Pablo Montesino Cáceres


Pablo Montesino Cáceres was a Spanish teacher and academic. He was born in Fuente del Carnero, Zamora in 1781 and died in 1849.

Education and career

Cáceres studied in Valladolid and later got his medical degree in Salamanca. He also served in the military. But he was, above all, a teacher.
Cáceres was a man of liberal and progressive interests and as a result was exiled in London for 10 years.
He carried out the first implementation of the liberal education system and generalized many ideas proposed by other prominent teachers. He was the first principal of the Escuelas Normales, and his ideas were widely circulate. He focused on early childhood education, having observed the educational situation in London, and also set about proper teacher training.
When he returned to Spain he established the Sociedad para mejorar la educación del pueblo, and following this he founded the first kindergarten school in 1838 in Madrid. He later created another such school that would bear his name. In 1839, he took part in the primary education reform, proposing the adoption of kindergarten schools and improved female education. One of his best known works was Manual para maestros de la escuela de Párvulos in 1840. This work included all his educational ideas, and was the first theoretical framework introduced in Spain.

Accomplishments

From 1836, with the Duke of Rivas' Plan de Instrucción Pública, the then newly formed liberal bourgeois government began to take steps to set up an educational model that suited their economic, ideological and political interests, following the basic tenets of the bourgeois liberal pedagogy. The main objective of this action was the construction of a national education system as was done in other European countries. For social and educational reasons, it was also necessary to meet the educational needs of younger children, through the establishment of kindergartens. For this purpose it was necessary to provide adequate training for teachers in special schools. The proper functioning of the system also required the creation of an inspectorate that would supervise, guide and advise teachers, while providing the necessary information to the government. Pablo Montesinos played a key role in designing the programmes and the processes of implementation of the actions undertaken to achieve these ends.
One of Cáceres' greatest accomplishments throughout his career was his work in the Escuelas Normales. The Escuelas Normales emerged in Spain in the forties and were primarily concerned with teacher training. Pablo Montesino, in 1843 delineated what teachers were to become and accordingly reorganized the Escuelas Normales. Many of these centers experienced an initial period of uncertainty during which they would not function as Escuelas Normales except in name only. For Paul Montesino there were only two ways to get a good teacher: either improve teacher quality through the creation of Escuelas Normales or impose an obligation to provide them good training. Pablo Montesino considered the first option the more natural, easy and fair.