Word: psychologist
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Addressing his audience on "The Unique Character of American Education". Dr. O. H. Judd, Director of the School of Education at Chicago University, psychologist and scholar in education, delivered the Inglis Lecture on secondary education last night in Emerson Hall. Pointing out three distinct differences in American and European educational systems. Dr. Judd stated that he felt that the secondary schools in America had been unfairly criticised by European scholars...
...requests is as follows: Public Secondary School Subjects 111 Private Secondary School Subjects 103 Administrations 79 College Subjects 109 Private Elementary School Subjects 57 Public Junior High School Subjects 20 Public Elementary School Subjects 10 Normal and Technical School Subjects 50 Personnel and Vocational Guidance Positions 22 Psychologist and Special Class Teachers 19 Research Positions 6 Part time or Temporary Positions 102 Miscellaneous 26 The list of the places and the number of positions filled is as follows: Public Secondary School Teaching 20 College Teaching 12 Public Secondary School Administration 9 Superintendent of Schools 8 Private Secondary School Teaching...
Addressing his audience on "The Unique Character of American Secondary Education." Dr. C. H. Judd, Director of the School of Education at Chicago University, noted psychologist and scholar in education, will deliver the Inglis Lecture in Secondary Education on Wednesday evening, December 14, at 8 o'clock, in Emerson Hall. The lecture will be open to the public...
...hands of Professor R. C. Givler, Ph.D. '14, of the Department of Psychology at Tufts College, in a verbal duel staged last night in the Living Room of the Union. Before an enthusiastic, responsive audience which packed the room and listened motionless throughout three hours, the divine and the psychologist thrust and parried on the subject: "Resolved, That this house believes that the growing tendency toward Agnosticism and Atheism is undermining our social structure". Dr. Straton, upholding this question, received 157 of his listeners' votes; Professor Givler won those...
Such lay questions were answered by Dr. Thaddeus Lincoln Bolton, psychologist at Temple University, Philadelphia, who set Psychologist Aveling right on a minor point besides carrying the Aveling analysis of laughter one illuminating step further. The minor point was: whereas Dr. Aveling supposed hyenas and humans to be the only laughing animals, Dr. Bolton had observed laughter in cows, calves, horses, monkeys; "and the most obvious laughter in the animal kingdom is that...