focus on working together, talking openly, and always trying to be better people inside the family..

Household Education
By Harriet Martineau
Discover how everyday life at home, shared by all who dwell there, can bring learning and growth to all.
Summary
About the AuthorHarriet Martineau was an English social theorist. She wrote from a sociological, holistic, religious and feminine angle, translated works by Auguste Comte, and, rarely for a woman writer at the time, earned enough to support herself. The young Princess Victoria enjoyed her work and invited her to her 1838 coronation. Martineau advised "a focus on all [society's] aspects, including key political, religious, and social institutions". She applied thorough analysis to women's status under men. The novelist Margaret Oliphant called her "a born lecturer and politician... less distinctively affected by her sex than perhaps any other, male or female, of her generation."
Harriet Martineau was an English social theorist. She wrote from a sociological, holistic, religious and feminine angle, translated works by Auguste Comte, and, rarely for a woman writer at the time, earned enough to support herself. The young Princess Victoria enjoyed her work and invited her to her 1838 coronation. Martineau advised "a focus on all [society's] aspects, including key political, religious, and social institutions". She applied thorough analysis to women's status under men. The novelist Margaret Oliphant called her "a born lecturer and politician... less distinctively affected by her sex than perhaps any other, male or female, of her generation."