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"educationalist" Definitions
  1. a specialist in theories and methods of teaching

856 Sentences With "educationalist"

How to use educationalist in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "educationalist" and check conjugation/comparative form for "educationalist". Mastering all the usages of "educationalist" from sentence examples published by news publications.

" In our conversation, Hillary Clinton spoke of the limits of an "educationalist" mind-set, which she called a "peculiar form of élitism.
It was as if all the meritocratic fantasies of every 1960s educationalist had come true and all Harold Wilson's children had been let in at the gate.
In this absorbing biography of the pioneering black educationalist and suffragist Adella Hunt Logan, her granddaughter, a historian, draws on journals, letters, family memories, and occasional imaginative license.
The parents are warmly praised by Tahir Alam, a Muslim educationalist who was barred from Birmingham's teaching system in 2015 after an inquiry into attempts to Islamise state schools.
Ms Li is among the well-heeled parents who send their children to Chengdu Waldorf School, a fee-paying institution inspired by the quirky philosophies of Rudolf Steiner, an early-20th-century Austrian educationalist.
Henri François Marion (18461896) was a French philosopher and educationalist.
Grace Chalmers Paterson was a campaigner, suffragist, temperance activist and educationalist.
Prof Alan George Smithers (born 20 May 1938) is an English educationalist.
Edmond Gore Alexander Holmes (1850-1936) was an educationalist, writer and poet.
Mrinal Miri (born 1 August 1940) is an Indian philosopher and educationalist.
Late Mrs. Saeeda Faiz receiving Best Educationalist Award-2009 by National Solidarity Council, New Delhi. Faiz achieved Best Educationalist Award-2009 by National Solidarity Council, New Delhi for the upliftment of the society and encouraging education in Ghazipur.
Micheál Ó Mordha () (c.1639–1723) was an Irish priest, philosopher and educationalist.
Theophilus Gale (1628–1678) was an English educationalist, nonconformist and theologian of dissent.
Hussain Dawood () (born 1943 in Bombay) is a Pakistani businessman, educationalist and philanthropist.
J. Sudhanandhen Mudaliyar (21 September 1944) was an Indian philanthropist, educationalist, and textile merchant.
Brother Sir Patrick Joseph Lynch (born 18 March 1942) is a New Zealand educationalist.
Elizabeth Marion Rea (; 6 August 19042 April 1965) was an English sculptor and educationalist.
Sigismund Evenius (ca. 1587 – 17 September 1639) was a German educationalist, teacher and writer.
Henry Barnard (January 24, 1811 – July 5, 1900) was an American educationalist and reformer.
Nevenka Petrić (1927-2015), writer, educationalist and expert for family planning and gender issues.
Francis Bowen (; September 8, 1811 – January 22, 1890) was an American philosopher, writer, and educationalist.
Jane Agnes Chessar (1835, Edinburgh – 3 September 1880, Brussels) was a British teacher and educationalist.
Rabbi Dr Yaacov Kopul Rosen (1913–1962) was an important anglo-Jewish rabbi and educationalist.
Beatrice Chamberlain (25 May 1862 – 19 November 1918) was a British educationalist and political organizer.
Grigoriev became better known, however, as a chess organizer and educationalist, chess journalist and problemist.
Sigurd Høst (22 January 1866 - 21 August 1939) was a Norwegian educationalist and textbook writer.
Walter Empson (19 February 1856 - 14 June 1934) was a New Zealand teacher, headmaster and educationalist.
Ivor Frederick Goodson (born 1943) is a British educationalist. He is a professor at Tallinn University.
James Alder Bateman (5 April 1925 – 20 October 1987) was a New Zealand politician and educationalist.
She is also the Chairman, Forum for African Women Educationalist of Nigeria (FAWEN), FCET Umunze Chapter.
She was the second wife of educationalist and writer Bob Bibby, who died 6 June 2014.
Philipp Emanuel von Fellenberg (27 June 1771 – 21 November 1844) was a Swiss educationalist and agronomist.
John Daniel Morell (18 June 1816 – 1 April 1891) was a British educationalist and Congregational minister.
Henry Dunn (1801-1878) was an English educationalist and author of religious books who was for twenty years secretary of the British and Foreign School Society."Henry Dunn (1801-1878): Educationalist", Claire Grey, Newsletter, Friends of West Norwood Cemetery, No. 95 (May 2019), pp. 7-11.
Daryl Runswick (born 12 October 1946) is a classically trained English composer, arranger, musician, producer and educationalist.
James Alexander Ross (10 June 1930 – 28 June 2020) was a New Zealand educationalist and public servant.
Richard Deodatus Poulett-Harris (26 October 1817 – 23 December 1899) was an educationalist in England and Tasmania.
Mícheál Ó Súilleabháin (, 10 December 1950 – 7 November 2018) was an Irish musician, composer, academic and educationalist.
Shena Dorothy Simon (21 October 1883 – 17 July 1972) was an English politician, feminist, educationalist and writer.
Jai Verma is an Indian-born Hindi writer, educationalist, poet, and advocate of Hindi language and culture.
It was founded on 7 September 1941 by educationalist Reverend Baburaoji Gholap, Annasaheb Aawate and their colleagues.
Danus George Moncrieff Skene (2 April 1944 – 19 August 2016) was a Scottish teacher, educationalist and politician.
The Honourable William Napier Bruce, (18 January 1858 – 20 March 1936) was a British educationalist and lawyer.
Mary Stewart Kilgour (24 September 1851 – 1955) was a suffragist, educationalist, writer and campaigner for women's rights.
John McClintock (October 27, 1814 – March 4, 1870), American Methodist Episcopal theologian and educationalist, was born in Philadelphia.
James Millar (J. P. M. Millar) (1893–1989) was a Scottish working-class educationalist of the twentieth century.
Thomas Barwick Lloyd Baker (14 November 1807 – 10 December 1886) was an English educationalist, social reformer, and ornithologist.
Professor Sir Bryan Thwaites, FIMA, FRSA (born 6 December 1923) is an English applied mathematician, educationalist and administrator.
Félix Pécaut (1828-31 July 1898) was a French educationalist and a member of an old Huguenot family.
Sir David Stirling Anderson (25 September 1895 – 18 January 1981) was a 20th century Scottish engineer and educationalist.
As well as Craig Roberts, Maisycwmmer was the birthplace of educationalist Mary Bridges-Adams (née Daltry) in 1854.
Arthur Gordon Tovey (1901-1974) was a notable New Zealand artist, art teacher and administrator, educationalist, and writer.
Jasia Reichardt was married firstly to Tony Richards and secondly, to art critic, illustrator and educationalist, Nick Wadley.
Rev. Dr. C. T. Geevarghese Panicker (1924-2008) was a priest and educationalist of Syro-Malankara Catholic Church.
Dugald Cowan Dugald McCoig Cowan (17 October 1865 – 30 December 1933 ) was a Scottish educationalist and Liberal politician.
Palani G Periasamy is an Indian industrialist and educationalist. He is chairman of Chennai-based PGP group of companies.
David Acfield Emms OBE (16 February 1925 - 21 December 2015) was an English educationalist and former rugby union player.
Elizabeth Malleson (née Whitehead; 1828-1916) was an English educationalist, suffragist and activist for women's education and rural nursing.
Baragwanath has been married twice, and has four children. His current and second wife is the educationalist Susan Baragwanath.
William Rolleston (19 September 1831 – 8 February 1903) was a New Zealand politician, public administrator, educationalist and Canterbury provincial superintendent.
Peter Hollindale (born 1936) is an educationalist and literary critic. Hollindale taught at Derwent College, York from 1936 to 1999.
Sir Robert Laurie Morant. Sir Robert Laurie Morant, (7 April 1863 – 13 March 1920) was an English administrator and educationalist.
Francis Wharton, 1854 Francis Wharton (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, March 7, 1820 – February 21, 1889) was an American legal writer and educationalist.
Manol Lazarov Sofiyanets (Bulgarian:Манол Лазаров Софиянец) born 1826 and died 1881, was a Bulgarian educationalist, poet and writer based in Sofia.
Graham George Able (born 28 July 1947) is an English educationalist who was the Master at Dulwich College from 1997-1998.
Arthur Melville Clark FRSE (1895–1990) was a Scottish educationalist and author of several academic books about English literature and poetry.
Sir Bertram Coghill Alan Windle, (8 May 1858 – 14 February 1929) was a British anatomist, administrator, archaeologist, scientist, educationalist and writer.
Mabel Kathleen Ashby (1892 - 1975) (wrote as M. K. Ashby) was an educationalist, writer and historian born in Tysoe, Warwickshire, England.
Abdul Hady Talukdar (1905-17 July 1985) was a Bangladeshi academic administrator, educationalist, politician, and former registrar of University of Dhaka.
John Jones Griffiths (1839–1901) was an educationalist, Liberal politician and prominent figure in the public life of the Rhondda, Wales.
Samuel Williams in 1880 Samuel Williams (17 January 1822 – 14 March 1907) was a New Zealand missionary, educationalist, farmer and pastoralist.
As a film educationalist she heads the subject of film at the SVKM J.V. Parekh International school in Mumbai, India besides teaching as a freelance educationalist at various prestigious film institutions on special invitation. She has also recently introduced the Michael Chekhov Acting technique to India with her DVD which she has researched, presented, directed and co-produced.
Mizanur Rahman Shelley (2 January 1943 – 12 August 2019) was a minister of Government of Bangladesh, political analyst, political scientist and educationalist.
Thomson c. 1918 George Malcolm Thomson (2 October 1848 – 25 August 1933) was a New Zealand scientist, educationalist, social worker and politician.
Edward Craven Hawtrey Edward Craven Hawtrey (7 May 178927 January 1862) was an English educationalist, headmaster and later provost of Eton College.
Sir William Spens, CBE (31 May 1882 – 1 November 1962) was a Scottish educationalist, academic and Master of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge.
2011 Patric Standford (5 February 1939 – 23 April 2014) was an award-winning English composer, supporter of composers’ rights, educationalist and author.
Folland in 1923 Mrs Leah Norah Folland JP CBE (1874 – 12 March 1957), was a Welsh educationalist, philanthropist and Liberal Party politician.
Gwendolen Lucy Somerset (née Alley, 16 November 1894 – 31 October 1988) was a New Zealand teacher, adult education director, educationalist and writer.
Richard D'Aeth (3 June 1912 – 19 February 2008) was a British educationalist and President of Hughes Hall, Cambridge, from 1978 to 1984.
Sukharanjan Samaddar (15 January 1938 – 14 April 1971) was a university professor, educationalist, and martyred freedom fighter of the Bangladesh Liberation War.
Mrs. Rachel Macnamara Thomas James Macnamara PC (23 August 1861 – 3 December 1931) was a British teacher, educationalist and radical Liberal politician.
Harold Marks (23 February 1914 – 28 March 2005) was a British educationalist who worked in and for adult and post-school education.
Sarah Sophia Stothard (1825-1901) was a notable New Zealand teacher and educationalist. She was born in London, London, England in about 1825.
Jan Peter de Lange (27 February 1926 – 9 April 2019) was a South African educationalist, chairman of the Afrikaner Broederbond, and a negotiator.
Madeline Margaret Daniell (née Carter) (19 May 1832 – 21 April 1906) was a Scottish educationalist and campaigner for women's rights to higher education.
Hugh Raymond Wright (born 24 August 1938) is an English schoolmaster and educationalist who was chairman of the Headmasters' Conference for 1995–1996.
James Duff Brown (1862–1914) was a British librarian, information theorist, music biographer and educationalist. Most of his life was spent in London.
Chief Mrs Leila Euphemia Apinke Fowler, MFR (born March 23, 1933) is a Nigerian educationalist who founded a school. She is the Yeye Mofin.
Ottilie Franziska Hoffmann (14 July 183520 December 1925) was a German educationalist and social reformer who came to prominence as a pioneering temperance activist.
Alderman Wilfred Byng Kenrick (4 December 1872 – 7 August 1962) was an English industrialist, politician and educationalist, who served as Lord Mayor of Birmingham.
Myrtle May Simpson (1905-1981) was a notable New Zealand teacher, school inspector and educationalist. She was born in Christchurch, New Zealand in 1905.
Anthony Courtenay Froude Verity (born 25 February 1939) is an educationalist and classical scholar and was Master of Dulwich College from 1986 to 1995.
David Renfrew White (1847-1937) was a notable New Zealand teacher, educationalist and university professor. He was born in Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland in 1847.
Sir Philip Joseph Hartog (2 March 1864 – 27 June 1947) was a British chemist and educationalist who undertook this role in England and India.
Richard Dawes (baptized 13 April 1793, died 10 March 1867) was an English cleric and educationalist. He was the Dean of Hereford from 1850.
His daughter Edyth married Thomas Bavin. His grandchildren included barrister John Winchcombe Bavin, educationalist Nancy Milner-Gulland and writer and theatrical producer Ian Bevan.
The school is located in a historic building that was constructed in 1908 and named after Robert Cotton Money, a 19th-century British educationalist.
Match supporters included sociologist and BBC Radio 4's Thinking Allowed presenter Laurie Taylor, the BBC's John Humphrys, and educationalist and author Anthony Seldon.
Charles Fraser (c.1823 – 25 August 1886) was a New Zealand minister, educationalist and journalist. He was born in Aberdeen, Aberdeenshire, Scotland in c.1823.
Joseph Ukel Abango (born 1939), commonly known as Joseph Ukel, is a veteran- politician of what is now South Sudan and an educationalist by profession.
James Thevathasan Rutnam was a Sri Lankan historian, educationalist, author, and politician. He is the founder of the Evelyn Rutnam Institute for Inter- Cultural Studies.
Prof Frederick Malloch Bruce FRSE FPS FIEE (1912-1997) was a Scottish electrical engineer and educationalist. He was the creator of the "Bruce- profile electrode".
Alan Edward Cripps Cornwall (12 August 1898 – 26 February 1984) was an English cricketer – a right-handed batsman who played for Gloucestershire – and an educationalist.
Antony Roy Clark MA (Cantab.) (born 7 November 1956) is a South African schoolmaster and educationalist, formerly a first-class cricketer, currently headmaster of Michaelhouse.
Fanny Hertz (1830 – 31 March 1908) was a British educationalist and feminist who worked to establish and promote various institutions for female education in Bradford.
Dr. Clifford James Hemming FBPS FRSA (9 September 1909 – 25 December 2007), better known as James Hemming, was a British child psychologist, educationalist and humanist.
Alexander Michael Hirst Aikman (9 September 1933 - 16 February 2005) was an Australian rower (an Olympic medal winner at the 1956 Melbourne Olympics) and educationalist.
Lord Kennet married Elizabeth Ann Adams in 1948. They had six children, one son William Aldus (Thoby) Young, and five daughters; Easter Russell, educationalist; the sculptor Emily Young; Mopsa English, educationalist; and the writers Louisa Young, aka children's author Zizou Corder and Zoe Young. Emily Young, described as an enigmatic and modish teenager in the 1960s, was the inspiration for the Pink Floyd song "See Emily Play".
Maurice David (7 May 1891 – 1974) was a French educationalist and writer.Bibliothèque nationale de France. Notice de personne: David, Maurice (1891-1974). Retrieved 17 October 2017 .
Cluysenaer s painting of Isabelle Gatti de Gamond Isabelle Laure Gatti de Gamond (28 July 1839 – 11 October 1905) was a Belgian educationalist, feminist, and politician.
Claudiana Ayo Cole is a Gambian politician, civil servant and educationalist who is the current Minister of Basic and Secondary Education in President Adama Barrow's cabinet.
Satyendranath Sarma (1917 - 1999) was an Assamese writer, educationalist, research scholar, critic and historian. He presided over the Assam Sahitya Sabha venue of Titabor in 1975.
George William Saul Howson MA (8 August 1860 – 7 January 1919) was an English educationalist and writer, reforming headmaster of Gresham's School from 1900 to 1919.
Christopher Herman Gilkes (1898 – 2 September 1953) was a noted educationalist and was Master of Dulwich College, United Kingdom, from 1941 to his death in 1953.
Norman Ian MacKenzie (18 August 1921 – 18 June 2013) was a British journalist, educationalist and historian who helped the Open University (OU) in the late 1960s.
Dylan Ap Rhys Wiliam is a British educationalist and Emeritus professor of Educational Assessment at the UCL Institute of Education and lives in Bradford County, Florida.
Alberto Lista (portrait by Joaquín Domínguez Bécquer) Alberto Rodríguez de Lista y Aragón (October 15, 1775October 5, 1848), Spanish poet and educationalist, was born at Seville.
National Council for Education and related universities as well as their institutions is the constitutional authority to standardize courses for the educationalist and teachers in Bangladesh.
Monique Boekaerts (born 1946) is a Belgian educationalist. She was a professor of pedagogy at the Radboud University Nijmegen (1980–1990) and Leiden University (1991–2011).
Andreas Georgiou Thomas (1942–2002) was a Cypriot poet and educationalist, who during his lifetime made a significant contribution to modern Cypriot literature and secondary education.
Håkan Sandberg is a Swedish academic, educationalist and social researcher. His research in collaborative health is highly recognized and implemented; specially in the Swedish welfare sector.
Dr George Alexander Carse FRSE RSSA (20 June 1880 – 20 August 1950) was a leading Scottish physicist and educationalist. In 1925 he was the first Mitchell Lecturer.
Named after the serial entrepreneur, philanthropist and educationalist Prasad V. Potluri, the College was founded in 1998. Dr. K. Sivaji Babu is the Principal of the PVPSIT.
Knight Bachelor insignia Robert George Alexander Balchin, Baron Lingfield Kt (born 31 July 1942) is a British educationalist, noted as an advocate and pioneer for school autonomy.
Sir Derek Birley (31 May 1926 – 14 May 2002) was a distinguished English educationalist and a prize-winning writer on the social history of sport, particularly cricket.
John J. O'Meara (18 February 191512 February 2003) was an Irish classical scholar, historian of ancient and medieval philosophy (in particular Augustine and Eriugena), educationalist and writer.
Ronald Groves MA BSc (Oxon); FRIC, (19 August 19088 February 1991) was a noted educationalist and academic and was Master of Dulwich College from 1954 to 1966.
His father, Major Arthur Frayling, was a furrier. His mother, Betty Frayling, won the RAC Rally in 1952. His brother, Christopher, is a British educationalist and writer.
Francis Lodowic Bartels (13 March 1910 – 20 March 2010) was a Ghanaian diplomat and educationalist, who served as Ghana's ambassador to West Germany between 1970 and 1972.
William Allan Armour (30 April 1880-21 April 1967) was a New Zealand school principal and educationalist. He was born in Dunedin, New Zealand on 30 April 1880.
Her father, James Kirkland, was a merchant in Glasgow. Her mother was called Janet Finlay. Kirkland married Hugo Reid in 1839. Reid was a progressive educationalist from Edinburgh.
Joseph Arthur Francis Spence is an educationalist and the current Master of Dulwich College. He was previously Headmaster of Oakham School and Master in College at Eton College.
Margaret Isobel Quass (6 April 1926 - 9 December 2003) was an educationalist. Between 1974 and 1986, she was Director of the Council for Education in World Citizenship (CEWC).
After losing his seat in the Conservative victory of 1979, Noble returned to his roots as an educationalist, working first for Blackburn College and then for Burnley College.
Cloudesley Brereton (1863–1937) was a British educationalist and writer with a particular interest in the teaching of modern languages. He was also a literary translator from French.
Shabab Aalam is an Indian author, educationalist and satirist. He is the Chairman of Grameen Mukt Vidhyalayi Shiksha Sansthan. His book SAMANVYA was released by Ram Niwas Goel.
Prof James Morton Hyslop FRSE FRSA LLD (1908–1984) was a Scottish mathematician and educationalist primarily linked to South Africa. He founded the Royal College of Nairobi in 1961.
Andrew Cameron (16 February 1855-19 May 1925) was a New Zealand presbyterian minister, educationalist and community leader. He was born in Paisley, Renfrewshire, Scotland on 16 February 1855.
David G. Scott is an Australian educationalist who has been the headmaster of Kingswood College in Melbourne, the Anglican Church Grammar School in Brisbane, and Newington College in Sydney.
Sybil Marshall on her wedding day in 1995 aged 82 Sybil Marshall (26 November 1913 – 29 August 2005) was a British writer, novelist, social historian, broadcaster, folklorist and educationalist.
Christopher Lawton Newton Thompson (14 February 1919 - 29 January 2002) was a South African soldier, sportsman, educationalist and anti-apartheid politician. He was the brother of Ossie Newton-Thompson.
"Ellys Manor House" , Ellysmanorhouse.com. Retrieved 25 October 2014. The church weather vane depicts a gilded fiddle. The educationalist and school textbook writer Charles Hoole was briefly rector from 1642.
Currently, Malay Bhowmick is serving as a professor of the Department of Management Studies at the University of Rajshahi. He is also a Bangladeshi playwright, actor, director and educationalist.
K. E. Radhakrishna (born 22 Dec 1946) an Indian educationalist , writer , playwright, musicologist, columnist and political leader. He holds an M.A. in English Literature and LLB from Bangalore University.
Michael Paul Nunan, CFC (1858 - 5 November 1934) was a member of the Congregation of Christian Brothers and an influential educationalist in New Zealand, Victoria and, especially, Western Australia.
During part of this time he was Chairman of the city's Public Health Committee. His second wife was the Labour Party politician, activist and adult educationalist Dame Mabel Tylecote.
Moulana Chalilakath Kunhahammad Haji (Arabic: جاللكت كنّ احمد الحاج Kerala 1866-1919) was a Malayali Sunni scholar and Islamic educationalist. He is known for his special attention on the reformation of orthodox Muslims and as father new Madrassa system in southern Indian state of Kerala. scholar and Islamic educationalist. He is known for his special attention on the reformation of orthodox Muslims and as father new Madrassa system in southern Indian state of Kerala.
Maud Russell England (30 December 1863 - 12 May 1956) was a New Zealand teacher, feminist, educationalist and art dealer. She was born in Rugby, Warwickshire, England on 30 December 1863.
Frank Livingstone Combs (19 July 1882 – 31 August 1960) was a New Zealand teacher, educationalist and editor. He was born in Napier, Hawke's Bay, New Zealand on 19 July 1882.
Thomas Adolphus Bowden (26 July 1824 – 24 June 1906) was an English-born New Zealand Anglican clergyman, farmer, teacher and educationalist. He was born in London on 26 July 1824.
Valsan Thampu notable educationalist and former Principal St Stephens College New Delhi, M. Murali Ex MLA, B. Aburaj, Director State Institute of Educational Technology, Kerala etc. are some among them.
Harriet Finlay-Johnson or Harriet Johnson or Harriet Weller (12 March 1871 – 1956) was a British educationalist and schoolteacher known for encouraging children to create dramas to improve their education.
John Shand (22 January 1834 – 30 November 1914) was a New Zealand university professor, educationalist and administrator. He was one of the three foundation professors at the University of Otago.
Hyman Chanover (April 19, 1920 - April 26, 1998) was a Rabbi, educationalist and author. His book Happy Hanukah Everybody (1969) was illustrated by Hans Christian Andersen Award winner Maurice Sendak.
Charles William Lloyd (23 September 1915 – February 1999) was an educationalist and was Headmaster of Alleyn's School from 1963–1966 and then Master of Dulwich College from 1967 to 1975.
Christopher Frayling (left) at the University of Bath in 2015. Sir Christopher John Frayling (born 25 December 1946) is a British educationalist and writer, known for his study of popular culture.
George Richard Ashbridge (13 August 1901-25 October 1984) was a New Zealand accountant, teachers’ union official and educationalist. He was born in Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand on 13 August 1901.
Vincent Noel Harold Strudwick (born 1932) is a British Church of England priest, theologian and educationalist. His areas of expertise include sixteenth-century English history and the ecclesiology of Richard Hooker.
Dame Celia Mary Hoyles (born 18 May 1946, née French) is a British mathematician, educationalist and Professor of Mathematics Education at University College London (UCL), in the Institute of Education (IoE).
Syed Shah Mohammed Hussaini (born 29 December 1922) is an Indian educationalist and a social worker. In 2004 he was awarded the Padma Shri in the field of literature and education.
Lorenzo Luzuriaga (1889–1959) was a Spanish educationalist. While in exile in Argentina following the Spanish Civil War, Luzuriaga translated several works by John Dewey, and popularized the figure among progressives.
Geoffrey Tyler (born 10 June 1920 – 28 April 2012) was an English educationalist. He was born in Ilford, Essex. A keen composer and singer, he has published books of songs for children.
William Sandford Pakenham-Walsh (; Pinyin: Wàn Báwén; Foochow Romanized: Uâng Bĕk-ùng; 1868 – April 26, 1960) was a Christian clergyman, educationalist and writer. He was most famous for his work Tudor Story.
Stephanie Grace Young (1890-1983) was a notable New Zealand headmistress and educationalist. She was born in Stroud, Gloucestershire, England in 1890. She was headmistress of St Margaret's College, Christchurch in 1931.
Martín Almada Martín Almada (born 30 January 1937) is a lawyer, writer and educationalist from Paraguay. A noted dissident and human rights activist, he was a prisoner of the Alfredo Stroessner regime.
Spring Board International Preschools educate children between 1 1/2 years to 5 years of age. Owned by actor-educationalist Vishnu Manchu, the international preschool operates more than 75 branches in India.
The educationalist Dinanath Bezbaruah and his team then took the project for establishing a senior secondary school, and finally in the year 1886, the Bezbarauah Higher Secondary School was founded in Golaghat.
Lincoln Arthur Winstone Efford (4 August 1907 – 24 April 1962) was a New Zealand pacifist, social reformer and adult educationalist. He was born in Christchurch, North Canterbury, New Zealand on 4 August 1907.
Anne Jellicoe, née Anne William Mullin (1823–1880) was a noted Irish educationalist best known for the founding of the prestigious Alexandra College, which became a force in women's education under her management.
Dr Charles Edward Wilson FRSE FSA FEIS LLD (1815-1888) was a 19th-century Scottish teacher and educationalist who was Scotland's first HM Chief Inspector of Schools following the Education (Scotland) Act 1872.
Sir Bernhard Samuelson, 1st Baronet, (22 November 1820 – 10 May 1905) was an industrialist, educationalist and a Liberal politician who sat in the House of Commons in 1859 and from 1865 to 1895.
Samuel Adu Gyamfi is a Ghanaian politician and an educationalist. He was a member of the 4th Parliament of the 4th Republic of Ghana for the Aowin Constituency in Western Region of Ghana.
Sir David John Collins (13 November 1949 – 14 February 2019)Stephen Exley, "Tributes paid to former FE commissioner Sir David Collins", TES, 20 February 2019. Retrieved 21 February 2019. was a British educationalist.
Helena Langhorne Powell (1862–1942) was an English historian and educationalist. She was Headmistress of Leeds Girls' High School, Principal of Cambridge Training College and Principal of St Mary's Training College, Lancaster Gate.
Julian Woolford is an award-winning British theatre director, writer and educationalist based in the UK and working internationally. He was educated at the University of Kent and Bristol Old Vic Theatre School.
Mary Jane Bridges-Adams (née Daltry; 19 October 1854 – 14 January 1939) was a British educationalist, socialist, and activist. She campaigned for free, compulsory, secular education for all and for free school meals.
Ts'o Seen Wan. Ts'o Seen Wan, CBE, JP (, born in Portuguese Macau November 10, 1868 - 1953), who styled himself S. W. Tso or S. W. Ts'o, was a distinguished Hong Kong lawyer and educationalist.
Joseph "Pentland" Firth (25 March 1859 - 13 April 1931) was a New Zealand educationalist and teacher. He was the headmaster of Wellington College from 1892 to 1920. He was born and died in Wellington.
John Clark Milne (1897-1962) was a Scottish poet who wrote in the Doric dialect of the Scots language. He was also a teacher and educationalist. Some of his poetry was written for children.
Himansu Sekhar Nahak (born 1 March 1988) is an Indian entrepreneur, social worker & educationalist. He is currently the Administrative Officer of IEM Group Of Institutions. Gopal Krushna College of Engineering & Technology, Jeypore, Orissa, GKCET.
Arnold Cecil Powell (18 September 1882 – 15 November 1963) was an English schoolmaster, educationalist and clergyman who was head master of several schools successively, ending his career as Custos of St Mary’s Hospital, Chichester.
Stein Erik Ulvund (born 11 August 1952) is a Norwegian educationalist. He was born in Nes i Hallingdal. He took his dr.philos. in 1986 and became professor at the University of Oslo in 1994.
Susil Kumar Rudra (7 January 1861 – 29 June 1925) was an Indian educationalist and associate of Mahatma Gandhi and C F Andrews who served as the first Indian principal of St Stephen's College, Delhi.
Dame Daphne Helen Purves (née Cowie; 8 November 1908 - 14 October 2008) was a New Zealand educationalist. She was the first New Zealander to serve as president of the International Federation of University Women.
Oliver Young, brother to John Lorenzo, photographed ca. 1870 John Lorenzo Young (30 May 1826 in London – 26 July 1881 at sea) was an English-Australian educationalist and founder of the Adelaide Educational Institution.
He was born in Stord, and was the older brother of politician and educationalist Johan David Haslund Gjøstein. In October 1877 he married Emilie Josefine Sundbye. The couple had seven daughters and four sons.
Mary Isabel Fraser (20 March 1863-18 April 1942) was a New Zealand school principal and educationalist. She was born in Dunedin, New Zealand on 20 March 1863. She introduced kiwifruit seeds in New Zealand.
John Massie MP, circa 1906 John Massie (3 December 1842 – 11 November 1925) was a British academic, educationalist and Liberal Party politician who served as Member of Parliament (MP) for Cricklade from 1906 to 1910.
Józef Jarzębowski, b. 26 November 1897 in Warsaw - d. 13 September 1964 in Herisau, Switzerland, was a Polish-born Roman Catholic priest, member of the Marian Fathers. He was an educationalist, historian, writer and noted antiquarian.
Sir Cyril M. Norwood (15 September 1875 – 13 March 1956) was an English educationalist who served as Headmaster of Bristol Grammar School and Harrow School, Master of Marlborough College, and President of St John's College, Oxford.
Christa Schmidt (born Christa Weigel: 3 April 1941) is a retired German politician (CDU) who served as a minister in the last government of East Germany. She built an earlier career as a teacher and educationalist.
He received a Doctor of Divinity in 1759. The educationalist and writer James Burgh, who founded a dissenting academy on the outskirts of London, was his cousin, describing him as his "much esteemed friend and relation".
Paul Gerhard Natorp (24 January 1854 – 17 August 1924) was a German philosopher and educationalist, considered one of the co-founders of the Marburg school of neo-Kantianism. He was known as an authority on Plato.
Nawab Syed Hussain Bilgrami, Imad-ul-Mulk Bahadur, CSI (1842-1926) was an Indian civil servant, politician, educationalist and an early leader of the All India Muslim League. He was the first Secretary General of Muslim League.
Joan Myrtle Wood (11 January 1909 - 27 November 1990) was a New Zealand educationalist and music teacher. She was instrumental in establishing nursery playcentres in the early 1940s, which later developed into the present-day playcentre movement.
Brown plaque, Holland Park Avenue, London Caroline Middleton DeCamp Benn (13 October 1926 – 22 November 2000), formerly Viscountess Stansgate, was an educationalist and writer, and wife of the British Labour politician Tony Benn (formerly 2nd Viscount Stansgate).
Graham Wallas portrait taken c. 1920s Graham Wallas (31 May 1858 – 9 August 1932) was an English socialist, social psychologist, educationalist, a leader of the Fabian Society and a co-founder of the London School of Economics.
Kathleen Tattersall (11 April 1942 – 23 January 2013) was a British educationalist, specialising in examination administration. She was the leader of five examination boards in the United Kingdom before becoming the first head of exams regulator Ofqual.
Chrystabel Prudence Goldsmith Procter (11 March 1894 – 21 June 1982) was an English gardener, educationalist and horticulturalist. Her career focused particularly on involving institutions and people in growing their own crops and on the education of women.
Association members also questioned the value of spending time teaching Ancient Greek in primary school. Linguist and educationalist Manolis Triantafyllidis (who would later play a major role in producing demotic readers, grammars and dictionaries) argued that "children emerged from school able to say nose, ears, pig, horse and house in Ancient Greek but without having broadened their repertoire of concepts". Translated in Mackridge 2009 p. 264. Triantafyllidis, Delmouzos and the philosopher and educationalist Dimitris Glinos soon became the leading lights of the Association, effectively supplanting the diaspora-based group surrounding Psycharis, Eftaliotis and Pallis.
Dr. Jane Gilbert (born 1955) is an educationalist in New Zealand. She was the Chief Researcher of New Zealand Council for Educational Research. From 2014, Jane was appointed as a professor of education at Auckland University of Technology.
Alington married Jane Margaret Booth (died 1910). Their son Cyril Alington was known as an educationalist, scholar, cleric, and author. His brother Herbert Alington, as well as his brother-in- law Clement Booth, were both first-class cricketers.
Martin Hall (born in Guildford, England) is a British-South African academic and educationalist who has written extensively on South African history, culture and higher education policy. He is a former Vice Chancellor of the University of Salford.
Rotohiko Tangonui Haupapa ( 1836 - 1 August 1887) was a notable New Zealand tribal leader, administrator and educationalist. Of Māori descent, he identified with the Ngāti Whakaue iwi. He was born in Ohinemutu, Rotorua, New Zealand in about 1836.
Saeeda Faiz (, ), was an educationalist and a social reformer from Ghazipur city in Uttar Pradesh. She was married to Late Mr. Shah Abul Faiz and had an active participation in educational reforms, especially for the women in Ghazipur.
Osbourn moved to the University of Birmingham for her doctoral studies on host adaptation in Septoria nodorum, supervised by Chris Caten. She has described the Salem State University educationalist Louise Swiniarksi as her 'anchor throughout my adult life'.
Karl Ferdinand Becker Karl Ferdinand Becker (14 April 1775 Lieser (Mosel) – 4 September 1849 Offenbach am Main) was a German physician, educationalist, and philologist. He wrote a German grammar. His deductive approach to comparative philology was later discredited.
Arthur Herman Gilkes MA, (1849 – 13 September 1922) was a noted educationalist, author, and clergyman, and was Master of Dulwich College from 1885 to 1914. His final years were spent as Vicar of St Mary Magdalen's Church, Oxford.
Memorial plaque in Chartres John of Salisbury (late 1110s – 25 October 1180), who described himself as Johannes Parvus ("John the Little"), was an English author, philosopher, educationalist, diplomat and bishop of Chartres, and was born at Salisbury, England.
Dr. Hemang Dixit (born 11 June 1937) is a prominent Nepalese educationalist and author. He is also a renowned consultant paediatrician. He writes novels under the pseudonym Mani Dixit. He is currently the Principal of Kathmandu Medical College.
Julia Lloyd (13 April 1867 – 7 April 1955) was a British philanthropist and educationalist. She was interested in the newly developed methods for teaching young children in kindergartens. She opened Birmingham's first nursery school based on Froebelian principles.
The late educationalist Sahu Girdhari Lal ji and his son Sahu Sambhu Nath Khanna ji established it as a degree college in 1948. For the last 58 years, the college has served education needs in Moradabad and nearby cities.
58, 151-2 Henslow's work in Hitcham, over and above the normal duties of a Rector, can be summarised as follows:Russell-Gebbett J. 1977. Henslow of Hitcham: botanist, educationalist & clergyman. Dalton, Lavenham. :1. The Parish School and other charities.
Peter Vale is married to the educationalist and activist Louise Carol Vale (born Kramer). The couple live in Schoenmakerskop, Eastern Cape, South Africa, and have two children - Dr. Beth Vale, a medical anthropologist, and Daniel Vale, a technology lawyer.
Dr Bell's School, Leith Dr Bell's School is a building located at 101 Great Junction Street, Leith, Scotland. The building was named after Scottish educationalist Andrew Bell (1753–1832), and is a Category B listed building of historical importance.
Dr Cecil Reddie (10 October 1858 – 6 February 1932)Register of Births, Marriages & Deaths, gives place & date of death as London, March Quarter 1932 was a reforming English educationalist. He founded and was headmaster of the progressive Abbotsholme School.
Hannah Gwendolen Shone (22 May 1907 - 14 July 1993) was a British aerodynamicist and educationalist most known for her work on spinning tunnels and aircraft flight-testing during World War II, as well as her involvement in flight education.
Under the auspices of the society, she played a pioneering role in the Christian women ministry of the Protestant movement in colonial Ghana. Catherine Mulgrave was also one of the first African woman teachers in the missionary educationalist system in Africa.
Unidentified residence in Bowen Hills, Brisbane, ca. 1875, described as residence of the first inspector of Queensland schools: John Gerard Anderson. John Gerard Anderson (1836–1911), M.A., J.P., was a Scottish-born educationalist and public servant in colonial Queensland, Australia.
Lord Sanderson in 1930 Henry Sanderson Furniss, 1st Baron Sanderson (1868–1939) was an English educationalist and socialist politician. He was the third Principal of Ruskin College, an educational institution in Oxford, England, for adults lacking in prior formal education.
Gunn Imsen (born 11 June 1946) is a Norwegian educationalist. She took her undergraduate education at the University of Oslo. She has been a professor at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology since 1993. Notable publications include Elevenes verden.
John Race Godfrey Tomlinson FCP (24 April 1932 - 6 August 2005) was a British educationalist. After serving as Director of Education for Cheshire from 1972 to 1984, he was Professor of Education at the University of Warwick from 1985 to 1997.
Chris Gostick, "Extra Material on James Hanley's The Closed Harbour". The Closed Harbour. (Richmond, Surrey: Oneworld Classics, 2009), p. 213. David Thomas (1880–1967), the trade union and Labour Party organizer and adult educationalist, was born and schooled in Llanfechain.
Harold James Ruthven Murray (24 June 1868 – 16 May 1955) was a British educationalist, inspector of schools, and prominent chess historian. His book, A History of Chess, is widely regarded as the most authoritative and most comprehensive history of the game.
James Allen, 1737 James Allen (4 May 1683 – 28 October 1746) was a prominent 18th-century educationalist, Master of the College of God's Gift in Dulwich (then colloquially called "Dulwich College") and was the founder of James Allen's Girls' School.
Cate Fowler (born 13 June 1949 in Tumut, New South Wales, Australia) is a theatre producer and director specialising in work for children and families and an educationalist engaged in research in the areas of children's performance and creative literacies.
Board members of the Norwegian National Women's Council in 1904. Karen Grude Koht, Fredrikke Marie Qvam, Gina Krog, Betzy Kjelsberg and Katti Anker Møller Karen Grude Koht (16 November 1871- 10 July 1960) was a Norwegian educationalist, essayist and feminist pioneer.
Chandrawati, Ganpat Rai - Ex-MLA, Hargain Singh Gochwal, Hukam Singh (master) - late Ex-Chief Minister, Kripa Ram Phogat (late) - head of first labour union of Delhi Transport Corporation, Ram Kishan Gupta (late) - Ex-MP and educationalist, are a few prominent politicians.
David Frederick St John Jesson (born 23 August 1935)Companies House is a British educationalist and a Professor in the Department of Economics at the University of York. He is a recognised expert on specialist schools and value- added performance (CVA).
John Williamson Nevin. John Williamson Nevin (February 20, 1803June 6, 1886), was an American theologian and educationalist. He was born in the Cumberland Valley, near Shippensburg, Franklin County, Pennsylvania. He was the father of noted sculptor and poet Blanche Nevin.
John Angelo Jackson (24 March 1921 – 2 July 2005) was an English mountaineer, explorer and educationalist. Photograph of John Angelo Jackson in the early 1960s in the grounds of Plas-y-Brenin, during his tenure as Director of the facility.
Indira Neville (born 1973) is a New Zealand comics artist, community organiser, musician and educationalist. She is notable for her work in the Hamilton-based comics collective Oats Comics, her own long running serial comic Nice Gravy and in recent times taking a prominent role in the promotion and recognition of New Zealand women's comics through her association with the Three Words anthology. Indira Neville is also notable for her work as an educationalist. She was a CORE Education eFellow, a winner of a Microsoft Innovative Teacher Award for her teaching, and a former principal of a primary school.
For this author's namesake, the social reformer, see Anne Knight. Anne Knight (born Anne Waspe; 28 October 1792 in Woodbridge, Suffolk - 11 December 1860 in Woodbridge, Suffolk) was a Quaker children's writer and educationalist. Mornings in the Library (c. 1828) and Mary Gray.
Frederick Archibald de la Mare (6 August 1877-9 May 1960) was a New Zealand lawyer and educationalist. He was born in Christchurch, North Canterbury, New Zealand on 6 August 1877. In 1935, he was awarded the King George V Silver Jubilee Medal.
Cyril Argentine Alington (22 October 1872 – 16 May 1955) was an English educationalist, scholar, cleric, and prolific author. He was successively the headmaster of Shrewsbury School and Eton College. He also served as chaplain to King George V and as Dean of Durham.
George Metcalfe (29 April 1837 – 29 May 1927) was a London-born Australian educationalist, school proprietor and writer. As proprietor and Headmaster of the High School, Goulburn, he was responsible for the pre-university education of two Premiers of New South Wales.
Rt. Rev. Mgr. Canon James P. Clenaghan, (Séamus Mac Leannacháin) P.P., V.G., St Malachy's Church, Belfast was a distinguished senior Irish churchman and educationalist whose entire ministry was in the Diocese of Down and Connor where he rose to become Vicar General.
Erling Lars Dale (12 March 1947 – 25 September 2011)uv.uoi.no retrieved 27th Sept 2011 was a Norwegian educationalist. He took his doctor's degree in 1987, and was an associate professor at the University of Oslo. He was hired as professor in 1993.
John Wale Hicks FRCP was an Anglican bishop,Rev Patrick Comerford educationalist and author in the second half of the nineteenth century.“Who was Who” 1897–2007 London, A & C Black, 2007 He was identified with the Anglo-Catholic tradition of Anglicanism.
Statues of Edwards and his son Ifan ab Owen Edwards in Llanuwchllyn, by Jonah Jones, unveiled 1972 Sir Owen Morgan Edwards (26 December 1858 - 15 May 1920) was a Welsh historian, educationalist and writer. He is often known as O. M. Edwards.
The winner was William Fitzgerald Langworthy of the Conservative Party. At the time of the election, Smith described his occupation as "educationalist". He ran again in the 1926 election, and finished third with 1,382 votes. The winner was Conservative Donald James Cowan.
John Ngata Kariuki is a Kenyan politician and businessman. He has two children: James Kariuki (husband to Alison Ngethe Kariuki and Dr. Elizabeth Nyawira. His grandchildren are Robyn Kariuki, Lauryn and Colin. His wife, Rose Wanjiku Kariuki (educationalist and economist), died in 2015.
Merrion Frances "Mem" Fox, AM (born Merrion Frances Partridge; 5 March 1946) is an Australian writer of children's books and an educationalist specialising in literacy. Fox has been semi-retired since 1996, but still gives seminars and lives in Adelaide, South Australia.
2013 Ann Geraldine Limb (born 13 February 1953) is a British educationalist, philanthropist, business leader, and charity chair. In September 2015, she became the first woman Chair of The Scout Association since the organization was founded by Robert Baden Powell in 1907.
In 1982, he married the educationalist Lindsay Mackie. She helped found the educational charity FILMCLUB. They have two daughters (born 1983 and May 1986). His daughter Isabella Rusbridger is a journalist, known professionally as "Bella Mackie" to distinguish herself from her father.
Sheikh Abdullah was an Indian lawyer, educationalist and women social reformer. He was a co-founder of Women's College, Aligarh and Aligarh Muslim University and known as Papa Mian. He was a recipient of the civilian honour of the Padma Bhushan in 1964.
His son, Sydney Turner (1814–1879), was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge, took holy orders in the Church of England, and became rector of Hempsted. Sharon Turner's son-in-law was William Ellis (1800–1881), an educationalist and economist who tutored the British royal family.
Sir Roy Shaw (8 July 1918 – 15 May 2012) was a British educationalist and public servant. Originally employed in adult education, to which he remained dedicated in later life, he was Secretary-General of the Arts Council of Great Britain from 1975 to 1983.
Vijila Sathyananth is an Indian politician, Educationalist and former Mayor of Tirunelveli Municipal Corporation. She represents All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam party. She also represents as a member in the party's general council. She is also a member in Rajya Sabha from 2014-20.
Smyth (seated, right) with other educators in 1930 Patrick Smyth (21 October 1893 - 29 May 1954) was a New Zealand teacher, principal and educationalist. Of Māori descent, he identified with the Nga Puhi iwi. He was born in Pungaere, Northland, New Zealand in 1893.
Sir Theodore Morison (9 May 1863 – 14 February 1936) was a British educationalist who served as a Member of the Council of India and Director of the University of London Institute in Paris. He is best known as an interpreter of Muslim life in India.
The company was founded in 1983, by Hanif Kalia, a well known businessman, educationalist and social welfare activist. Its corporate office was in Karachi and its international marketing and commercial services head office in Pakistan. It also had an office in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada.
EduTECH 2013 had over 3,000 participants and over 150 exhibitors. The keynote speech was given by Daniel Pink, author and former speechwriter for Al Gore. The 2013 speakers included Ken Robinson, an educationalist featured on TED talk, Salman Khanm, Alan November and Stephen Heppell.
Simon Matthews Edwin Kempson (3 May 1831 – 20 June 1894) was an English educationalist and colonial administrator who also played first-class cricket for Cambridge University, the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) and the Gentlemen. He was born at Castle Bromwich, Birmingham and died at Uley, Gloucestershire.
Eric Joseph Simeon (1918–2007), was an Indian school educationalist. He was the headmaster of some of the distinguished schools of India from 1960s to the mid-1980s. He served as the headmaster of La Martiniere Calcutta, The Doon School and Cathedral and John Connon School.
Gunnar Handal (born 25 March 1936) is a Norwegian educationalist. He was born in Bergen. He took the mag.art. degree in pedagogy at the University of Oslo in 1964, but was hired at (now: the Department of Education) at the University of Oslo already in 1963.
John Frederick Wolfenden, Baron Wolfenden, CBE (26 June 1906, Swindon, Wiltshire – 18 January 1985, Guildford, Surrey) was a British educationalist probably best remembered for chairing the Wolfenden Committee whose report, recommending the decriminalisation of homosexuality, was published in 1957. He was headmaster of Uppingham and Shrewsbury.
Rajkumar Shitaljit Singh, also known as "RK Shitaljit", was a noted writer, Retrieved on 7 January 2019. scholar and educationalist of Manipur. He was born on 18 August 1913, Retrieved on 7 January 2019. and died at the age of 95 Retrieved on 7 January 2019.
Dame Rachel Mary de Souza (born January 1968) is a British educationalist, and former head teacher. Since 2012, she has been the chief executive of the Inspiration Trust. Rachel de Souza was appointed a Dame in the 2014 New Year Honours for her services to education.
Hoani Retimana Waititi (12 April 1926 - 30 September 1965) was a notable New Zealand teacher, educationalist and community leader. Of Māori descent, he identified with the Te Whānau-ā-Apanui iwi. He was born in Whangaparaoa near Cape Runaway, Bay of Plenty, New Zealand, in 1926.
Johan Nordahl Brun Rolfsen (12 June 1848 - 18 January 1928) was a Norwegian writer, educationalist and teacher, journalist, translator and speaker. He is best known for the series of five readers for elementary school, Læsebog for folkeskolen (1892-1895), which became the most widespread schoolbook in Norway.
The Greenhows' daughter Frances married into the Lupton family of Leeds. Frances was an educationalist and worked to expand educational opportunities for girls. Their eldest son was Thomas (1795–1824), a surgeon who also founded an eye infirmary, now part of the Norfolk and Norwich Hospital.
He was married to Gladys (Jim) Buntine, who was the Australian Chief Commissioner of Girl Guides from 1962 until 1968. Their son was educationalist Robert Buntine of The Kings School and Newington College.BUNTINE, Robert Walter (1929–2014) – Heritage Guide to The Geelong College Retrieved 30 May 2016.
Marie Haps (1879–1939) Marie Haps (1879-1939) was a Luxembourg-born Belgian educationalist, the founder of what subsequently became the Institut Libre Marie Haps (now part of the Haute École Léonard de Vinci) and the Marie Haps Faculty of Translation and Interpreting (Saint-Louis University, Brussels).
He was appointed Justice of the Supreme Court of Norway from 1946. He was decorated Commander of the Order of St. Olav in 1964. He died in 1980. His son Bård Gaarder was a presiding judge, and married to noted educationalist Birgit Brock-Utne for many years.
Andrew Bell (27 March 1753 – 27 January 1832) was a Scottish Episcopalian priest and educationalist who pioneered the Madras System of Education (also known as "mutual instruction" or the "monitorial system") in schools and was the founder of Madras College, a secondary school in St Andrews.
Sir George Peter Scott FAcSS (born 1 August 1946)George, Martin (2 June 2010). "Sir Peter Scott to retire from Kingston University six months early". Kingston Guardian is a British educationalist and the former Vice-Chancellor of Kingston University in Kingston upon Thames in southwest London.
Professor Mark Watson-Gandy (born 8 November 1967) is a British lawyer and educationalist, specialising in UK insolvency law. Since 2019 he is Chairman of the Biometrics and Forensic Ethics Group, a Home Office non-departmental public body, formerly known as the National DNA Database Ethics Group.
Geoffrey Foxall Bell, MC (16 April 1896 – 17 January 1984) was an English cricketer and educationalist. He was a right-handed batsman who played first- class cricket for Derbyshire and Oxford University. He won the Military Cross during World War I and became headmaster of two schools.
Sir Owen John Roberts, JP, DL, DCL, LL.D (7 April 1835 – 6 January 1915) was a Welsh educationalist, who helped to pioneer technical education in London. He is also a great-grandfather of Antony Armstrong-Jones, 1st Earl of Snowdon, who was the husband of Princess Margaret.
Antoine Garin Antoine Marie Garin (23 July 1810 - 14 April 1889) was a French Roman Catholic priest, missionary and educationalist who came to New Zealand. He was born in Rambert-en-Bugey, France on 23 July 1810. He died in 1889 and was buried at Wakapuaka Cemetery in Nelson.
The College was founded in 1983 by General Fazle Haq, governor of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and educationalist Abdul Ali Khan, son of politician Bacha Khan and brother of poet and philosopher Abdul Ghani Khan was its first Principal. Classes began on May 2, 1985, under the leadership of Ali Khan.
Stamp collector Stanley Gibbons, architects John Foulston and George Wightwick, writer and educationalist Derwent Coleridge, Conservative M.P. for West Somerset and later Liberal M.P. for North Devon Sir Thomas Dyke Acland, 11th Baronet, actor James Hayward, newspaper publisher and politician William Saunders and electrical engineer Jonathan Nash Hearder.
British Army intelligence file for Mary McSwiney Mary MacSwiney (pronounced 'MacSweeney'; ; 27 March 1872 – 8 March 1942) was an Irish politician and educationalist. In 1927 she became leader of Sinn Féin when Éamon de Valera resigned from the presidency of the party.The Times, "Southern Irish Elections", 6 June 1927.
He also played in one first-class match for Warwickshire against Cambridge University in 1969. After the end of his playing career, Alan Old became a successful educationalist, serving as the Principal of Cleveland Technical College, having already been a master at Worksop College during his playing career.
The Cusrow Wadia Institute of Technology is a polytechnical educational center in Pune, India. It was founded in 1938 by the Modern Education Society of Pune. The Modern Education Society was founded in 1932 in Pune by Prin. V. K. Joag, an educationalist, and Sir Cusrow Wadia, a industrialist.
Prof John Strong CBE FRSE FEIS LLD (1868–1945) was a 20th-century British educationalist. He was one of the creators of the Education Act (Scotland) 1918. Amongst other actions. This brought the many poorly-funded private Catholic schools in Scotland (mainly in the Glasgow area) into state control.
Theodore Clarke Smith (1870–1960)Series Descriptions. Williams College. Retrieved 6 October 2015. was professor of American history at Williams College from 1903 to 1938. Smith was an educationalist and curriculum reformer who served on the Committee on Curriculum of 1911-1927 and the Advisory Committee of 1911-1935.
Albertine Necker de Saussure, 1766 to 1841 Albertine Adrienne Necker de Saussure (9 April 1766, in Geneva – 13 April 1841, in Mornex,Dictionnaire historique de la Suisse on the Salève, near Geneva) was a Genevan and then Swiss writer and educationalist, and an early advocate of education for women.
The contributions of more recent poets like BraJ Vallabh Chaturbedi, Smt. Kishori, Late Kiran Ji, Tripurari Singh Matwala, Late Prof. Dineshwar Prasad Verma Deverendra Malaypuri, Prabhat Sarsij, Vinay Asham, Shyam Prasad Dixit, Anandi Prasad Singh, Raj Kishor Prasad (Advocate), Ranjit Kumar Singh (Social worker, J.V.S.S), N.S Rajput (Educationalist).
George Manville Fenn George Manville Fenn (3 January 1831 in Pimlico – 26 August 1909 in Isleworth) was a prolific English novelist, journalist, editor and educationalist. Many of his novels were written for young adults. His final book was a biography of his fellow writer for juveniles, George Alfred Henty.
John Wesley Work Jr. (August 6, 1871 – September 7, 1925) was the first African-American collector of folk songs and spirituals, and also a choral director, educationalist and songwriter. He is now sometimes known as John Wesley Work II, to distinguish him from his son, John Wesley Work III.
Rajdharpur Madhyamik Bidyalay () better known as Rajdharpur High School is a secondary school in Rajdharpur, Baliakandi Upazila, Rajbari, Bangladesh. It started as a junior high school in 1968, and was upgraded to a high school in 1973. This school was founded by educationalist and social worker Abdul Gofur Molla.
Charles Nherera is a Zimbabwean educationalist. He was founding Vice- Chancellor of Chinhoyi University of Technology and chairman of the parastatal Zimbabwe United Passenger Company (ZUPCO). He was arrested for corruption, in connection with the latter post, in 2006 and jailed. The charges were later quashed by the High Court.
Mary Ellen Bews (20 August 1856-29 March 1945) was a New Zealand school principal and educationalist . She was born in Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland on 20 August 1856. She was the founder and manager of Mount Eden College in 1895–1914, one of the first colleges for girls in New Zealand.
Barbara Leigh Smith Bodichon (8 April 1827 – 11 June 1891) was an English educationalist and artist, and a leading mid-19th-century feminist and women's rights activist. She published her influential Brief Summary of the Laws of England concerning Women in 1854. She co-founded the English Woman's Journal in 1858.
Kerry now devotes her full-time work to this community cause and sees her primary life work as an educationalist. Jones is the publisher and editor of Aboriginal Arts in Transition (1989), The No Case Papers (1999), The Australian Constitutional Monarchy (1994), The ACM Handbook (1996) and The People's Protest (2000).
Maria Aurora Couto is an Indian writer, and educationalist from Goa. She is best known for her book Goa: A Daughter's Story. She currently lives in the North Goan village of Aldona. She helped start the DD Kosambi Festival of Ideas and has been involved in activities of Goa University.
Sir Walter Adams (16 December 1906The International Who's Who 1943-44. 8th edition. George Allen & Unwin, London, 1943, p. 5. - 21 May 1975) was a British historian and educationalist. Adams was educated at University College London, and was a lecturer in History at the same institution from 1926 to 1934.
Howes was born in 1879 at Southbridge. He was one of five surviving children of Cecilia Brown and William Howes, a post office clerk and accountant from England. His elder sister Edith, who would become a writer and educationalist, was born in 1872 before the family migrated to New Zealand.
Erich Marks (born June 22, 1954 in Bielefeld) is a German educationalist and the managing director of the Crime Prevention Council of Lower Saxony. Furthermore he is the managing director of the German Foundation for Crime Prevention and Offender Support (DVS) as well as the German Congress on Crime Prevention.
Kolachal Sea Port Jeppiaar Fishing Harbour in Muttom is the nearest Sea Port. This is a private sea port and was built by educationalist and business man Jeppiaar. Another nearest sea port is Kolachal. It is an ancient port, aging back to 18th century. Vasco da Gama called it ‘Colachi’.
As he pursued higher studies, his PhD guide, Rasiklal Parikh served as a key source of inspiration. Shastri was also influenced by the views of Mahatma Gandhi, Swami Vivekananda and Bal Gangadhar Tilak. He married Shridevi Bhatt, daughter of an educationalist Karunashankar Kuberji Bhatt, in 1947. They had a son.
Norman Whatley (8 September 1884 - 1 April 1965) was an English educationalist, headmaster of Clifton College from 1923-1939, and also a historian, Fellow of Hertford College, Oxford. He served during the First World War. He was Mayor of Oxford 1949-1950. He was editor of The Isis Magazine, 1904–1905.
The main campus of Shanghai University is located in Baoshan District. One of several schools in the district, Xing Zhi Middle School was founded by the famous educationalist from Nanjing, Tao Xingzhi. Shanghai Xingzhi High School and the High School Affiliated to Shanghai University are also located in the district.
Beyond the many stone slabs with poems and songs from past students of the University, the garden also is also home to three monuments: A statue depicting Portuguese poet and educationalist João de Deus, as well as a bust of writer Eça de Queirós, and another of romantic poet António Nobre.
Cooper died in Auckland in September 1990. His life was the subject of a 2005 biography by Andrew Mason, with a review of the book praising Cooper as a "profound meritocrat" whose "unremitting application of personal standards took him from farm boy to the best-known educationalist of his time".
Evelyn Norah "Rani" Shullai is an educationalist and a pioneer of Girl Guiding in India. She has received numerous awards including the Silver Star from the Indian government and the Silver Elephant from the Bharat Scouts and Guides. Shullai is the second Padma Shri recipient in Meghalaya, given in 1977.
Oluremi Comfort Sonaiya (born March 2, 1955), is a Nigerian politician, educationalist and writer. She was Nigeria's only female presidential candidate in the 2015 general election under the platform of the KOWA Party. But recently lost her bid to Dr. Adesina Fagbenro Byron in representing the party again in 2019 election .
Tim Dornan (born 1950) is a British physician, endocrinologist and medical educationalist. He is Professor at the School of Medicine, Dentistry and Biomedical Sciences at the Queen's University Belfast.Tim Dornan, Queen's University Belfast He was formerly Professor of Medical Education at Maastricht University, where he is now Professor Emeritus.Medical education.
Henry Edward Field (11 July 1903 - 28 March 1991) was a New Zealand educational psychologist, educationalist and university professor. He was born in Christchurch, New Zealand, on 11 July 1903. In the 1973 New Year Honours, Field was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire, for services to education.
Michael Modhushudon College, in Jessore District, is one of the largest educational institutions in Khulna Division, Bangladesh. The college is named after famed educationalist and intellectual Michael Madhusudan Dutt. It has about 26,000 students and 19 faculties. It gives four years bachelor's and one years master's course opportunities under Bangladesh National University.
Bo Dahlin (born 1948) is a Swedish educationalist. He is Professor of Education at Karlstad University and Professor II at Rudolf Steiner University College in Oslo. Dahlin's research is focused on didactics, especially philosophical and phenomenographic studies of learning in different contexts, e.g. how people in different cultures perceive learning, knowledge and understanding.
In 1907, he opened "St. Mark's Anglo-Chinese College", later known as Foochow Trinity College, today the Fuzhou Foreign Language School. W. S. Pakenham-Walsh retired in 1919, but he remained in China until 1921. On his return to England he became Vicar of Sulgrave, Northamptonshire, and also a keen scholar and educationalist.
Wilhelm Aarek (17 April 1907 – 26 December 1999) was a Norwegian philologist and educationalist. He was a cand.philol. by education, and was appointed as a lecturer in the English language at Kristiansand Teacher's College in 1938. He had also applied for a job at Stavanger Cathedral School, but was rejected by the government.
Nancy Mayhew Youngman OBE, (28 June 1906 – 17 April 1995), was an English painter and educationalist. Youngman is remembered primarily as a painter, but from before the war to the mid-1960s she was an influential figure in art education, as a teacher, an author and an impressively efficient organiser of exhibitions.
The grave of A R Carson, Greyfriars Kirkyard Aglionby Ross Carson FRSE LLD (1780 – 4 November 1850) was an educationalist and author. He served as rector of the High School in Edinburgh from 1820 to 1845. His Latin texts remain in use. In texts he is usually referred to as A. R. Carson.
Lily Poulett-Harris (2 September 1873 – 15 August 1897) was an Australian sportswoman and educationalist, notable for being the founder and captain of the first Women's cricket team in Australia. Poulett-Harris continued to play until forced to retire due to ill health from the tuberculosis that was eventually to claim her life.
Shankar Ramchandra Bhise (born into the Marathi CKP family; 1894 - 1971), popularly known as "Acharya Bhise" or "Bhise Guruji", was a social worker, educationalist, and novelist devoted to the education and development of the Adivasi community. Bhise wrote novels, including Janglantil Chhaya, which discusses the exploitation and conditions of Adivasi forest tribes.
Digswell Arts Trust was the brainchild of Henry Morris, a pioneering educationalist. Through his enthusiasm, dedication and influence he persuaded the Government and the Welwyn Garden City Development Corporation to establish a Trust for professional artists in Welwyn Garden City, England. It was formally inaugurated by Countess Mountbatten on 29 May 1957.
Ismail al-Qabbani (; born in 1898 in Asyut Governorate–1963) was an Egyptian reforming educationalist. He introduced to the Egyptian education system the concept of Pragmatism. He was also convinced that education in Egypt should be indigenous and rooted in Egyptian and Arabic culture. He became Dean of the Institute of Education.
Calder is the son of science writer Nigel Calder and the grandson of Lord Ritchie-Calder. He is the nephew of Scottish writer and critic, Angus Calder and educationalist Isla Calder (1946-2000). Simon married Charlotte in Las Vegas in 1997. He has two daughters (born in 2000 and 2003) and lives in London.
Savitribai Phule (3 January 1831 – 10 March 1897) was an Indian social reformer, educationalist, and poet from Maharashtra. She is regarded as the first female teacher of India. Along with her husband, Jyotirao Phule, she played an important role in improving women's rights in India. She is regarded as the mother of Indian feminism.
Philip Edwin Bujak (born 17 February 1960) is an educationalist and commentator on Anglo Polish affairs As CEO of Montessori St Nicholas Charity he was responsible for the founding of the Montessori Schools Association, the Montessori Evaluation and Accreditation Board, and a leader in the drive for the creation of state funded Montessori schools.
Joyasree Goswami Mahanta is an Indian politician. She was a Member of Parliament, representing Assam in the Rajya Sabha the upper house of India's Parliament as a member of the Asom Gana Parishad. She is an Assamese language writer and educationalist. She was awarded India's fourth highest civilian award the Padma Shri in 2018.
Peter Hebblethwaite died in 1994. Margaret Hebblethwaite worked from 1984-94 in prison chaplaincy, catechesis and parish work in Oxford. From 1991 to 2000 she was assistant editor of The Tablet."Margaret Hebblethwaite", Greenbelt Since 2000 she has been a freelance missionary and educationalist in Santa María, Paraguay, pioneering and supporting community work in education.
Dame Elizabeth Leah Manning DBE (née Perrett; 14 April 1886 – 15 September 1977) was a British educationalist, social reformer, and Labour Member of Parliament (MP) in the 1930s and 1940s. She organised the evacuation of orphaned or at risk Basque children during the Spanish Civil War.Basque Children of '37 Association, basquechildren.org; accessed 2 April 2014.
Kwasi was born on 20 October 1976 in the town of Tatale in the Northern Region of Ghana. He earned his Higher National Diploma in Education from Sunyani Polytechnic, Sunyani (now Sunyani Technical University) in 2010 where he majored in Electrical Engineering. He is an educationalist by profession. He is married with three children.
Philippa Garrett Fawcett (4 April 1868 – 10 June 1948) was an English mathematician and educationalist. She was the first woman to obtain the top score in the Cambridge Mathematical Tripos exams. She taught at Newnham College, Cambridge, and at the normal school in Johannesburg, and she became an administrator for the London County Council.
Lilian Margaret Passmore Sanderson (22 February 1925 – 16 September 1996) was an English teacher and educationalist who became known for her research on female genital mutilation, particularly in Sudan. She was the author of Against the Mutilation of Women: The Struggle Against Unnecessary Suffering (1981) and Female Genital Mutilation, Excision and Infibulation: A Bibliography (1986).
Sigmund Vangsnes (13 January 1926 – 26 September 2017) was a Norwegian educationalist. He was born in Vik, and graduated with the cand.oecon. degree from the University of Oslo in 1954. He was the founder and director of the Nordic Institute for Studies in Innovation, Research and Education from 1961 to 1991, branching out of NAVF.
Blackett was the eldest son of Rev. William Blackett, a missionary and educationalist in India and his wife Grace Phillott. He was born in Calcutta and educated at Marlborough College. At Marlborough, he injured his leg badly, and while he recuperated, he spent some time in Germany and acquired a lifelong interest in the country.
Bishop Thomas Grimley (1821–1871) was an Irish born priest and educationalist who served as Bishop of Cape Town, South Africa. Rt. Reverend Grimley was born in Skerries, Dublin,A Skerries Bishop - Paper 020 - Lecture – 1949, by Halpin, Paddy, Published – Time & Tide Vol 1, Paper also in the Nat. Library – P. 7632. in 1821.
Main administrative building Entrance to Saadat College Sadat college is the first college in Bangladesh established by a Muslim Zamindar. It was founded by Wazed Ali Khan Panni, a zamindar and educationalist of Tangail. He named it after his grandfather Saadat Ali Khan Panni. The founder member of Saadat college was Principal Ibrahim Khan.
Dabholkar was born on 1 November 1945 to Achyut and Tarabai, being the youngest of ten sibling. His eldest sibling was the educationalist, Gandhian and socialist Devdatta Dabholkar. He did his schooling at New English School Satara and Willingdon College, Sangli. He was a qualified medical doctor, having obtained an MBBS degree from the Government Medical College, Miraj.
Arthur Gordon Butchers (11 February 1885 - 21 April 1960) was a New Zealand principal, educationalist and historian. He was born in Brunswick, Victoria, Australia on 11 February 1885. In the 1947 New Year Honours, Butchers was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire in recognition of his service as headmaster of The Correspondence School.
Rubina Saigol is a Pakistani feminist scholar and educationalist. She has authored and edited several books and papers in English and Urdu. Her scholarly work explores the themes of gender, education, nationalism, the state, ethnicity, religious radicalism, terrorism, feminism and human rights. She is a senior member of Women Action Forum and co founder of Ajoka Theatre Group.
Arthur Engel, Aachen 1978 Arthur Engel (born 1928) is a German mathematics teacher, educationalist and prolific author. His work has been translated into several languages. He has played a role in national and international mathematical competitions since 1970. Engel was one of the first to recognize the impact of electronic calculators and computers on mathematics teaching.
Dr. H.N Shubhada is an educationalist from Bangalore. She is the winner of 13 National Awards from NCERT and Kittur Rani Chennamma Award from S. M. Krishna, former Chief Minister of Karnataka for her educational research on special children. She is the co-founder of Bhandhavya Education Trust which is the first of a kind Integrated School in Karnataka.
Canon Patrick Rogers MRIA, D.Litt., was an Irish Roman Catholic priest of the Diocese of Down and Connor, an ecclesiastical historian, author and educationalist. He spent much of his professional life as Principal of St. Joseph's College of Education, a male only teacher training college in Belfast which merged in 1985 to become St. Mary's University College, Belfast.
Plaque commemorating the birth of Alois Fischer, 10 April 1880 Aloys Fischer (10 April 1880 – 23 November 1937) was a German educationalist. Fischer was born in Furth im Wald, Bavaria on 10 April 1880. He attended the local elementary school. In 1891 he was awarded a scholarship to the grammar school based at the Benedictine Metten Abbey.
Rona Bailey (née Stephenson 1914–2005) New Zealand drama and dance practitioner, educationalist and activist. Bailey was influential in emerging contemporary dance and professional theatre in New Zealand. She was an activist in the anti-apartheid movement in the 1970s and 80s and part of Treaty of Waitangi anti-racist education that started in the mid 1980s.
Hope Jensen Leichter is an American educationalist. She serves as the Elbenwood Professor of Education at Teachers College, Columbia University. She earned a bachelor's of arts degree from Oberlin College and completed her doctorate at Harvard University. Leichter has been a member of the National Academy of Education since 1979, and was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1981.
Janusz Jankowski is a doctor, educationalist and scientist of Scottish Polish origin He is an expert in Social and Healthcare Policy, Academic Management and Global Research and Education Networks He was formerly in previous senior management roles including Deputy Vice Chancellor of Research and Innovation, Pro Vice Chancellor Research, Vice Dean Research and the Sir James Black Professorship.
Garth Boomer (1940 – 1993) was an influential educationalist working in Australia. Since 1995 the Australian Association for the Teaching of English has held a Garth Boomer Memorial Address in his honour. He was particularly influential in the teaching of English, and he was president of the Australian Association for the Teaching of English for a time.
Lenford Alphonso (Kwesi) Garrison (13 June 1943 – 18 February 2003) was an educationalist, community activist and historian whose life's work was to catalogue the development of the black British identity and its history and promote the works of young black writers. To this end, he set up ACER (Afro- Caribbean Education Resource) and co-founded the Black Cultural Archives.
Scouting brought uniforms, flags, more organisation, more camps and a clearer, more rational ideology. There was also an educationalist influence from Gustav Wyneken. Together, this led to the emergence of the Bündische Jugend, a movement of many different youth associations. There were Wandervogel groups, Scouting associations and others, all of which mixed the elements described above with new ingredients.
The education of the boarding school students is based on the principles of the educationalist Kurt Hahn. The school cover a significant part of their basic food requirements with produce from two farms which they run themselves. Mekaela Academies was founded in 1993 by members of the German charitable society "Watoto e.V." (Watoto means "children" in Swahili).
On 2 August 1899 he married Estelle Miriam Salom (24 February 1876 – 11 May 1960), daughter of Maurice Salom, MLC of Adelaide, South Australia. There were two sons: Maurice Salom Myers (1900–1986) and Geoffrey Alexander Myers (1908–2002). Myer's sister Phoebe Myers was a notable educationalist, who represented New Zealand at the League of Nations in 1929.
Jonas Woodward (1810? - 13 June 1881) was a New Zealand businessman, educationalist, politician, congregational leader and public trustee. He was born in London, England and baptised on 29 April 1810. He represented the City of Wellington electorate on the Wellington Provincial Council from October 1855 to August 1857, and the Wellington Country electorate from August 1859 to February 1865.
Amaat Honoraat Joos (3 May 1855 in Hamme – 15 August 1937 in Ghent) was a Flemish priest and prelate who became well known as an educationalist, dialectologist and folklorist."Amaat Honoraat Joos", Biographisch woordenboek der Noord- en Zuidnederlandsche letterkunde, edited by F. Jos. van den Branden and J.G. Frederiks (Amsterdam, 1888-1891), 400-401. Transcription from dbnl.org.
Cossham was born in High Street, Thornbury, in a house where his father, grandfather and great- grandfather were also born. His father Jesse Cossham, a carpenter and builder, named his son after the composer of Messiah, George Frederic Handel. A plaque at his birthplace describes him as a "non-conformist Preacher, Industrialist, Geologist, Politician, Educationalist and Public Benefactor".
Liam Ó Cuinneagáin served ten years as chairperson of Údarás na Gaeltachta (2002-2012).Liam Ó Cuinneagáin profile Údarás na Gaeltachta website He is also an educationalist in the Irish language. Ó Cuinneagáin trained as a teacher in St. Patrick's College in Drumcondra, Dublin. He was School Principal and teacher in Dublin's inner-city from 1972–1994.
St Bartholomew the Great Priory Church's coat of arms Phyllis Wallbank MBE (1 September 1918 - 9 April 2020) was a British educationalist who, in 1948, founded the first all-age Montessori school in Great Britain and the Gatehouse Learning Centre, which took its name from the gatehouse of the Priory Church of St Bartholomew the Great in London.
On 1 May 2011, St. Edward's College formally gained academy status and became officially known as St Edward's College Edmund Rice Academy Trust. This includes a reference to Blessed Edmund Rice (1762-1844), the Irish Catholic educationalist and founder of the Congregation of Christian Brothers, formerly associated with the school, and also of the Presentation Brothers.
Walter James Scott (23 December 1902 - 19 February 1985) was a notable New Zealand teacher, lecturer, educationalist, teachers’ college principal and civil libertarian. He was born in Hilton, South Canterbury, New Zealand in 1902. On 27 December 1928, Scott married Hectorina Jessie MacDonald at St Paul's Presbytarian Church, Invercargill.Title: New Zealand, Marriage Index, 1840-1934 Author: Ancestry.
Hugo Stumberg Kołłątaj, alt. Kołłątay, (1 April 1750 – 28 February 1812) was a prominent Polish constitutional reformer and educationalist, and one of the most prominent figures of the Polish Enlightenment. He served as Deputy Chancellor of the Crown, 1791–92. He was a Roman Catholic priest, social and political activist, political thinker, historian, philosopher, and polymath.
The Pearse Museum () is dedicated to the memory of Patrick Pearse and his brother, William. Patrick Pearse was an educationalist and nationalist who was executed for his part in the 1916 Rising. The museum is situated in the suburb of Rathfarnham on the south side of Dublin, Ireland. It was formerly an Irish speaking school named St. Enda's.
Marx's daughter Eleanor and Collet's daughter, Clara Collet, amongst others, became heavily involved in the readings. His five children included the colonial administrator Wilfred Collet (1856–1929) and the educationalist Clara Collet (1860–1948). He died 1898 in Finsbury, and is buried in Highgate West Cemetery. His wife, Jane Collet (1820–1908), died 10 years after him.
She later taught and lectured in Boston, Massachusetts. Poulsson was an advocate of the educationalist Friedrich Fröbel. She wrote and gave lectures on parenting, as well as writing books for children. She made a number of trips to Norway and together with her sister Laura E. Poulsson, translated the works of others authors from the Norwegian language.
Michael Rutschky was a member of the PEN Zentrums Deutschland. He received the 1997 Heinrich Mann Prize; in 1999 he held the poetic dozent of the University of Heidelberg. He is Scholar at the Internationales Künstlerhaus Villa Concordia in Bamberg. He was married to the educationalist and publisher Katharina Rutschky until her death in January 2010.
Alfred Oftedal Telhaug (25 September 1934 – 10 June 2016) was a Norwegian educationalist. Telhaug was born in Skudeneshavn to vicar Andreas Telhaug and Randi Oftedal. He graduated from Stavanger Cathedral School in 1953, the teacher's school in Oslo in 1959, the University of Oslo in 1962, and took the dr.philos. degree at the University of Trondheim in 1990.
Ernest Salter Davies CBE (25 October 1872 - 10 June 1955) was a Welsh teacher and educationalist, who served as director of education for Kent from 1918 to 1938. His influence extended beyond Kent, as he was chairman of the Carnegie United Kingdom Trust, editor of the Journal of Education and President or chairman of trustees of several other institutions.
Potla Nageswara Rao (born 5 March 1958) is an Indian billionaire entrepreneur, philanthropist, Educationalist and Member of Legislative Council (MLC) of Telangana. He represents the Local body Constituency of Khammam and is a senior leader of the Indian National Congress from Khammam District. He is also an industrialist, he established Adam's Engineering College in 1998 at Paloncha, Khammam District.
In 1955 the Ministry of Education of the Georgian SSR awarded Javakhishvili the badge "Excellent Educationalist". The Soviet Government highly appreciated Javakhishvili's scientific and public activities and awarded him the Order of Lenin, the Order of the Red Banner of Labour twice, and the Medal "For Conspicuous Service during the Great Patriotic War of 1941 — 1945".
Anant Pai (17 September 1929 – 24 February 2011), popularly known as Uncle Pai, was an Indian educationalist and a pioneer in Indian comics. He is most famous as the creator of two comic book series viz. Amar Chitra Katha, which retold traditional Indian folk tales, mythological stories, and biographies of historical characters; and Tinkle, a children's anthology.
Nikolai Petrovich Ostroumov (1846–1930) was an educationalist in Turkestan. He studied under Nikolai Il'minskii at the Kazan Theological Seminary, where he studied Arabic and Turkic languages as well as Islam.Islam in the Russian Federation and the Post Soviet Republics: a Historical perspective by Spyros Plakoudas, p 31 He was editor of Turkistan Wilayatining Gazeti from 1883 to 1917.
Godfrey was born and raised up in Hydrabad. Her father Allen Godfrey was an engineer at the Royal Mint for the Nizam of Hyderabad and her mother Marjorie Godfrey was an educationalist, MP and MLA. She was a student of Rosary Convent High School and Koti Women's College. She worked as a manager of the Royal Dutch Airlines.
Rev. John Breeden (9 May 1872 –1942) was an English Wesleyan Methodist Missionary Society missionary in the Madras Presidency. He was an educationalist and the founder of St George's Homes, an Orphanage-cum-School for abandoned and deprived children of Eurasians or Anglo-Indians in Kodaikanal, later renamed as The Laidlaw Memorial School, Ketti in the Nilgiris.
Kurt Adams (15 December 1889 – 7 October 1944) was a Hamburg SPD politician and an educationalist. Following the failed assassination attempt on the leader in July 1944 Kurt Adams was one of several thousand high-profile non- Nazis arrested and detained by the government during August. He died a couple of months later at the Buchenwald concentration camp.
Al-Gazali was born in Amarah, Iraq, and raised in Baghdad. Her mother was an educationalist and her father an Army judge in Baghdad. She received higher education in UK. Al-Gazali studied medicine at the University of Iraq in Baghdad. She received her Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery from Baghdad Medical College in 1973.
Len Clive "Kim" Taylor (4 August 1922 in Kolkata – 20 July 2013 in Chichester) was a British Educationalist. He was headmaster at Sevenoaks School before being appointed as Director of the Resources for Learning Project at the Nuffield Foundation. He then worked at the Centre for Educational Resources and Innovation. Taylor was born in India under the British Raj.
The son of James, a prominent educationalist and child psychologist, McGibbon studied at St Edmund's Primary, Whitton and Salesian College. He learnt to play the drums, his chief instrument, during his time at Richmond Tertiary College. In 1980, despite serious thoughts about attending Berklee School of Music, he left college to forge a career as a working musician.
Syed Golam Sarwar, Ex-Superintendent Engineer, DPHE, BANGLADESH # Mr. Mohtossir Ali, Educationalist # Mr.Engineer Farashat Ali, Chairman, NRB Commercial Bank Limited, Bangladesh # Dr. Syed Sharmin Sarwar, M. A. G. Osmani Medical college, Sylhet, Bangladesh. # Mr. Syed Golam Shahajarul Alam, Joint Director, Bangladesh Bank. #Mr. Khan Jamal Nurul Islam. writer & Journalist (Editor-of Shahajalal Darpan, fortnight Bengali). #Mr.
Rev. William Delany, S.J., LL.D. (R.U.I.), was an Irish Jesuit priest and educationalist, who served as President of University College Dublin.Timeline UCD President's Office. He was born in 1835 in Leighlinbridge, Co.Carlow and received his early education in St. Patrick's Carlow, College before going on to Maynooth College he pursued further studies in the Gregorian University, Rome.
Golaghat Government Bezbaruah Higher Secondary School is a boys' Upper Primary with Secondary and Senior Secondary school located at Golaghat East in Golaghat, Assam, India. Founded in the late 19th century by the educationalist Dinanath Bezbaruah, it is one of the oldest secondary schools in the state. based in Assam. Asamiya is the medium of instruction.
Hilde Behrend was born on 13 August 1917 in Berlin, Germany. Her father, Felix Wilhelm Behrend, was a physics and mathematics teacher and well known educationalist, who was demoted and dismissed by the Nazis, due to his Jewish heritage. Her brother, Felix Behrend, became a mathematician. In 1936, aged 19 years old, Behrend moved to London.
Potluri Vara Prasad (born 8 September 1970), popularly known as "PVP", is a serial entrepreneur, philanthropist and educationalist. He owns the film production company called PVP cinema. As a serial entrepreneur in the global outsourcing services space, he built and sold 3 companies. During that decade, he was the driving force behind many companies, including Procon Inc.
Herman Elroy Flecker was born on 5 November 1884 in Lewisham, London, to William Herman Flecker (d. 1941), headmaster of Dean Close School, Cheltenham, and his wife Sarah.Charles Williams: The Third Inkling, Grevel Lindop, Oxford University Press, 2015, p. 380 His much younger brother was the educationalist Henry Lael Oswald Flecker (1896-1958), who became Headmaster of Christ's Hospital.
Vijay Pandurang Bhatkar is an Indian computer scientist, IT leader and educationalist. He is best known as the architect of India's national initiative in supercomputing where he led the development of Param supercomputers. He is a Padma Bhushan, Padma Shri and Maharashtra Bhushan awardee. Indian computer magazine Dataquest placed him among the pioneers of India's IT industry.
Her plan was to select the most suitable girls from orphanages and train them to become elementary school teachers. Girls from higher social classes were not, she insisted, really suitable for work as elementary school teachers. There are suggestions that Halberstadt had been influenced by the ideas propounded by Swiss educationalist Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi. Her project was timely.
Learmonth White Dalrymple (c.1827–26 August 1906) was a New Zealand educationalist who campaigned for girls' secondary education in Dunedin and for women to be admitted to the University of Otago. This was the first Australasian university to agree to this and the school is said to be the first public high school for girls in the Southern hemisphere.
Blanche Eleanor Carnachan (23 November 1871 - 22 March 1954) was a New Zealand teacher, educationalist and community worker. She was born in Cambridge, New Zealand, on 23 November 1871. In 1935, she was awarded the King George V Silver Jubilee Medal. In the 1939 King's Birthday Honours, Carnachan was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire, for social welfare services.
Arnold Everitt Campbell (13 August 1906 - 2 July 1980) was a New Zealand university lecturer, educationalist and writer. He was born in Karere, New Zealand, on 13 August 1906. In the 1966 New Year Honours, Campbell was appointed a Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George, in recognition of his services as director of the Department of Education.
Alfred Albert Thomas William Adams (24 June 1842 - 1 June 1919), known as Thomas William Adams, was a New Zealand farmer, forester, churchman and educationalist. He was born in Graveley, Cambridgeshire, England on 24 June 1842. In 1862 he emigrated to New Zealand on the African. He bought of virgin tussock land at Greendale in Canterbury in 1865 and converted them to farmland.
Yates had a commission to paint the educationalist Charlotte Mason in the Lake District and he decided to bring his daughter up there. They lived at "Cote How" near Grasmere until 1906. During this period he painted the educator John Haden Badley. He was invited to America to attend the inauguration of United States President Woodrow Wilson and to paint his portrait.
Sir David John Watson (22 March 19498 February 2015) was a British academic and educationalist. He was Director of Brighton Polytechnic from 1990 to 1992 and Vice-Chancellor of its successor the University of Brighton from 1992 to 2005. He was the Principal of Green Templeton College, Oxford and Professor of Higher Education at the University of Oxford from 2010 to 2015.
Yogendra was a yoga teacher and educationalist, the son of Shri Yogendra (who in 1918 founded the Yoga Institute in India). The school aimed to develop children through spiritual and emotional growth to additional to physical and intellectual development. St Mary's School opened its Upper Campus in 2002. In 2007, Warwick Christian College was established by the Christian Community Ministries.
Wallbank was born in Oakworth, Yorkshire, the son of William Wallbank. He studied the organ under the tutelage of Edwin Crow at Ripon Cathedral.riponchoralsociety.org.uk Wallbank married Alice Mary Batt, the daughter of Albert Batt, on 14 March 1913, at St George's Church, Leeds; they had a son, the Revd Prebendary Newell Eddius Wallbank (1914-1996), who married the educationalist Phyllis Wallbank.
Consequently, Bengali text books were prescribed for Odia students. At that time, Radhanath was one of prime figure along with Fakir Mohan Senapati, who fought against the expansionism of Bengali educationalist to eradicate Odia language from Odisha. He was the Inspector of Odisha Schools Association and along with Fakir Mohan Senapati and Madhusudan Rao, he tried to promote text book writings.
In 1824 Turnor founded a National School in Colsterworth run under the principles of Scottish educationalist Dr Bell, which also served nearby villages and parishes of Stoke Rochford, Skillington, and Woolsthorpe. The school included a school room and an adjoining house and garden for the schoolmaster. A Roman bath was discovered by Turnor on the banks of the River Witham near Stoke Rochford.
Katharina Rutschky (25 January 1941, Berlin - 14 January 2010, Berlin) was a German educationalist and author. She coined the term Schwarze Pädagogik (literally black pedagogy) in her eponymous book from 1977, describing physical and psychical violence as part of education (a notion elaborated upon some years later by Alice Miller). Until her death, Rutschky lived with her husband Michael Rutschky in Berlin.
Philip Ashton Smithells (12 April 1910 - 13 January 1977) was a New Zealand physical educationalist and university professor. He was born in Leeds, Yorkshire, England in 1910, the son of the British chemist Arthur Smithells. He received his education at Bedales School and at Clare College of the University of Cambridge. He became a lecturer in physical education at the University of Otago.
Macleod studied at the University of Glasgow, and trained as a GP in Paisley. She was awarded an honorary professorship from the University of Nottingham in 2016. She cites Vicky Osgood, a clinician and educationalist, as her inspiration, in a Women in Medicine project by the Royal College of Physicians. Macleod has been a General Practitioner in Ashbourne, Derbyshire since 1989.
Ngata Prosser Pitcaithly (26 September 1906 - 28 April 1991) was a New Zealand principal and educationalist. He was born in Waimate, South Canterbury, New Zealand in 1906. Not from Māori-ancestry, his Australian-born mother liked Māori names and all the children were given one. Pitcaithly did develop an interest in Māori culture and made outstanding contributions to Māori education.
For many years he was president of the Board of Deputies, succeeding his uncle, Sir Moses Montefiore; but he resigned the position in 1894. He was a vice-president of Jews' College, and for many years president of the borough Jewish schools. In 1860, he married Emmeline, daughter of Henry Micholls. Their daughter Margaret married the educationalist Sir Theodore Morison.
Gertrud Grunow (8 July 1870 – 11 June 1944) was a German musician and educationalist who formulated theories on the relationships between sound, colour and movement and was a specialist in vocal pedagogy. She taught courses in the "theory of harmonisation" at the Bauhaus in Weimar, where she was the school's first woman teacher and the only woman teacher during the school's Weimar years.
Simon Gicharu is an educationalist and founder of Mount Kenya University, which is East and Central Africa’s largest private university. He was born in 1964 in Gathiruini village, Kiambu County, Kenya. He is the first in a family of seven. Gicharu is also the Chairman of the Rural Electrification and Renewable Energy Corporation and National Private Universities Owners Association of Kenya.
Otonti Amadi Nduka (born 1926) is a Nigerian educationalist and Ikwerre ethnic nationality spokesman. He is married to Pamela Nduka and together they have 5 children. Otonti and his wife are still currently residing in Nigeria. He is a retired professor and Dean of Education at the University of Port Harcourt, and a Fellow and Vice President of Nigerian Academy of Education.
Marcel Boll (15 September 1886, Paris – 12 August 1971, Paris) was a French positivist, educationalist who played a prominent role in promoting the Vienna Circle in France. He was professor of Chemistry and Electricity at HEC Paris. He edited works by Rudolf Carnap, Phillip Frank, Hans Reichenbach, and Moritz Schlick in France (the translations as such were made by others).
Murray began a shorter work on chess history written in a more popular style. Although begun many years earlier this work was unfinished at his death. It was completed by B. Goulding Brown and Harry Golombek and published in 1963 as A Short History of Chess. Murray was the father of educationalist and biographer K. M. Elisabeth Murray and the archaeologist Kenneth Murray.
Helga Eng, c. 1930 Helga Kristine Eng (31 May 1875 – 26 May 1966) was a Norwegian psychologist and educationalist. She was the third woman to receive a doctor's degree in Norway, and the first to do so in psychology. She was born in Rakkestad as a daughter of teacher and smallholder Hans Andersen Kirkeng (1838–1898) and Johanne Marie Sæves (1843–1886).
Sri Sarada Secondary School is a school in Chennai, at Gopalapuram. It was formed in 1976 by the veteran educationalist Late Smt T. Vasanthalakshmi, supported by Kulapathi Dr. S. Balakrishna Joshi. During the 1976–77 school year, Sri Sarada Secondary School was launched in memory of her mother, Smt Sarada. The school was affiliated to the Central Board of Secondary Education, New Delhi.
Her patron — or matron — was the well-off Mrs Burgh, widow of the educationalist, who treated her almost as a daughter.Gordon, p46. The new arrival attended services at NGUC: she was a lifelong Anglican, but, in keeping with the church's and Price's ethos of logical enquiry and individual conscience, believers of all kinds were welcomed without any expectation of conversion.Tomalin, p60.
542–3 His daughter Jane married Edward Latham (d. 1883), housemaster of Repton School then vicar of Holy Trinity Church, Matlock Bath. Edward and Jane had ten children, including Jane Leeke Latham, an educationalist and missionary.Margaret Bryant, ‘Latham, Jane Leeke (1867–1938)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004, accessed 9 September 2008] Leeke died at Holbrook Hall, near Derby.
The Society of the Daughters of the Holy Heart of Mary came to Karachi in 1954. One of them, Mother Doyle, an American educationalist, was instrumental in establishing the Catholic Board of Education.Mascarenhas, Oswin (2011). The Origin and Evolution of St Lawrence's Parish, Karachi, Pakistan: The Garden Area with the Settlement of the Christian Community ((Kindle Locations 1808-1809, 1814, 1820-1821).
Oxford Grammar High School was founded by educationalist Manikonda Vedakumar, an alumnus of the JNTU, Hyderabad, in the year 1980. In 2008, its management started a Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) affiliated school as well. The total strength of the school is around 900 with 42 teachers teaching at their level best. It is located at St.No.13, HimayatNagar, Hyderabad, Telangana.
Marjorie Ethel Reeves, (17 July 1905 – 27 November 2003) was a British historian and educationalist. She served on several national committees and was a major contributor to the education of history in Britain. She helped create St Anne's College as part of Oxford University in 1952, and she led a revival of interest in the work of Joachim of Fiore.
Christian Jacob Protten also Christian Jakobus Africanus Protten or Uldrich (15 September 1715 – 24 August or 23 October 1769) was a Euro-African Moravian missionary pioneer, linguist, translator and educationalist-administrator in Christiansborg on the Danish Gold Coast in the eighteenth century. The first recorded grammatical treatise in the Ga and Fante languages was written by Protten and published in Copenhagen in 1764.
Muir College is arguably the oldest English-speaking high school in South Africa, tracing its origin back to 1822 when a Scottish educationalist, James Rose- Innes, established Uitenhage’s first Free Government School in Cuyler Street on 12 July 1822 with 60 pupils. In 1865 the Proprietary School – more exclusive and fee-paying opened. The Rev. Dr Robert Templeton M.A. was the first headmaster.
Dunedin: Kenmore. Valpy was born in Reading, Berkshire, the son of English educationalist Richard Valpy and the younger brother of the English printer and publisher Abraham John Valpy. Valpy spent much of his early life in Calcutta, where he worked as a judge. He retired to England in 1836, but poor health prompted him to emigrate with his family to healthier climes.
Ashby Blair Haslewood (1810 – 17 July 1876) was an English clergyman and educationalist who as a young man played first-class cricket for Cambridge University. Haslewood was born in 1810 in Wimbledon, then considered part of Surrey, but the exact date of birth is not known; he was christened at Hampstead on 16 July 1811 and he died in 1876 at Marylebone.
Mabel Clarisse Warburton MBE (1879–1961) was an English Christian missionary and educationalist. She was born 22 June 1879 in Kings Langley, Hertfordshire. Her father had died before her birth and her mother died in childbirth, so she was brought up by her grandparents at Bradwell House near Wolverton, Buckinghamshire. Her brother died in an institution after being declared insane.
Sir Michael Ernest Sadler (3 July 1861 – 14 October 1943) was an English historian, educationalist and university administrator."Sadler, Sir Michael Ernest", The Concise Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 1992. He worked at the universities of Manchester and was the Vice- Chancellor of the University of Leeds. He was also a champion of the English public school system.
The first official quarters for the CHS was over a store at 124 Main Street in Hartford.Bickford 1975, p. 27. The CHS' new ideals and direction were spearheaded by educationalist Henry Barnard, who recommended that the Society enroll members from around the state, encouraged a history and genealogy magazine and retrieved speakers for lectures who could address groups throughout Connecticut.Bickford 1975, p. 25.
Bakhtin 1986, p.117 The Brazilian educationalist Paulo Freire, known for developing popular education, advanced dialogue as a type of pedagogy. Freire held that dialogued communication allowed students and teachers to learn from one another in an environment characterized by respect and equality. A great advocate for oppressed peoples, Freire was concerned with praxis—action that is informed and linked to people's values.
John Charles Lewis Sparkes John Sparkes (c.1833 – 11 December 1907) was an English educationalist and college head. Born in Brixton, Lambeth UK. He trained at the National Art Training Schools as an art teacher. As an educator, he initiated innovative policies at Lambeth School of Art (later the South London Technical School of Art) where he was Superintendent of Studies.
Erling Kristvik (30 August 1882 - 9 January 1969) was a Norwegian educationalist. He was born in Kornstad. He served as rector at the School of education in Volda from 1930 to 1946, and was appointed professor at Norwegian College of Teaching in Trondheim from 1946 to 1952. Among his books are Læraryrket from 1925, Sjelelære from 1937, and Elevkunne from 1939.
Entitled Masturbation For Girls, it was also to be produced by Spun Gold, and focus on female masturbation. It was to feature the sex educationalist Betty Dodson, although the format had yet not been finalised. It was reported after the postponement of their airing that the second and third films were to be entitled I Can't Stop Wanking and Masturbation for Women respectively.
Santosh Choubey is an Indian social entrepreneur, educationalist, poet, and writer of Hindi literature. He founded the All India Society for Electronics and Computer Technology(AISECT) in 1985. Currently, he serves as the Chairman of AISECT and Chancellor of the AISECT group of universities (AGU) along with being involved in various literary and cultural activities to promote Indian Hindi literature and art.
Kelsall's research focused on demography, industrial relations, social mobility, social stratification, and access to education and the professions. In retirement, he also took an interest in Scottish social history and antique glassware. Kelsall died on 1 May 1996; since 1934, he had been married to the educationalist Helen (née Lightbody), with whom he had a son and co-authored a number of books.
Details are included in the civil parish of Birdsall, North Yorkshire. The gates of Langton Hall Langton Hall was the home of Woodleigh School, an independent preparatory school founded in 1929 by the educationalist Arthur England, from 1946 until the school's closure in 2012. There is also a small state primary school, Langton Community School with around 80 pupils.Metcalfe, Claire (23 November 2006).
Johan Gjøstein was born at Hystad, Stord as the son of teacher Amund Vikingsen Gjøstein (1820–1873) and his wife Anne Munthe Olsen (1826–1901).Johan David Haslund Gjøstein - Norwegian Social Science Data Services (NSD) He was the younger brother of politician and educationalist Ole Georg Gjøsteen. Johan Gjøstein was married to Anna Gjøstein, an early women's rights pioneer and socialist politician.
Stella Dadzie (born in 1952, London) is a British educationalist, activist, writer and historian. She is best known for her involvement in the UK's Black Women's Movement, being a founding member of the Organisation of Women of African and Asian Descent (OWAAD) and co-authoring The Heart of the Race: Black Women's Lives in Britain with Suzanne Scafe and Beverley Bryan.
These are nationally rewarded double shift schools. In 1926, the Government Saadat University College was established by Wazed Ali Khan Panni, a zamindar and educationalist of Tangail. He named it after the name of his grandfather Saadat Ali Khan Panni. Govt. M.M. Ali College was established by Maulana Abdul Hamid Khan Bhasani at Kagmari (1 km from the main city) is one of the (First Govt.
The former Vice Provincial Governor of Guangdong, educationalist, Wang Pingshan, headed the school as principal for more than twenty years. By 2004, the school staffed with more than 200 teachers, among which 81 Senior teachers, 17 Master teachers, and 4 with the title of The ACE Teacher of the Province. The management team comprises Principal Yao Xunqi, Deputy Principals Wu Qing and Xiao Zhaoyun.
Mark Cohen (26 November 1849 - 3 March 1928) was a New Zealand journalist, newspaper editor, educationalist and social reformer. He was born in London, England on 26 November 1849. He was a member of the New Zealand Legislative Council from 25 June 1920 to 24 June 1927; and 25 June 1927 to 3 March 1928, when he died. He was appointed by the Reform Government.
Sir Graham Balfour (2 December 1858 – 26 October 1929) was a noted educationalist, author and son of Surgeon General Thomas Graham Balfour. He lived near his cousin, Robert Louis Stevenson during the final years of Stevenson's life, and went on to write a biography of him. After writing a few books, he spent time on education administration, including managing the education system of Staffordshire.
Rollo John Oliver Meyer (15 March 1905 – 9 March 1991), known generally as 'Jack', and at Millfield mainly as 'Boss', was an English educationalist who founded Millfield School (1935) and Millfield Preparatory School (1946) in Somerset; he was also an all-round sportsman who played cricket at first-class level in both England and in India. He died in Bristol on 9 March 1991.
Emily Elizabeth Carpenter (20 January 1917 - 14 March 1991) was a New Zealand university tutor in home science, adult educationalist and consumer advocate. She was born in Scargill, North Canterbury, New Zealand, on 20 January 1917. In the 1985 New Year Honours, Carpenter was appointed a Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George, for services to the Consumer Council and home science.
Beloff was born and brought up in London, and was from a Russian Jewish family. His parents were Semion (Simon) Beloff (born Semion Rubinowicz) and Maria (Marie) Katzin. He was the brother of the historian Max Beloff, the politician and educationalist Renee Soskin, the biochemist Anne Beloff-Chain, and the journalist Nora Beloff. He served in the British Army in the Second World War.
Sir Robert Salisbury is an educationalist, and a "leading expert" on education funding. He has an international reputation for his ideas on leadership styles and staff motivation. He is most noted for transforming a failing secondary school in a pit village in Nottinghamshire into a "beacon of success" at the heart of its community, winning a number of awards and attracting a stream of famous visitors.
Sir Swire Smith (4 March 1842 – 16 March 1918) was an English woollen manufacturer, educationalist and Liberal Party politician. In many ways he was typical of the public-spirited, self-made Victorian. Of nonconformist lineage, he believed in social and intellectual improvement, the virtues of hard work and thrift and the role of the Liberal Party in the encouragement and promotion of this ethic.
William Wyamar Vaughan (25 February 1865 - 4 February 1938) was a British educationalist. Vaughan was the son of Sir Henry Halford Vaughan, Regius Professor of Modern History at Oxford. His mother Adeline Maria Jackson was Julia Stephen's older sister making him a maternal first cousin to Virginia Woolf. In 1898 he married Margaret Symonds, daughter of John Addington Symonds; they had two sons and a daughter.
Gowda Saraswat Brahmins (GSB) form the main community here with Konkani as their mother tongue. Dr. T.M.A Pai, an eminent educationalist, philanthropist and the founder of Manipal hailed from this village.-people still with surname "Kallianpur" in front of their first name are the remnants of a great generation of forefathers. At Kallianpura another temple which is now being renovated Sri Kenchamma Temple which is Gramadevata.
From there she obtained her first leadership post as head of Colston's Girls' School in Bristol. She was there until 1954 when she took the job of leading Kidbrooke School, the first purpose-built comprehensive school in London. She was not an educationalist or an intellectual, she would think and then do. She relied on her own experience and common sense to decide the right path.
Richard Lionel Tufnell (10 December 1896 – 1 October 1956) was a Conservative Party politician in the United Kingdom. Richard Tufnell was son of Edward Tufnell, Member of Parliament for South East Essex, and grandson of the civil servant and educationalist Edward Carleton Tufnell.Sources in British Political History 1900-1951, vol. 4: A Guide to the Private Papers of Members of Parliament: L-Z, Chris Cook, Macmillan, p.
This continued in the Soviet bloc after 1945. When the 1968 student movement revived Marxism, the concept of body culture – Körperkultur in West Germany, "somatic culture" in America – re-entered into the sports-critical discourse, but received new analytical dimensions. Quel corps? (Which body?) was the title of a critical review of sports, edited by the French Marxist educationalist Jean-Marie Brohm in 1975-1997.
Luns was born in a Roman Catholic, francophile and artistic family. His mother's family originated from Alsace-Lorraine but had moved to Belgium after the annexation of the region by the German Empire in 1871. His father, Huib Luns, was a versatile artist and a gifted educationalist who ended his career as professor of architectural drawing at the Delft University of Technology.Kersten, A.E., Luns.
Dansadau was born in June 1953. He obtained a B.Sc (Education) and a PGD (Public Administration), and worked as an educationalist. He began medium, and later large-scale farming in 1977, and continued to stay involved in farming throughout his political career. He was the Sokoto State Secretary of the National Party of Nigeria (NPN) from 1981 to 1983 during the Second Nigerian Republic.
Tareen is a recipient of several state as well as national awards. Taking into account of his contribution as a scientist and educationalist, Indian government has awarded the Padma Shri to him in 2009.J A K Tareen awarded Padma Shri - Times Of India He has also received the National Mineral award, the golden Jubilee Science & Technology award of Mysore University, and Mineralogical Society Gold Medal award.
Sir David Stanley Smith (11 February 1888 - 29 December 1982) was a New Zealand lawyer, judge and educationalist. Smith was born in Dunedin, Otago, New Zealand in 1888. He worked for Charles Morison as an assistant from 1912. He Smith was appointed as a judge to the Supreme Court in 1928, a relatively early appointment based on his performance as counsel for Maori land claims.
Rony Robinson (born 24 December 1940 in Sheffield) is an English writer, educationalist and Sony Award-winning BBC Radio Sheffield daytime presenter. Rony in the Garden His novels include: The Ted Carp Tradition (Hodder), The Beano (Faber). His plays include Snapshots (Theatre Royal,Stratford East), Events In An Upper Room (Belgrade, Coventry and ICA) and the Sony Award- winning Last Loves on BBC Radio 4.
Nielsen stated in a 2002 interview that, "My father toured as an educationalist. He taught about Denmark. I'd come on in a Danish folk dress and sing Danish songs in Danish classes." By the time she was six years old she was singing on the radio and a number of childhood recordings from as early as 1952 exist with Nielsen singing folk songs accompanied by her father.
His most important work was that of an educationalist. He founded the institution that was to become Nizam College. He also founded a girls’ high school in 1885, which was the first institution of its kind in India. He was instrumental in the formation of three industrial schools (helping revive declining industries) at the three principal centres of local industries, namely Aurangabad, Hyderabad and Warangal.
Simon was born in Didsbury, Manchester, as the eldest son of Henry Gustav Simon and Emily Stoehr. He was educated at Rugby School and studied mechanical sciences at Pembroke College, Cambridge. In 1912 he married Shena Dorothy Potter (1883–1972), a noted social reformer. They had three children: Roger, a solicitor and journalist; Brian, an educationalist and historian; and a daughter Antonia (Tony) who died in childhood.
Goubaux died in 1858 and was succeeded by M. Moujean, who directed the college until 1887. It was during his tenure that Chaptal became firmly established as one of the leading public educational establishments in France. By 1867 the school had 1,055 pupils. In 1868 the educationalist Matthew Arnold wrote that the college had 1,000 scholars, of whom 600 were boarders and paid £40 per year.
Leonard John Lewis was a British academic. He worked as an educationalist in Nigeria and was a lecturer (later professor) at the Institute of Education of the University of London. He served as Principal of the University of Zimbabwe for the transition to Zimbabwe's independence, despite his somewhat controversial views on education and politics. He has published a number of books on education policy.
James David Salmond (1 May 1898 - 1 April 1976) was a notable New Zealand teacher, Presbyterian minister and religious educationalist. He was born in Queenstown, New Zealand, in 1898. In the 1962 Queen's Birthday Honours, Salmond was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire, for services to the community, especially in connection with youth work and Christian education for the Presbyterian Church.
He was elected to the Madras Legislative Council as an outstanding educationalist. For a short while he was in the Justice party. The Justice Party (India) found him far too brilliant and individualistic for keeping proper party control over him. In 1926 January, when it was decided to establish Andhra University at Waltaire, Reddy was the natural choice for appointment as its first Vice-Chancellor.
Marie Antoinette Hélène Léontine (Ellen) Heseltine was born in Kingston upon Hull, Yorkshire in 1812. She married Arthur Davitt, an educationalist, in Jersey in 1845. The couple arrived in Australia on 31 July 1854 with the aim of opening a new Model School.Australian Dictionary of Biography - Arthur Davitt However, internal disagreements and a financial recession resulted in the discharge of the Davitts in 1859.
There are more than 300 houses, Two Lower Primary Schools and Two Anganvadies in this area, and a branch of the Pamba River passes through. Late Karuvatta Chandran from Karamuttu was awarded the President's and State Government's awards for the best teacher. He was also a renowned playwright, comic writer, social worker and educationalist. The annual boat race held in Karuvatta is on the Pamba river.
Wheldon was born on 7 May 1916 in Prestatyn, Flintshire, Wales. He was educated at Friars School, Bangor, at the time an all-boys grammar school. His father, Sir Wynn Wheldon, was a prominent educationalist who had been awarded the DSO for gallantry in the First World War. His grandfather, Tomos Jones Wheldon, had been the Moderator of the Calvinist Methodist Church in Wales.
Behind the former Creedmoor High School gym lies B.C. Roberts Ballfield, named after Battle Caviness Roberts who coached for the South Granville Athletic Association well into his years before his death in 1982. Creedmoor is also the home of South Granville High School, G.C. Hawley Middle, and Creedmoor Elementary. The Hawley School, dedicated in 1937 for educationalist Rev. Grover Cleveland Hawley, originally educated the local black students.
Black Cultural Archives (BCA) was founded in 1981, by educationalist and historian Len Garrison and others. BCA's mission is to record, preserve and celebrate the history of people of African descent in Britain."About Us", Black Cultural Archives. The BCA's new building in Brixton, opened in 2014, enables access to the archive collection, provides dedicated learning spaces and mounts a programme of exhibitions and events.
Tari Mangal, Qematay, Kutri, Gidu and Shalawzan are popular for tourism as thousands of people from different parts of Pakistan have been visiting these zones on special occasions. Educationalist and Political activist Syed Ahmad Shah also belongs to Tari Mangal, Parachinar Kurram Agency.He is serving as a Principal in International Public School Teri Mangal since 2001. Mangals are living bothsides in Afghanistan and Pakistan.
Geoffrey Nathaniel Joseph Pyke (9 November 1893 - 21 February 1948) was an English journalist, educationalist, and inventor. Pyke came to public attention when he escaped from internment in Germany during World War I. He had travelled to Germany under a false passport, and was soon arrested and interned. Pyke is remembered for proposing the newly invented material pykrete for the construction of the ship Habakkuk.
A plaque to Hodmann hanging at Reinickendorf 45, in Berlin Max Julius Carl Alexander Hodann (30 August 1894 – 17 December 1946) was a German physician, eugenicist, sex educator and socialist, "the best-known and most controversial medical sex educationalist in the Weimar Republic". He wrote for a working- class readership (e.g. Guy and Gal, 1924) and for children (e.g. Where Children Come From, 1926).
Myra Ellen Roper (1911–2002) was a British-born Australian educationalist, author, broadcaster, and expert on China. She was principal of University Women's College, at the University of Melbourne from 1947 to 1960. Roper wrote five books about China to encourage sympathy and acceptance of the new People's Republic of China, including a book for children. Her papers are collected in the National Library of Australia.
He is survived by two sons and a daughter. His son Ahamed Rayees is an educationalist and recently elected as President of Muscat Kerala Muslim Cultural Centre, which is a frontal organization of Indian Union Muslim League. He is also serving as President of Indian School Al Ghubra in Oman.Indian School Al Ghubra Oman He was buried with full state honours at Kannur City Juma Masjid Qabarstan.
Qazi Motahar Hossain (30 July 1897 – 9 October 1981) was a Bangladeshi author, scientist, statistician, chess player, and journalist. Hossain was a pioneer educationalist of Bangladesh. He did original research in statistics and pioneered its education in Bangladesh both as a faculty and administrator. As one the early faculties of University of Dhaka, he was vigorously active in the cultural circles that grew around it.
The Magnus Baronetcy, of Tangley Hill in Wonersh in the County of Surrey, is a title in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom. It was created on 22 June 1917 for the educationalist and Conservative politician Philip Magnus. He represented London University in the House of Commons from 1906 to 1922. He was succeeded by his grandson, the second Baronet, who was a historian and biographer.
Kommuri Pratap Reddy Institute of Technology (KPRIT) is a college in Ghatkesar, Telangana. It was founded by K Pratap Reddy in 2008. Sri K Pratap Reddy is a member of the Legislative assembly as well as an educationalist and philanthropist. Established in 2008, KPRIT is located on an area of 22 acre (40 ha) site adjacent to NTPC power grid near Ghanpur Village, Ghatkesar Mandal.
Her husband's name had been recommended to the first Governor- General of Turkestan, Konstantin von Kaufman. Kaufman was a military governor and he was still extending the borders of the Russian Empire. Kaufman wanted an investigation of what he saw as a "newly and scarcely explored region". Kaufman's team included the Fedchenkos, the war artist Vasily Vereshchagin and later the educationalist and linguist Nikolai Ostroumov.
The scholarships led to the founding of Sunderland Technical College in 1901, one of the forerunners of the University of Sunderland. On 2 June 1922, Bartram was gazetted a Knight Bachelor as "[o]ne of the Senior JP's of Sunderland. Leading educationalist from 1870. A generous benefactor to charitable, religious and educational bodies in Sunderland" and knighted at Buckingham Palace by George V on 8 July 1922.
Thangal Kunju Musaliar Centenary Public School (TKMCPS) was started by Thangal Kunju Musaliar College Trust in the academic year 1997–8 in commemoration of the birth centenary of its founder, late Jb. A Thangal Kunju Musaliar-the educationalist, industrialist and philanthropist. The formal inauguration of this supreme venture was on 12 June 1997 by Jb. Shahal Hassan Musaliar, the President of TKM College Trust.
The noted education reformer Prince Louis I of Anhalt-Köthen was looking for a suitable teacher to lead the school reforms which he was promoting. Christian Gueintz was recommended to The Prince, probably by the fashionably radical educationalist Wolfgang Ratke and/or possibly by Jakob Martini. Starting on 3 June 1619, Gueintz now found himself the other side of Dessau, in Köthen, teaching Latin and Greek.
Taj Mahmūd Amrōtī (, ) (born in Deewani village, Khairpur, Sindh, 1857; died 1929) was a scholar, fighter against British control of India, and educationalist. He led the "Reshmi Roomal" and "Hijrat Movement" of protest emigration to Afghanistan. Amroti helped Khilafat Movement of Turkish Khilafat / Khalifah by sending financial help and troops of his followers, force named as Junood-e-Rabbani i.e. the Forces of Allah.
That Noel Wills was prepared to compromise his original intentions says much for his receptiveness to new ideas and the respect that he had for the educationalist; that Simpson was prepared to leave Rugby to take the founding Headship of Rendcomb rather than posts at Oundle or Leeds University says much for the respect that the educationalist had for the Founder. Simpson's attraction to Rendcomb would have been increased as he learnt more of the Founder's intentions in a series of letters between the two in the months after their meeting (the Founder being the excellent fisherman that he was!) outlining his intention to provide 'a social, moral and intellectual education rather than mere scholarship'. Simpson clearly saw the potential that such a brief provided. On 2 June 1920, Rendcomb College opened with twelve boys, Simpson at the helm and Noel Wills as Chair of Governors.
Frederick Giles Gibbs (31 October 1866-16 January 1953) was a New Zealand school principal, educationalist, businessman, naturalist and community leader. He was born in London, England on 31 October 1866. Gibbs was educated at Nelson College from 1879 to 1887.Nelson College Old Boys' Register, 1856–2006, 6th edition He completed his BA at Canterbury College in 1889 and graduated MA with first-class honours in 1890.
Frances Shayle George (1828-1890) was a New Zealand teacher, writer and educationalist. She was born in Clifton, Gloucestershire, England on 20 September 1828, and died in Auckland, New Zealand on 8 September 1890. Her writings of poetry and essays ranged from dissertations on the importance of education for young women to contributions to Charles Dickens' Household Words on the subject of early settler's life in New Zealand.
George Warren was a British Methodist missionary who went to Sierra Leone in Nov 1811. Rev. Warren had been an itinerant preacher travelling through England and Wales for John Wesley's circuits. Warren volunteered to become a missionary and educationalist in Sierra Leone, and sailed there in 1811 on board the Traveller, captained by Paul Cuffee. He was accompanied by three school teachers: Jonathan Raynor, John Healey and Thomas Hirst.
William Fitzgerald William Sanderson Fitzgerald (12 November 1838 – 27 January 1920) was a New Zealand teacher and educationalist. He was born in Musselburgh, Midlothian, Scotland on 12 November 1838. In 1861, he was appointed by the Free Church of Scotland to be principal of a Presbyterian boarding and day school in Pigeon Bay on Banks Peninsula in New Zealand's South Island. He and his wife reached Lyttelton in October 1861.
A three-storey brick and concrete building (1956) demonstrates the post-war construction of larger and more permanent school buildings in areas of established populations. The building reflects mid-20th century architectural and educationalist movements through its modernist, climatically responsive design and materials. The grounds retain mature trees and landscaping features, representative of suburban school sites, and demonstrate the importance of play and aesthetics in the education of children.
The British Way and Purpose was an educational programme set up by the British Directorate of Army Education within the British Army in the autumn of 1942. The series of accompanying pamphlets were subsequently collated into an eponymous book published in 1944. The educationalist Robert L. Marshall was the general editor of the series. The booklets were also used by the Royal Navy and the Royal Air Force.
Kathrine McAllister "Rena" Bell (née Stewart, 13 May 1895 - 7 October 1970) was a New Zealand teacher, farmer, political organiser and educationalist. She was born in Manchester, Lancashire, England, on 13 May 1895. In the 1966 New Year Honours, Bell was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire for services to education and the community, especially as chair of the Tauranga College board of governors.
The school was established in 1969, when the then Woodley Preparatory School was purchased by the founders. It was one of a number of alternative schools that pioneered the application in Australia of the ideas of progressive educationalist A. S. Neill. The school commenced with 116 students in January 1970: 72 in the preschool and 44 in the primary. The school expanded to include a second adjacent building in 1971.
Norman George Fisher (9 July 1910 – 1 February 1972) was a British educationalist who was at various times Chief Education Officer for the English city of Manchester, head of the staff college of the National Coal Board, and chairman of the panel on the BBC Television question-and-answer show, The Brains Trust. He appeared as a "castaway" on the BBC Radio programme Desert Island Discs on 10 August 1959.
Hugh Hughes), University of Wales Trinity Saint David, Lampeter The Reverend Thomas Price (2 October 1787 – 7 November 1848) (known by the bardic name of Carnhuanawc) was a historian and a major Welsh literary figure of the early 19th century. Price was also "an essayist, orator, naturalist, educationalist, linguist, antiquarian, artist and musician". He contributed to learned and popular journals and was a leading figure in the revival of the Eisteddfod.
Lindsay is the only son of Michael Lindsay, 2nd Baron Lindsay of Birker, and his wife, Hsiao Li. He was born in a hospital cave in Yenan while his parents, supporters of Chinese communist resistance fighters, were fleeing the Japanese.Lady Lindsay of Birker He was the grandson of the Scottish academic and educationalist Sandie Lindsay, 1st Baron Lindsay of Birker.Kidd, Charles, Williamson, David (editors). Debrett's Peerage and Baronetage (1990 edition).
The origins of Hillcrest International Schools started with Hillcrest Preparatory School which was founded in 1965 by educationalist Dorothy Noad and long- serving government employee Frank Thompson. Hillcrest Preparatory secured its international school status in 1972, when it became a member of IAPS; joining a conglomerate of British Curriculum schools across the world. In 1975, Kenneth Matiba, Stephen Smith and Frank Thompson partnered to start the Hillcrest Secondary School.
"Ex-grammar school principal becomes latest head of West London Free School", TES, 28 December 2017. Retrieved 3 January 2017. The trust opened a primary school in Hammersmith in 2013, a second primary in Earls Court in 2014 and a third primary in Kensington in 2016. Young is a follower of the American educationalist E. D. Hirsch and an advocate of a traditional, knowledge-based approach to education.
Brother Edmund Rice Catholic Secondary School (equally known as Brother Edmund Rice CSS, BERCSS, Brother Edmund Rice, or Rice) is a former publicly funded high school in Toronto, Ontario, Canada managed by the Toronto Catholic District School Board. It was named after Edmund Ignatius Rice, a Roman Catholic missionary and educationalist and the founder of two religious institutes of religious brothers: the Congregation of Christian Brothers and the Presentation Brothers.
Vetle Vislie (21 September 1858 – 7 February 1933) was a Norwegian educationalist and writer. He was born in Skafså as a son of farmer Gjermund Vetleson Vislie (1825–1903) and Anne Larsdotter Mandt (1818–1904). He made his debut as a playwright in 1899, with Utan hovding, and wrote Fru Gerda in 1890. His novels include Heldøla (1895), Solvending (1897), Trollringar (1903), Malm (1906), Lukkespel (1911) and Det nye riket (1913).
Vanderbilt Sloane was enthusiastic about donating money to good causes and social demands. She was a supporter of educationalist Martha Berry and made many financial contributions to Berry College; correspondence between the two women was later made public. A major activity of hers was the restoration of the Theodore Roosevelt House at 28 East 20th Street. She was president of the Women's Roosevelt Memorial Association for many years.
Sir Christopher Anthony Woodhead (20 October 1946 – 23 June 2015) was a British educationalist. He was Her Majesty's Chief Inspector of Schools in England from 1994 to 2000, and was one of the most controversial figures in debates on the direction of English education policy.The Times 3 February 1997 Valerie Grove interview He was Chairman of Cognita, a company dedicated to fostering private education, from 2004 to 2013.
Dame Alexandra Vivien Burslem (née Thornley; born 6 May 1940), sometimes known as Sandra Burslem, is a British academic and educationalist. Born in Shanghai, China, she was the daughter of Stanley Morris Thornley, the British Ambassador to China. Sandra Thornley returned to England during the expulsion of foreign nationals that occurred during the Communist Revolution. She afterwards attended the Arnold High School for Girls in Blackpool and was married in 1960.
Yolande Beckles is a British educationalist and businesswoman. She founded Global Graduates in 1998, a company aimed at raising the aspirations of, and teaching soft skills to mainly ethnic minority children, but not solely made up from ethnic minority children. Global Graduates collapsed in 2003.The Independent - Yolande Beckles: Little Miss Know-all After this, debts were left unpaid and at least nineteen county court judgments were lodged against her.
She is a Resource Person of the UGC for various Indian Universities. She is an educationalist, writer, poet, feminist and a translator and has widely varying interests including literary theory, theatre and drama. She has been lauded by‘The Hindu’ in ‘The Personality of the week’ for her distinct thoughts on education. Apart from taking part in several television programs, she also presents a program named Manadhil urudhi vendum in Kalaignar TV.
Swaminathan was born in Chennai, India. Swaminathan is the daughter of "Father of Green Revolution of India" M. S. Swaminathan and Indian educationalist Mina Swaminathan. Swaminathan has two siblings, Madhura Swaminathan, a professor of economics at the Indian Statistical Institute, Bangalore, and Nithya Swaminathan, a Senior Lecturer in Gender Analysis in International Development at the University of East Anglia. Swaminathan received an M.B.B.S. from the Armed Forces Medical College in Pune.
Rosa Bassett, MBE, BA (9 August 1871 – 19 December 1925) was an English educationalist and headmistress of Stockwell Secondary School. After a relocation from Stockwell the school's name was changed to County Secondary School, Streatham. Located in Welham Road, London, it was later renamed Rosa Bassett School in her memory and honour. Rosa Bassett was instrumental in the first application of the Dalton Plan of teaching within an English secondary school.
After the war Świrski did not return to Poland and remained in exile. He was regarded as a distinguished leader of men and as a brilliant strategist. In the history of Polish naval forces he is rated as an exceptional officer and educationalist of the younger officer corps. Among his signal achievements was his three-pronged plan to ensure the sustainability of the Polish Marines as a defence force: 1.
William Kirby Sullivan (1822 - 1890) was an Irish philologist, chemist, historian, Irish nationalist, educationalist and a passionate promoter of Irish industrial development. He was most notable for his scholarship promoting the literary history and culture of Ireland. He was widely referenced by researchers such as scientist William Grove, jurist and historian Henry Maine and ethnographer and historian Jeremiah Curtin, who visited him in his Irish sojourn of 1887.
Begum Khurshid Mirza was born as Khurshid Jehan to Sheikh Abdullah (educationalist) and Waheed Jahan Begum, the founders of Women's College, Aligarh, where she received her education. Her father was a practising lawyer and philanthropist who was keen to bring education and enlightenment to Muslim women. Her father was an open-minded and liberal man. Khurshid grew up in Aligarh and got married in 1934 to a police officer Akbar Mirza.
Becky Francis, (born 7 November 1969) is a British educationalist and academic, who specialises in educational inequalities. Since January 2020, she has been Chief Executive of the Education Endowment Foundation (EEF). Before joining the EEF, she was Director of the UCL Institute of Education at University College London. She has also taught and researched at the University of Greenwich, London Metropolitan University, Roehampton University, and King's College London.
James Fitzgerald (20 March 1862 - 24 June 1943) was a New Zealand cricketer and physician. He was one of the twins born at Pigeon Bay on Banks Peninsula in 1862; his father was the educationalist William Fitzgerald. He played two first-class matches for Otago between 1883 and 1885. Fitzgerald was a physician and was the oldest one practising in New Zealand at the time of his death.
Furthermore, they shared the same school motto – "plus est en vous", a contraction of "plus est en vous que vous pensez" meaning, "there is more in you than you think". They were both founded by the German educationalist Dr Kurt Hahn. His bust was prominently displayed in Aberlour House's front hall for many years. The prep school was founded at Wester Elchies in 1936 – three years after Gordonstoun.
Geoffrey Pyke was an English journalist, educationalist, and later an inventor whose clever, but unorthodox, ideas could be difficult to implement. In lifestyle and appearance, he fit the common stereotype of a scientist-engineer-inventor or in British slang, a "boffin". This was part of the British approach in World War II, of encouraging innovative warfare methods and weapons, that was personally backed by Churchill. Hobart's Funnies are another example.
Caroline Moir is a British author based in Kendal UK, close to the Lake District National Park. She is known for writing plays, fiction (genres include the dystopic and modern gothic) and creative non-fiction. A focus of her work is also as an educationalist and promoter of literary arts. She studied English & philosophy at the University of Birmingham, masters at Lancaster University and a PhD from the University of Glasgow.
Following the Milan food riots of May 1898 and their aftermath, he was forced to flee to Switzerland. In his absence he was sentenced to 11 years in prison. In 1903 he obtained Swiss citizenship, and became the first socialist deputy in the parliament of the Canton of Ticino. He lived in Bellinzona where he worked as a lawyer and married the teacher and educationalist Lauretta Perucchi (1873-1966).
Oddvar Vormeland (28 February 1924 – 30 August 2013) was a Norwegian educationalist and civil servant. He was born in Hof i Solør as a son of folk high school manager Ola Vormeland and his wife Gyda, née Hval. In 1949 he married Sigrun Røed, who was also a daughter of a school manager. He took commerce school in 1942, the examen artium in 1943 and teachers' college in 1948.
New Year Honours were granted in the United Kingdom and New Zealand at the start of 2005. Among these in the UK were knighthoods awarded to Mike Tomlinson, the educationalist; Derek Wanless, who led a review of the National Health Service; and Brian Harrison, editor of the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. The former athlete Kelly Holmes was made a Dame. The television presenter Alan Whicker was awarded a CBE.
Initial Methodist mission work was pioneered by American Methodist missionaries already established in Malaya and Singapore. The first Methodist service was conducted in 1904 by the Rev. George F. Pykett, a leader missionary and educationalist with the Methodist Mission in Malaya. He was then followed by the Rev S. S. Pakianathan who planted churches as well as schools from 1905 to 1918 in Medan, Buitenzorg (present day Bogor), and Palembang.
Arthur Dewhurst Riley (18 February 1860 – 29 August 1929) was an English born New Zealand artist, educationalist and businessman. Riley was an advocate of technical education, and had a significant impact on the provision of technical and vocation education in New Zealand. He graduated from Royal College of Art in London in 1881, and emigrated to Melbourne. In 1885 he moved to Wellington to take up a position with the Wellington Education Board.
Interviewed for a college in the United States about dealing with difficult children the personality theory researcher and educationalist placed importance on investigating the environment and surroundings when problems frequently emerge to help discover what triggers can spark behaviour. O'Reilly has said "I read backwards and see the world in reverse. In fact my own PhD research was an inverse method." Other educational methods developed by O'Reilly include the Experience Effect and the Gap Effect.
Among those who were associated with the Student Show in its earlier years were Eric Linklater, Sonia Dresdel, Stephen Mitchell, Moultrie Kelsall, and Andrew Cruickshank. Cruickshank later became famous for his portrayal of Dr Cameron in the 1960s BBC Television series Dr Finlay's Casebook. Participants from later in the 20th Century include playwright and educationalist James Scotland, William "Buff" Hardie and Stephen Robertson of Scotland the What?, and members of The Flying Pigs.
Arthur Edward Foot CBE (more commonly A.E. Foot) (21 June 1901 – 26 September 1968), was an English schoolmaster, educationalist and academic. He was a science master at Eton College from 1923 to 1932. In 1935, he was invited to India to head a newly opened all-boys boarding school, The Doon School, where he was the first headmaster from 1935 to 1948. He then returned to England as head of another new school, Ottershaw.
Since 2010 she has been a broadcaster, initially an Bradford's community radio station BCB 106.6, a broadcast journalist on BBC radio stations and the current affairs and politics presenter on TV station Made in Leeds. Born Margaret Victoria Nuttgens, she is the youngest child of the late writer, broadcaster and educationalist Patrick Nuttgens, sister of composer Sandy Nuttgens and cinematographer Giles Nuttgens, and the granddaughter of stained glass artist, Joseph Edward Nuttgens.
Arvid Gjengedal (born 19 July 1943) is a Norwegian educationalist and politician for the Conservative Party. He was born in Lom, finished his secondary education in Lillehammer in 1963 and graduated with a cand.philol. degree in history from the University of Oslo. He was hired at the Notodden Teachers' College in 1971, and when it merged to form the Telemark University College in 1994, Gjengedal became dean of the department of teachers' education.
Anthony Valletta (21 December 1908 – 8 December 1988 in Birkirkara, Malta) was a well known educationalist, lepidopterist and naturalist. He was a Fellow of the Royal Entomological Society The Birkirkara Primary School was named after him. He has written several books on nature in the Maltese Islands, such as Know the Trees and Know the Birds. He also discovered a sub-species of moth which has been named after him - Pterolonche vallettae (Amsel, 1955 ).
Central square, Bogota campusThe campus was designed by German educationalist Fritz Karsen and architect Leopold Rother, both refugees from Nazi Germany. Construction began in 1935, under the government of Alfonso López Pumarejo. It is organized into an ellipse, divided into five parts, each containing one academic division and its respective departments. From an aerial view, the shape of an owl can be seen, emblematic of a deep connection with wisdom and intuitive knowledge.
Prior to 1920s, the samaj opposed the Indian national movement because it was a movement led by the elites. Later followers of the Samaj during 20th century included educationalist Bhaurao Patil and Maratha leaders such as Keshavrao Jedhe, Nana Patil, Khanderao Bagal and Madhavrao Bagal. By the 1930s, given the mass movement nature of the Congress party under Mahatma Gandhi, the samaj leaders such as Jedhe joined the Congress, and the samaj activities withered away.
Edvard Befring, 1969 Edvard Befring (born 11 May 1936) is a Norwegian educationalist. He was born in Stardalen as the son of bus driver, Thor Befring (1905–1987) and nurse, Petra Åsta Gilleshammer (1904–1996). Between 1961 and 1980 he was married to nurse Magnhild Sevre. In his youth he was an able discus thrower with a personal best of 43.40 metres, achieved at Bislett stadion in June 1961 while representing IL Vestar.
A Graduate Course in Linguistics shortly followed at The University of Wisconsin, Madison, USA. A career Educationalist, Okoji Oko returned to University of Calabar and graduated with M.A. Linguistics in 1984. By 1990 she graduated from The University of Port Harcourt in Rivers State where she acquired her Doctorate in Linguistics. Several years later in 2007, she enrolled in and graduated from The Management Institute of Canada where she acquired an M.B.A.
Pulluvazhy is a small village in Rayamangalam Grama punchyathu in the Ernakulam district of Kerala state, India. It is close to the towns Perumbavoor, Muvattupuzha and Kothamangalam. Pulluvazhy is the birthplace of many people representatives of Kerala Legislature. K.G.Rohithakshan Kartha (KGR Kartha), represented Seventh Kerala Legislative Assembly as Minister for Health; Communist Party veteran and former Chief Editor of Deshabhimani, P. Govinda Pillai, well known educationalist Rev K.C.Paily were born in Pulluvazhy.
Hyder Kaloach well known as Hyder Harvi came during Arghun period from Hirat to Sindh and settled in Pat. His collection of poetry is Qasaid Hyder Kaloach if popular. In 1915, the reformist educationalist Kazi Ahmadi established, with the help of the British government, a co-educational Model School in Paat, which now bears his name. Education of girls in Sindh was a bold step in those days, and met with a lot of opposition.
Hans-Jørgen Holman (20 February 1925 – 6 August 1986) (also Hans-Jorgen Holmen-Guttormsen) was a Norwegian-American musicologist and educationalist. Holman spent the larger part of his life teaching and researching at Andrews University, Berrien Springs, Michigan—specializing in Medieval and Renaissance music. His 1961 Indiana University doctoral dissertation The responsoria prolixa of the Codex Worcester F 160 is considered one of the principal authoritative works on the vocal music of the Medieval church.
Helge Dahl (26 May 1921 – 16 December 2004) was a Norwegian educationalist. He was born in Rjukan as the son of labourers. He finished his secondary education in his hometown in 1940 and graduated with the cand.philol. degree in 1946 at the University in Oslo. From 1947 to 1957 he was a teacher at Tromsø Teacher's College, and took the dr.philos. degree in 1957 with the thesis Språkpolitikk og skolestell i Finnmark 1814–1905.
After teaching for the University of Wales, Aberystwyth, and at the University of Cambridge, he held various posts in Japan. His most extended employment, from 1991 to 2005, was teaching English Literature and English as a second language at Tohoku University in Sendai. He underwent a successful brain tumour operation in 1993 while his first marriage was failing. He remarried in 1995 to an educationalist and now has two daughters, Giulia and Matilde.
Liddle attended the Nottingham College of Art from around 1957-59 and studied drawing and art history under John Powell and smithing under the silversmith G.K. Kitson. Liddle befriended fellow students Keith Albarn and his partner, Hazel. After studying, Liddle lived for a time in London where he married the Marshal Scholar Patricia Moyer. He also struck up a close friendship with the adult educationalist, Frank Turk, learning much from his experience of eastern spirituality.
He went on to become a specialist medical photographer at Guy's Hospital, as well as an active freelance photographer for the West Indian Gazette. His educationalist training began in 1971 when he attended Ruskin College, gaining a diploma in development studies. He later gained a BA at the University of Sussex in African history and Caribbean history, then went on to an MA in local history from Leicester University."Len Garrison", 100 Great Black Britons.
White was born in Belfast, the daughter of Dr Thomas Jones, commonly known as "TJ", a noted civil servant, educationalist and friend of the establishment. She was educated at St Paul's Girls' School, London, and Somerville College, Oxford, where she read Philosophy, Politics and Economics. She spent a year in Heidelberg before working for the New York Public Library. Back in England, she studied housing policies and the problems of the homeless.
Oorvazi Irani is an independent filmmaker based in Mumbai, India. Apart from being a filmmaker, she is a film educationalist, an acting coach, and a film critic and the Director of her home production company SBI Impresario Pvt. Ltd incorporated by her father Sorab Irani in 1975. Currently, she has directed The Path of Zarathustra a movie on Parsis. She has also directed two short films “The K File” and “Mamaiji” (Grandmother).
Edmund Ignatius Rice (1762–1844) was a Catholic missionary and educationalist. He was born in Callan, County Kilkenny, Ireland, in 1762 and died in Waterford, Ireland in 1844. In 1802, he opened a school for the poor and marginalised but the children were so difficult to manage that the teachers resigned. He to devoted himself to training teachers who would dedicate their lives to prayer and to teaching the children free of charge.
M. K. A. Hameed was born in October 1930 to M. K. Khader Pillay, a former President of the Alwaye Municipality, and recipient of the Khan Sahib title. He is also the nephew of prominent industrialist and philanthropist M. K. Mackar Pillay. After graduating from the Madras Institute of Technology, Hameed joined Fertilisers and Chemicals Travancore (FACT) as a chemical engineer. Hameed married Sherifa Beevi, a daughter of prominent industrialist and educationalist Thangal Kunju Musliar.
One of the important institutes in Mattanur is the Pazhassi Raja NSS College. The college was established in 1964 and was founded by social reformer and educationalist Padma Bhushan-winning Mannathu Padmanabhan. The college now comes under Kannur University (earlier under the University of Calicut) and offers courses at graduate and postgraduate levels. The alumni of the college include Sri, a film actor; and Patyam Srinivasan, a prized Malayalam film industry person.
The other principal priority at the outset was provision of professional-level hospital services for the sick of the Surselva district. Babette Gasteyer received her training in Wiesbaden and then started out as an educationalist, working at aristocratic houses in what are now Germany, Austria and Moravia, also at times working as a nurse. In 1866 she was recruited as a teacher by Depuoz. As a nun she used the name "Sister Maria Theresia Gasteyer".
Emilia Rensi was born in Bellinzona, Ticino, Switzerland. Her father was the Italian philosopher Giuseppe Rensi (1871-1941), and her mother was the writer and educationalist Lauretta Perucchi (1873-1966). She had an elder sister, Algisa (1899-1994), who became a nun and abbess. She and her sister were born in Switzerland at the time when their father was living there in exile from Italy following political unrest (he also met his wife there).
Kenneth Durham (died 6 August 2016) was a British schoolteacher, educationalist, and headmaster of University College School (1996-2013). Durham was educated at St John's School, Leatherhead and studied at Brasenose College, Oxford. He taught economics at St. Albans School, before becoming Director of Studies and Head of Economics at King's College School, Wimbledon. In 1996 he was appointed Headmaster of University College School, which is part of the Eton Group of independent schools.
During World War II he served in the 2/28th Battalion as a captain, serving in Tobruk and Syria. Promoted to Major and then Lieutenant- Colonel he was put in charge of the 2/11th Battalion. In 1944 he returned to Hale School, before being appointed headmaster of Geelong College in 1945. Buntine was the son of educationalist Walter Murray Buntine (18661953) of Caulfield Grammar School, for whom the Buntine Oration is named.
Chia was born in Hong Kong. His father Dewey Teh-huai Chia (; 1912–1998), the eldest son of Republic of China Ministry of Finance official , was prominent in Shanghai's finance industry. His mother Kitty Shun-hua Chin Chia (; 1916–2016), a daughter of educationalist , was a graduate of Yenching University. Chia's parents had moved to Hong Kong the year before his birth, and then the family moved again to Taiwan in 1951.
Shunkersheth on a 1991 stamp of India Hon. Jagannath Shankarsheth Murkute (also spelled as Jugonnath "Nana" Shunkersheth and Jaggannath Shankarsheth Murkute; 10 February 1803 – 31 July 1865) was an Indian philanthropist and educationalist. He was born in 1803 in the wealthy Murkute family of the Daivadnya Brahmin community in Mumbai. Unlike his forefathers, who performed priestly duties for his community, he engaged in commerce and soon developed a reputation as a very reliable businessman.
The George Street building has the following inscription on it: :Thomas Hill Green (1832–82). Educationalist, Fellow of Balliol, White's Professor of Moral Philosophy, elected (1876) first University Member of Oxford City Council to help found and establish the High School for Boys (1881–1966), thereby completing the city's 'ladder of learning' from elementary school to university— :A project dearest to his heart. :Thus were united town and gown in common cause.
Eugene Skeef Eugene Skeef FRSA is a South African percussionist, composer, poet, educationalist and animator living in London since 1980. He also works in conflict resolution, acts as a consultant on cultural development, teaches creative leadership and is a broadcaster. In 2003 he founded Umoya Creations, a charity set up to facilitate this international work. Eugene’s roots are firmly established in his cultural work with Steve Biko, the late South African civil rights leader.
Raj Bisaria (born 10 November 1935) is an Indian director, producer, actor and educationalist, described by the Press Trust of India as "the father of the modern theatre in North India". He founded Theatre Arts Workshop in 1966, and Bhartendu Academy of Dramatic Arts in 1975 and the repertory company of Bhartendu Academy of Dramatic Arts in 1980. He has blended artistic concepts of the East and the West, and the traditional and the modern.
Gordon, p40. This was Mrs Burgh, widow of the educationalist, who used her influence to find the young schoolmistress a house to rent and 20 students to fill it. The flavour of the village and the approach of these Rational Dissenters appealed to Wollstonecraft: they were hard-working, humane, critical but uncynical, and respectful towards women. p51. The ideas Wollstonecraft ingested from the sermons at NGUC pushed her towards a political awakening.
Dr. Abdul Latif Tibawi (, 1910–1981) was a Palestinian historian and educationalist. Born in Taybet El-Muthalath, near TulKarem, he was one of the earliest graduates of the Arabic College, Dar Al-Mu’allimin, in Jerusalem. He read history and Arabic literature at the American University of Beirut and later earned a Ph.D from the University of London in 1948. Prior to the 1948 Palestinian exodus he was a senior education officer in Jerusalem.
She is an educationalist who owned a school who was a politician in the Fourth Nigerian Republic. She was first elected to the House of Representatives in 2003. In 2007 she was already a thirty-year veteran as a politician in Kwama. She is a member of the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP) and she is still elected in an area which is generally a supporter of the People's Democratic Party (PDP) party.
William Craik (born 1881, Montrose) was an educationalist who was a promoter and practitioner of Independent working class education (IWCE). He participated in the strike at Ruskin College in 1909. Following the failure of the strike, he then played a major role alongside George Simms in the use of the Plebs Magazine in advocating the foundation of the Central Labour College as an educational established which saw workers education as a political process.
Paul Garnault 2019 Paul Garnault is a Welsh actor, director and educationalist. He is currently Director of Practical Skills Theraputic Education and Development for Wales and Director of Performing Arts at the Ruskin Mill Trust UK. He is a Director of Tir Ceridwen Land Trust (2019). He has also spent over 20 years in Further Education management and as a lecturer in Performing Arts and Media Production. He is Artistic Director for Wales Actors’ Company.
Józef was regarded as deeply religious, modest and shy. From 1762 to 1771 he attended the highly rated Jesuit Collegium Nobilium in Warsaw. He was taught there by distinguished professors, Adam Naruszewicz, poet, historian and editor, Karol Wyrwicz, geographer, historian and educationalist, Franciszek Bohomolec, author of many ruthless satires about the excesses of the nobility and by I. Nagurczewski and J. Albertrandi. All these men belonged to the intellectual circle of the last king of Poland, Stanisław August Poniatowski.
Moonesinghe graduated from UCL Medical School in 1997, where she was president of the medical students' union, and did her postgraduate training in internal medicine at Guy's and St. Thomas' Hospitals. In 2015, Moonesinghe began a fellowship in Improvement Science with the Health Foundation. Moonesinghe has reported she was inspired by Katharine Lloyd-Williams, an anaesthetist and educationalist who oversaw the creation of the UK’s first medical school completely open to both male and female students.
Victor Karlovich Della-Vos (1829–1890) was a Russian educationalist and proponent of manual training. Della-Vos graduated from Moscow University in 1853 with a degree in physical and mathematical sciences and soon embarked on his teaching career. In 1858 he went to Paris to study machine tool manufacture. After also visiting London where he studied agricultural machinery he returned to Russia in 1864 to take up the post of professor of mechanics at the Petrovsky Academy.
Graham Hingangaroa Smith (born 1950) is a New Zealand Māori academic and educationalist of Ngāti Porou, Ngāi Tahu, Ngāti Apa and Ngāti Kahungunu descent. Smith grew up with his grandmother in the Wairarapa region. He received a scholarship to a private boarding school in Auckland, which led to university and a teaching career. After a Diploma of Teaching and a PhD at the University of Auckland, he was Pro Vice-Chancellor (Māori) there for five years.
William Mansfield Poole (6 April 1871 – 13 December 1946) was an educationalist and author of several widely held academic text books.Kelly's Handbook to the Titled, Landed and Official Classes, Published 1928 He had a particular gift for languages and was an early head of Modern Languages at the Royal Naval College, Osborne. In his youth he was also an accomplished oarsman, and rowed for Oxford in the 1891 Boat Race.Obituary in The Eagle, Bedford Modern School, Easter 1947, Vol.
Schueppel is the son of the visual artist and author Hem Schueppel and the educationalist Christine Schueppel, (born as Christine Irmer) and has a younger sister, Heike. The father was an oppositional political activivist in East Germany and sent to the Soviet gulag of Vorkuta. Diplomatic reasons delivered him and he was able to move to West Germany in 1955. In 1956 his wife left the East Germany with the two children, and the family moved to Güttersbach.
The British Salem School of Gordonstoun was established in 1934 by Kurt Hahn, a Jewish educationalist who, after being arbitrarily arrested for the burning of the Reichstag, [70] fled Nazi Germany. Hahn was asked by friends to give a demonstration in the UK of his "Salem system". He was born in Berlin in 1886 and studied at the University of Oxford. After reading Plato's The Republic as a young man, Hahn conceived the idea of a modern school.
Isabel Le Brun de Pinochet Isabel Le Brun de Pinochet (born 1845, in San Felipe, Chile - flourished 1870s), was a Chilean educationalist who led reform of education for girls in Chile. In her time secondary education for girls was limited and only available through the church. Pinochet opened a private secondary school, later known as Liceo Isabel Le Brun de Pinochet, in Santiago in 1875. This paved the way for a state-funded educational system for both sexes.
Romilly Lisle Holdsworth, commonly known as R. L. Holdsworth, (25 February 1899 – 20 June 1976) was an English scholar, academic, educationalist, cricketer and a distinguished Himalayan mountaineer. He was a member of the first expedition to Kamet in 1931, which included other stalwarts such as Eric Shipton and Frank Smythe. Holdsworth, along with Shipton and Smythe, are credited with the discovery of the Valley of Flowers, now a UNESCO World Heritage Site, during their return from Kamet.
However, it is doubtful if the Vatican needed much urging. McQuaid had an outstanding reputation as a Catholic educationalist and had been close to Archbishop Edward Byrne of Dublin, his immediate predecessor. His name had already been mentioned in connection with his native diocese of Kilmore. However de Valera was later to state that he had also been impressed by McQuaid's social concerns at a time when the hardships of the war were particularly affecting the poor.
Colin Macdonald Gilray (17 March 1885 – 15 July 1974) was a Scottish-born rugby union player, soldier and educationalist. He represented both New Zealand and Scotland in rugby union and won the Military Cross during World War I as a captain in the British Rifle Brigade. A Rhodes Scholar, he became headmaster of both John McGlashan College in Dunedin, New Zealand, and Scotch College, Melbourne, and served as deputy chancellor of the University of Melbourne on two separate occasions.
Thiagarajar Polytechnic College, Alagappanagar is a Government-owned aided Vocational Education Institution in Thrissur district. The college was started by the great Educationalist and philanthropist, Dr.Alagappa Chettiar, who has started many educational institutions in Tamilnadu and Kerala. It was sanctioned by Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, the first Prime Minister of India in 1956 and was the first aided polytechnic institution in the India. Entrance of college The institution is now under the Patron ship of archdiocese of thrissur.
John Ashworth Sir John Ashworth (born 27 November 1938) is a scientist and educationalist. He was educated at West Buckland School and Exeter College, Oxford. He obtained a PhD degree at Leicester University and was a lecturer and reader there before taking up a post of foundation Professor of Biology at University of Essex in 1974. His scientific research at the time focused on developmental biology and cell differentiation, with a particular interest in the slime mold.
Sidney Harrison (4 May 1903 - 8 January 1986) was a British pianist, composer, broadcaster and educationalist who taught at the Guildhall School of Music for many years.Musical Times obituary, March 1986, p 162 One of his protégés was Sir George Martin. The son of a tailor, Harrison grew up in Hammersmith, London and began playing the piano at the age of four. He studied at the Guildhall School of Music under Francesco Berger and Orlando MorganHarrison, Sidney.
Upon graduating with honours from Radeliffe, she began to lecture extensively on the education of the blind; and has received many honours for achievement. Helen Keller greatly furthered the work of the "Foundation of the Blind". MASON (Orange) Named after Charlotte Mason (Marie Shew) 1842-1923, an educationalist whose philosophy influences much on the best practice of modern primary schools. She believes in the response of all children to all living ideas presented in a literary form.
She subsequently worked at the Borough Road School and the Home and Colonial School Society. After her father's death, she moved to Ambleside, setting up a school for local children and boarders, Eller How. On the death of her brother Arthur, she moved to Surrey, to support her sister-in-law Blanche Clough in bringing up their three small children. The youngest daughter, Blanche Athena Clough, would follow in her aunt's footsteps and herself become a notable educationalist.
The National College in Jayanagar was started in 1965. It offers courses at both pre-university and degree levels in Arts and Science subjects including English, Kannada, Sanskrit, French, Hindi, Physics, Computer Science, Electronics, Psychology, Mathematics, Chemistry, Botany, and Zoology. The college is known for following Gandhian principles and was built by educationalist Padmabhushan Dr. H. Narasimhiah, a Gandhian himself. The College has Dr. H.N. Kalakshetra in its premises which is linked with Bangalore Lalitha Kala Parishat.
She developed an excellent reputation in the delivery of two thousand babies and was well liked as a professional midwife. She was known as a foundation level scholar and educationalist because of her advanced knowledge in the field that she wrote on in various manuscripts. With her husband she headed a minor medical dynasty and pharmacy that ran down through her family that lasted for decades. Henry the Great of France married Marie de' Medici in 1600.
The college grew from the school into a wooded campus under the leadership of educationalist Dr. William Miller, who created hostels and several academic and cultural associations, which shaped MCC into a premier educational institution in South Asia. The rapid expansion of the college and the paucity of the space necessitated moving the campus to a more spacious location. Accordingly, the college under the leadership of Rev. William Skinner (principal 1909–1921) initiated the Tambaram Project in 1919. Rev.
Winston Adams of South Africa received the Bronze Wolf in 2017. Frank Opie, a South African Scout leader and environmental educationalist, published The Global Scout on behalf of World Scouting in 1993. The South African Scout Association hosted the World Scout Conference and World Scout Youth Forum in Durban in 1999. Garnet de la Hunt chaired the World Scout Committee from 1999 to 2002, and former Chief Scout Nkwenkwe Nkomo was elected to the World Scout Committee in 2005.
Among the school's former pupils were the educationalist Griffith Jones;David Jones, Life and Times of Griffith Jones (1902) online the early Methodist leader and Bible publisher Peter Williams;Williams, Peter (1723-1796), Methodist cleric, author, and Biblical commentator, Gomer M. Roberts (1959), Dictionary of Welsh Biography. the senior Admiralty civil servant Sir Walter St David Jenkins;WBO the clergyman James Rice Buckley;Victorian Web. the Welsh poet William Saunders;Dictionary of Welsh Biography. Retrieved 16 October 2019.
In 1938, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the Fair Labor Standards Act which, amongst other things, placed limits on many forms of child labor. The Polish educationalist Janusz Korczak wrote of the rights of children in his book How to Love a Child (Warsaw, 1919); a later book was entitled The Child's Right to Respect (Warsaw, 1929). In 1917, following the Russian Revolution, the Moscow branch of the organization Proletkult produced a Declaration of Children's Rights.
Armstrong by John Aubrey, 1970 Sir Thomas Henry Wait Armstrong (15 June 1898 – 26 June 1994) was an English organist, conductor, composer and educationalist. He was from a musical family and his early career was as a church and cathedral organist. From the 1920s onwards he was a broadcaster for the BBC giving talks as well as playing. While organist and faculty member of Christ Church, Oxford Armstrong combined academic work with practical musicianship, as player and conductor.
David Thomas (16 July 1880 – 27 June 1967) was a Welsh educationalist, Welsh language writer and Labour Party pioneer in Wales. Born in Llanfechain, Montgomeryshire, he taught mainly in Wales, initially as a non-certificated teacher, but he obtained a teacher's certificate in 1905. Thomas was active in the Labour Party and labour movement in North Wales. His first book, Y Werin a'i Theyrnas (The People and Their Kingdom, 1910), was influential on trade unionists and Welsh Labour members.
Her husband, William Gaskell, a Unitarian minister and educationalist, survived Elizabeth by nearly two decades, dying in 1884 of bronchitis.Brill (1984), pp 117–118. Upon his death, his two surviving unmarried daughters, Meta and Julia, lived in the house (his two other daughters, Marianne and Florence, had both married, though Florence died 3 years prior to William's death). The two sisters continued living at Plymouth Grove and both were involved in various charitable causes throughout their lives.
Poul la Cour (13 April 1846 – 24 April 1908) was a Danish scientist, inventor and educationalist. Today la Cour is especially recognized for his early work on wind power, both experimental work on aerodynamics and practical implementation of wind power plants. He worked most of his life at Askov Folk High School where he developed the historic genetic method of teaching the sciences. Early in his life he was a telegraphic inventor working with multiplex telegraphy.
R F Mackenzie (1910–1987), a Scottish educationalist and headteacher, was one of the most original and controversial thinkers in 20th century Scotland. He was born in Garioch in Aberdeenshire and attended Robert Gordon's College and the University of Aberdeen. Following active service in the RAF during the Second World War, he qualified as a teacher. He was an advocate of the abolition of corporal punishment and he endeavoured to promote a progressive curriculum in secondary schools.
Jon Asbjørn Vislie (8 October 1896 - 9 February 1945) was a Norwegian lawyer who was executed during the occupation of Norway by Nazi Germany. He was born in Kristiania as the son of educationalist and writer Vetle Vislie and his Scanian wife Gerda, née Annerlöv. Jon Vislie married and had two children, and the family had settled in Bærum. Vislie had taken an education in law, and was a barrister with access to Supreme Court cases.
Sir Thomas William Moffett (3 June 1820 – 6 July 1908) was an Irish scholar and educationalist, who served as president of Queen's College Galway. Moffett was born at Castleknock, County Dublin, on 3 June 1820. He was educated at Trinity College Dublin, where he was a Berkeley Gold Medallist in Logic and Metaphysics, a gold medallist in Greek, and a prizeman in Divinity and Modern History. He graduated in 1843 as Senior Moderator in Ethics and Logic.
John Comyn Vaughan Wilkes (30 March 1902 – 24 January 1986) was an English educationalist, who was Warden of Radley College and an Anglican priest. Wilkes was born in Eastbourne, the eldest son of Lewis Chitty Vaughan Wilkes and his wife Cicely Ellen Philadelphia Comyn. His parents were the proprietors of St Cyprian's School which they had established in 1899. Wilkes was educated at Fonthill East Grinstead, St Cyprians and Eton College, where he was a King's Scholar.
Henrietta Jex-Blake Henrietta Jex-Blake (June 1862 – 21 May 1953) was a British violinist, and the principal of Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford, from 1909 to 1921. She was the daughter of the Anglican priest and educationalist, Thomas Jex-Blake and his wife Henrietta Cordery. Her sister Katharine Jex- Blake was mistress of Girton College, Cambridge. Her aunt Sophia Jex-Blake was the first practising female doctor in Scotland, and a leading campaigner for medical education for women.
Grave of Auguste Förster, Hauptfriedhof, Kassel Auguste Förster (7 December 1848, Warburg - 3 October 1926, Brunswick) was a German educationalist and activist in the bourgeois women's movement. She was founder of the Kassel Organization of Women's Groups (Gründerin des Verbandes Kassler Frauenvereine). In 1893 she attended the founding of the World's Congress of Representative Women meeting on the occasion of the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago. She was accompanied by Anna Simson, Hanna Bieber-Böhm and Käthe Schirmacher.
Giovanna Berneri (born Giovannina Caleffi: 5 May 1897 - 14 March 1962) was an educationalist and militant libertarian anarchist. She was born and died in Italy, but, largely for political reasons, spent much of her life in other countries: some of her most productive years were lived in France. After the war, between 1946 and 1962 she edited the Italian language magazine Volontà. She was born Giovannina Caleffi, but most sources give her forename / Christian name as Giovanna.
Sister Mary Paul Mulquin (1842 – 10 February 1930) was a Roman Catholic nun and educationalist born in Adare, Limerick, Ireland. Born Katherine Mulquin to John Mulquin, a landowner, and his wife Catherine, née Sheehy, she changed her name in 1863 once she was received into her religious order. In 1873 she travelled to Australia with six other nuns on board the SS Great Britain, arriving in Melbourne on 21 December 1873. While on board she kept a diary which recorded her daily life.
Robert Leckie Marshall (27 August, 1913 – 21 October, 2008) was a Scottish educationalist who was principal of the Co-operative College. Marshall was born into a miner's family Lanarkshire and attended primary school at Chryston. He went on to Coatbridge secondary school. Thanks to a Carnegie Foundation grant, a miners' scholarship and a university bursary, he was able to attend St Andrews University whence he graduated in 1935 with two degrees - medieval and modern history, and first-class honours in English.
Sir William Duguid Geddes (; 21 November 1828Scotland, Select Births and Baptisms, 1564-19509 February 1900) was Scottish scholar and educationalist, who expanded the cause of classical Greek at the University of Aberdeen. Geddes classical translations, grammars and scholarship of such high quality contributed to several unique publications, both written with collaborators and edited in series. One of the outstanding scholars of his generation in Scotland, he was the architect of the fusion and High Victorian developer of the modern University of Aberdeen.
Maria Luisa Caterina Cecilia Cosway (ma-RYE-ah; née Hadfield; 11 June 1760 – 5 January 1838) was an Italian-English artist and educationalist. She worked in England, in France, and later in Italy, cultivating a large circle of friends and clients. She exhibited at the Royal Academy of Arts, and commissioned the first portrait of Napoleon to be seen in England. Her paintings and engravings are held by the British Museum, the British Library, and the New York Public Library.
An Egyptian scene in the year of his birth Charles Frederic Moberly Bell was born in Alexandria. At this period, Egypt was ruled by Muhammad Ali, and its second city was a major Mediterranean trading port, dealing in commodities such as Egyptian cotton. His father was a merchant, and first cousin to George Moberly, Headmaster of Winchester College and later bishop of Salisbury. This made Charles Frederic second cousin to Charlotte Anne Moberly, a pioneering educationalist best known for the Moberly-Jourdain incident.
The future prophecies, the past and the present activity of the people, the truth of spiritual doctrines are displayed through his countless Bhajanas, Malika and other spiritual texts like "Sankhanavi" "Ananta Gupta Gita", "Anantagoi", "Bhabananabara", "Hanumanta Gita", "Nila Madhava Gita" etc. His contributions and literary achievements have been appreciated in a thesis "Hadi Das Rachanabali" by a local educationalist Prof. R. Sahu. After Hadi Das breathed his last in the late 1830 he was regarded as a saint of Orissa like Panchasakha.
Morgan Hector Phillips (14 March 1885 - 3 March 1953) was a Welsh headmaster and educationalist, who served as headmaster of Ruthin School from 1930 to 1935. Phillips, who was the son of the rector of Radyr, Glamorgan, Wales, was born on 14 March 1885. He was educated at Christ College, Brecon and was then a classical scholar at Jesus College, Oxford (graduating in 1911). He was a teacher in East Grinstead, at University College School in London, and at Charterhouse.
L) from the Nigerian Law School in 1992 and Masters in Law (LL.M) from University of Lagos Nigeria in 1996. As a law graduate, Titilope Akosa is a legal practitioner based on civil and criminal litigation and an active Human rights activist. She participated in various courses and trainings which includes; Associate Membership Course, Chartered Institute of Arbitrators, U.K, Nigerian Branch, Lagos, Nigeria April 2004, Monitoring and Evaluation Training held in Liberia by Forum For African Women Educationalist (FAWE), Kenya.
James Thomas Roberts (1871-1964), more commonly known as J. T. Roberts, was a Sierra Leonean minister and educationalist who was principal of Methodist Boys High School. He immigrated to the Gold Coast in 1922 and founded Accra High School in 1923. Roberts also founded the Asante Collegiate school now known as Osei Kyeretwie Secondary School. Roberts is highly regarded as one of the best Sierra Leonean expatriates and educationalists to Ghana, where he is still highly regarded for his educational work.
He worked with Henry G. Appenzeller, Horace G. Underwood, William B. Scranton, and William D. Reynolds. In 1897 he returned to Canada and the US, and on May 13 was ordained as a Presbyterian minister at New Albany Presbytery, Indiana. In 1900 he became the first minister of Yondong Presbyterian Church (연동교회) in Seoul. As an educationalist, he founded the Jesus Church Middle School, present Kongsin Middle and High School, as well as Yondong Girls’ School, presently Chongsin Girls’ School, in Seoul.
William Arthur Greener Penlington (1890-1982) was a New Zealand school principal and educationalist. He was born on Banks Peninsula in Akaroa, New Zealand in 1890 to an early-settler family. During World War I he was a captain in the New Zealand Rifle Brigade. After the war he was raised temporarily to Major in the resettlement and rehabilitation effort He was later head master of Hastings High School, where he was involved in the aftermath of the 1931 Hawke's Bay earthquake.
Furthermore, in May 1998 MHP leader Devlet Bahçeli addressed a crowd of 15,000 German Turks at the Türk Federasyon annual meeting. Baden- Württemberg Interior Minister Reinhold Gall stated that Türk Federasyon is a "melting pot of extreme nationalists with Turkish migrant background". Türk Federasyon alone has 7,000 active members (for comparison, the neo-Nazi National Democratic Party (NPD) has 5,000 members). According to educationalist Kemal Bozay, their influence on third generation Turkish youth—who are "looking for an identity"—has "increased significantly".
In the mid-18th century Riddle's Court was home to David Hume and he began writing "The History of England" here.Edinburgh and District (Ward Lock Travel Guide, 1930). Used in the 19th century by the educationalist and polymath Patrick Geddes, the house is now cared for by the Scottish Historic Buildings Trust (SHBT), and was previously in part used by the Worker's Educational Association and the Architectural Heritage Society of Scotland. The building is now home to the Patrick Geddes Centre for Learning.
Rosa Mary Barrett (1855–1936) was an English-born Irish social reformer, educationalist and suffragist; her brother was the physicist William F. Barrett. Barrett moved to Monkstown, Co. Dublin and then to Kingstown (now Dún Laoghaire), Co. Dublin, in Ireland. In 1879 she helped set up a committee for the establishment of a care facility for children, effectively a creche allowing women to enter the workforce. It eventually led to the establishment of The Cottage Home for Little Children which housed Protestant children.
Retrieved 10 February 2015 with 260 pupils in the former premises of Wycombe High School in Benjamin Road, which dated from 1906. They were too small to cope with the expansion of that school which necessitated a move to new buildings on Marlow Hill to the south of the town centre. The new school was named Lady Verney after the educationalist Margaret Verney, a member of the local Verney family who served on the Education Committee of Buckinghamshire County Council.
Kenneth C. Murray (1903 – 21 April 1972) was an English archaeologist and teacher. The second son of the chess historian H. J. R. Murray and his suffragette wife Kate Crosthwaite, Murray was an elder brother of educationalist and biographer Elisabeth Murray, and a grandson of Sir James Murray, editor of the Oxford English Dictionary. He left Balliol College, Oxford without a degree in order to study art. He left for Nigeria in 1927 and worked there as an art teacher.
Sir Don Baron Jayatilaka (Sinhala:ශ්‍රීමත් දොන් බාරොන් ජයතිලක; 13 February 1868 – 29 May 1944) known as D.B. Jayatilaka was a Sri Lankan educationalist, statesmen and diplomat. He was Vice-President of the Legislative Council of Ceylon; the Minister for Home Affairs and Leader of the House of the State Council of Ceylon; and Representative of Government of Ceylon in New Delhi.Don Baron Jayatilaka Sir D. B. Jayatilaka is also considered as a flag bearer of Buddhist education in Sri Lanka.
Main College Sri Gowthami Degree and PG College is a pioneering Under graduate and Post Graduate College at Darsi in Prakasam district, Andhra Pradesh, South India. It is the first college among the group of Sri Gowthami Educational Institutions (SGEIs) in Prakasam district, Andhra Pradesh State, established by the educationalist and social activist, Kanumarla Gunda Reddy in the year 2000. It is being managed and run by Sri Gowthami Urban and Rural Integrated Development and Educational Society (SGURID&ES;, 412/2000).
From 1916–1956 the headmistress was Mother Sister Mary Immaculate (born ca. 1890 – died 1977), Yorkshire Women of the Century, educationalist, overseeing St Joseph’s to become one of the major Catholic girls' grammar schools in the country. The college's motto is "Per Crucem ad Lucem"- Through the Cross to the Light. From 2008 the school had a federated governing body with St. Bede's Grammar School and Yorkshire Martyrs Catholic College and when Yorkshire Martyrs closed in 2010 the girls transferred to St Joseph's.
Aves was born on 22 August 1898 in Hertfordshire to social reformer Harry Ernest Aves and Eva Mary Aves (born Maitland). Her mother was a daughter of suffragist and educationalist Emma Maitland. She was educated at Frognal School and then Newnham College, Cambridge, where she graduated with third-class honours in economics. During her time at university, she became president of the Women's University Settlement, which worked to promote the welfare of women and children in deprived areas of London.
She was born on 25 August 1905 in Aligarh. She was the eldest of five children born to Sheikh Abdullah (educationalist) and his wife Begum Wahid Jahan. Her father, Sheikh Abdullah (not to be confused with the Sheikh Abdullah of Kashmir), was a leading pioneer of women's English-based education in India and established the Women's College, Aligarh at the Aligarh Muslim University, where she had her early education. She left Aligarh to join the Isabella Thoburn College in Lucknow in 1921.
Alain Platel was born in Ghent in 1956. In 1969, he was accepted to study at the Hoste-Sabbattini Mime Centre in Ghent. He trained as a remedial educationalist, working with physically and mentally disabled children, but continued to study mime (with Wim Vandekerckhove) and later to take courses at the Paul Grinwis Academy of Ballet. In 1980, he attended a contemporary dance workshop led by the Canadian choreographer Barbara Pearce in Paris, and went on to dance in her production Patchwork.
John Channell Mills (26 March 1929 - 16 October 1998) was an English actor, working in the theatre. He was born in London and was the father of comedian, Bob Mills, and the writer/educationalist, Colin Mills, through his first two wives, respectively. His youngest son, sound engineer and lighting designer, Danny Mills, was born to his wife, Maria Warburg, in 1968. Mills passed away at his home in Gipsy Hill from complications relating to emphysema on 16th October 1998, aged sixty-eight.
Arutchelvar Dr. N Mahalingam was the Founder Chairman of Sakthi Group, 6,000 crore industrial conglomerate operating in sugar, automobiles, finance, distilleries, power and logistics. Dr. N. Mahalingam was a philanthropist, educationalist and a politician. He is the founder of many educational institutions, from schools to colleges. Some of his educational institutions are Kumaraguru College of Technology, Nachimuthu Polytechnic College, Mahalingam College of Engineering, NGM College, Kumaraguru Institution of Agriculture and in his vision started Kumaraguru College of Liberal Arts and Science in 2018.
Kalutara Koralalage Edward Winifred Brito Adikaram (5 March 1905 - 28 December 1985) was an educationalist, writer, social activist and a Philosopher in Sri Lanka. In 1931 he obtained an M.A degree from London School of Oriental Studies and in 1933 a PhD on the thesis "Early History of Buddhism in Ceylon". After returning to Sri Lanka he started to teach in Ananda Sastralaya, Kotte and in 1934, he became the principal of the school. He was a prominent nonviolence activist in Sri Lanka.
Brian Jackson Brian Jackson (28 December 1932 - 3 July 1983) was a 20th- century British educationalist who was involved in the debate over selective schooling during the 1960s. In 1960 Brian Jackson and Michael Young created the Advisory Centre for Education. They went on to establish the National Extension College in 1963 as a pilot for the Open University. He founded the National Educational Research and Development Trust (NERDT) which set up the National Children's Centre in 1975 in Huddersfield.
Granville Boyle Coghlan was an educationalist and an early twentieth century rugby union international who is known as one of the "lost lions"David Walmsley (Author), Robby Elson (Editor), The Lions: The Complete History of the British and Irish Rugby Union Team, Genesis Publications (2005) due to his participation on the 1927 British Lions tour to Argentina which, although retrospectively recognised as a Lions tour, did not confer test status on any of the four encounters with the Argentina national rugby union team.
" The African newspaper Maghrebia reported that the incident drew outrage in the Maghreb region of Northwest Africa. Bassima Hakkaoui, a Moroccan Islamist Justice and Development Party MP, commented, "In principle, the state has laws which specify which party is supposed to give judgement, along with the nature of the crime. It defies logic to hand down a death sentence to a woman who has been raped." Islamic educationalist Hamid Baalla agreed, saying, "You cannot describe people who resort to such actions as Muslim.
He was born at Alberbury, Shropshire and attended Poplar Academy where he was taught by John Stock, the progressive educationalist. Pritchard later described his studies as consisting of "a systematic course of instruction relating to physical phenomena". At sixteen he was enrolled as a sizar at St John's College, Cambridge, graduating in 1830 as fourth wrangler. In 1832 he was elected a fellow of his college, and in the following year he was ordained, and became head of a private school at Stockwell.
In 1948 he received the Medaglia di Benemerenza from the Italian government, honouring him both as an educationalist and as an archaeologist. (The date, 13 June 1948, marked the bicentenary of the excavation of Pompeii.) Following the war the school made steady progress under his leadership. It was during his tenure that the decision to move St Olave's from its inner-city location near Tower Bridge to suburban Orpington was made (1957), and the move was realised in 1968 while he was still headmaster.
Oscar Browning OBE (17 January 1837 – 6 October 1923) was a British educationalist, historian and bon viveur, a well-known Cambridge personality during the late Victorian and Edwardian eras. An innovator in the early development of professional training for teachers, he served as principal of the Cambridge University Day Training College (CUDTC) from 1891 to 1909. He was also a prolific author of popular histories and other books. The son of a prosperous distiller, Browning was educated at Eton, and then King's College, Cambridge.
A series of educational methods for students with learning difficulties called the Purple Learning Project were developed by O'Reilly in an education centre she founded in 2009 called the Homework Club located in Blanchardstown, Dublin, Ireland. Classes are not created based on age or academic level but student personality type and ability. Classroom sizes are capped with a maximum of ten students per class taught by honours university graduates trained in O'Reilly's teaching methods. The government of Finland engaged with research from the Irish educationalist.
Founded in 1887, the school moved to its present site in 1905 under the leadership of headmistress Helen Musson. Notable alumnæ include the novelist and social activist Brigid Brophy, the novelist Elizabeth Taylor the educationalist Baroness Brigstocke, and the historian Lucy Worsley. Around one hundred years before the school was founded in 1887, the novelist Jane Austen briefly attended Reading Ladies' Boarding School within the Abbey Gateway,Reading Museum's local information on Jane Austen's school which is commemorated by, and incorporated into, the Abbey School's crest.
Schonell graduated from the University of Western Australia in 1925, at the same time as his wife-to-be, Florence Eleanor de Bracey Waterman; the couple married the next year. Eleanor, as she was always known, was a close collaborator with Schonell, and a noted educationalist in her own right. In 1928 they left for England. Schonell studied at Kings College London and the London Day Training College, University of London; his Ph.D. thesis was on the diagnosis and remediation of difficulties in spelling.
200px Nicolas Gédoyn (15 June 1677 – 10 August 1744) was a French clergyman, translator, pioneer educationalist and literary critic. He was the fifth member elected to occupy seat 3 of the Académie française in 1719, and the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres in 1722 Gédoyn was born in Orléans. Trained by the Jesuits from the age of 15, he was appointed professor of rhetoric in Blois, then canon at the Sainte-Chapelle and Abbey Beaugency. Among his literary works are translations of Quintilian and Pausanias.
Sir William Emrys "Bill" Williams, CBE (Manchester, 5 October 1896 – Aylesbury, 30 March 1977) was Editor-in-Chief of Penguin Books from 1936 to 1965 and an educationalist and powerhouse of popular education in the 20th century.Sander Meredeen: The Man Who Made Penguins. The Life of Sir William Emrys Williams, Stroud, Gloucestershire: Darien-Jones Publishing, 2008. . A close collaborator with Allen Lane, Penguin's founder, for over thirty years, Williams was the cultural force behind Penguin Books' success and was the creator of the Pelican imprint.
This is a list of the published works of Oscar Browning, teacher, historian and educationalist, whose active life extended from the mid-Victorian period to the 1920s. The list is incomplete. As well as authoring numerous books, Browning edited and wrote prefaces to other works, and was a copious contributor of articles and reviews which appeared in a range of journals and newspapers, a sample of which are included here. The main source is the partial bibliography included in the 1956 edition of H.E. Wortham's biography.
Clifford Douglas (C. D.) Blake AO is an Australian agriculturalist and educationalist who became first Vice-Chancellor of Charles Sturt University, from 1990 through to 2001 and then after his retirement from CSU in July 2001, he took up an interim Vice-Chancellor position at Adelaide University from August 2001. Blake was born in Muswellbrook, New South Wales in 1937. He studied at the University of Sydney and at Rothamsted Experimental Station in England, where he earned a PhD from the University of London.
200px Leslie Cannold at TEDxCanberra 2012 about abortion Leslie Cannold (born 1970 in Port Chester, NY) is an Australian philosopher, ethicist, educationalist, writer, activist, and public intellectual. Born and raised in Armonk and Scarsdale, New York, Leslie Cannold migrated to Melbourne in her early twenties. She began writing for The Age as an opinion and education section columnist while raising young children and completing her graduate degrees. A non-fiction author and novelist, Cannold is a familiar voice and face on radio and TV in Australia.
William Glyndwr "Wil" Edmunds OBE (born 1947) is a retired Welsh educationalist. He was Principal of Coleg Ceredigion and then Principal/Chief Executive of Deeside College 1997-2004, during which time the college was the first Further Education college to be awarded the Queen's Anniversary Prize. In 2004 he was appointed chair of ACCAC, the Qualifications, Curriculum and Assessment Authority for Wales. Edmunds has a degree in music from Bretton Hall College, University of Leeds, and a master's degree in social psychology from the University of Liverpool.
Joseph Albert Lauwerys (1902–1981) was a prominent educationalist who played an important role in the foundation of UNESCO. Joseph Lauwerys was born in Brussels, Belgium on & November 1902 and came to England in 1914 where he remained for the rest of his life. He attended Ratcliffe College, Leicestershire, and after a period of school in Bournemouth he worked as a shop assistant. However, from his involvement in the co-operative movement, he decided to attend evening classes, studying in chemistry and physics at King's College London.
Sir Robert Birley KCMG (14 July 1903 – 22 July 1982) was an English educationalist who was head master of Charterhouse School, then Eton College, and an anti-apartheid campaigner. He acquired the nickname "Red Robert", as even his moderate liberal politics caused concern for the conservative members of the Eton school of governors. His predecessor, Claude Aurelius Elliott was appointed provost and in his capacity as chair of the board of governors, living next door to Birley, he was able to keep an eye on Robert.
Francis George Robson Fisher (9 April 1921 – 26 January 2000) was a British educationalist and headmaster. Robson Fisher, as he was generally known, attended Liverpool College, where he became head boy. He won an exhibition in Classics and was educated at Worcester College, Oxford 1940–1941 and 1946–1947, with a break for war service during World War II with the Artillery in north Africa and Italy (1942–1945). On his return he switched subject to English and gained a Master of Arts.Obituaries, Oxford University Gazette, 2000.
Baron Lindsay of Birker, of Low Ground in the County of Cumberland, is a title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom. It was created on 13 November 1945 for the Scottish academic and educationalist, Sandie Lindsay. His eldest son, the second Baron, was Professor of Far Eastern Studies at the American University in Washington, D.C. The second Baron's wife, Hsiao Li, was the first Chinese- born peeress. the title is held by the second Baron's only son, the third Baron, who succeeded in 1994.
Nevenka Petrić (11 March 1927, Maslovare – 27 December 2015 Belgrade) was a Serbian writer, poet, educationalist, and expert in the fields of family planning and gender relations. She joined the Partisans at the age of 14. She became a youth leader and then a head of Health and Social Policy in Yugoslavian local government. She was a member of the Yugoslav women's assembly, secretary of the Conference for Social Activity of Yugoslav Women (1961–69), and president of the Family Planning Council of Yugoslavia (1968–76).
Vienna College Namugongo commenced in February 1999 as a result of an invitation by the Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni to Austrians to invest in the Ugandan Education sector. Two notable Austrians, Brigadier Helmut Moser and Major Gabriel Rudolf partnering with Ugandan educationalist Dr. J.C. Muyingo mobilized resources to establish this project. Emmanuel Wamala, the Archbishop of Kampala archdiocese donated the land onto which Vienna College Namugongo sits today. A home to over four hundred students, Vienna College Namugongo, is a private co-education institution.
Sir Algernon Phillips Withiel Thomas (3 June 1857 – 28 December 1937) was a New Zealand university professor, geologist, biologist and educationalist. He was born in Birkenhead, Cheshire, England in 1857 and died in Auckland, New Zealand in 1937. He is best known for his early research (1880–83) into the life cycle of the sheep liver fluke (Fasciola hepatica), a distinction he shared with the German zoologist Rudolf Leuckart, his report on the eruption of Tarawera (1888) and his contribution to the development of New Zealand pedagogy.
When it was 2006, the HNDE had already completed 20 years of time giving out middle-level engineers. To celebrate the 20th anniversary an exhibition was organized, in parallel with the INCO exhibition of IIESL was held on 23, 24 and 25 June 2006 at the BMICH. Minister Mr.Sarath Amunugama was the chief guest on the first day."Himidiriya" a collection of short stories was presented to the educationalist Mr.Leelananda Gamachchi. By the way on 7 January 2008 HNDE students’ council erected a signboard at the entrance.
L. Robin Kleinschmidt is an Australian Lutheran educationalist. He served as headmaster of St Peters Lutheran College, Brisbane and was responsible in part for encouraging the theatrical talents of a young Sigrid Thornton. Kleinschmidt served as headmaster of Redeemer College from foundation to 2001 and was responsible for the construction of most of the modern campus. His influence on the school can still be seen, particularly in the field of Debating, where the Inter-House Debating Trophy is known as the Robin Kleinschmidt Trophy.
Helen Elizabeth "Betty" Archdale (21 August 1907 – 1 January 2000) was a British educationalist and cricketer. She was a captain of the English women's cricket team in 1934 and 1935. In 1934/35 she led the first English cricket team to tour Australia and New Zealand, the result of which was a 2–0 victory over Australia. This tour did much both to raise the status of women's cricket and to heal some of the damage done to Anglo-Australian cricket relations by bodyline two years earlier.
McEwan Dunfermline:The Post War Years p. 18. As part of the donation of the estate, the Dunfermline Carnegie Trust invited proposals for the development of the area as a civic space. Two entries were submitted in 1903–04, one of which was by the world-renowned urban planner, naturalist and educationalist Patrick Geddes (1854–1932). His thinking about the commission, as he saw it, to balance preservation of heritage with regeneration, was an important influence in the formation of his ideas in town planning and civic renaissance.
George Philip Ottey (9 October 1824 – 17 December 1891) was an English clergyman and educationalist and a cricketer who played first-class cricket for Cambridge University from 1844 to 1847. He was born at Southfleet in Kent and died at Bournemouth, then in Hampshire, now in Dorset. Ottey was educated at Rugby School and at St John's College, Cambridge. In cricket he had success as a bowler and his batting figures are not impressive by modern standards; in a few matches, however, he opened the batting.
Her first literary efforts were directed in supporting her brother Charles in his orientalist and linguistic studies. After his death in 1792 she continued to publish orientalist scholarship, as well as historical, educationalist and theoretical works. She wrote The Cottagers of Glenburnie (1808), a tale which had much popularity in its day, and perhaps had some effect in the improvement of certain aspects of humble domestic life in Scotland. She also wrote the anti-Jacobin novel Memoirs of Modern Philosophers (1800),Ty, Eleanor (1991).
One of Baji Prabhu's descendant, Ramchandra Kashinath Deshpande, was an Indian freedom fighter against the British rule, educationalist and social activist who worked in Dhule, Jalgaon, and Pune for encouraging education. He participated in the Quit India Movement during the British rule and was imprisoned for 19 months in the Kolhapur Central Jail. He was felicitated after Independence by the then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. For his social work he was given the title of ‘Special Executive Magistrate’ by the Maharashtra government in 1989.
In 1823 Mappleton was a civil parish in the Wapentake of Holderness and the Liberty of St Peter's. The ecclesiastical parish and church living was under the patronage of the Archdeacon of the East Riding A public school was established in 1820 by subscription and run under the ideas of educationalist Andrew Bell. Population at the time was 187, including the hamlet of Rolston (then 'Rowlston'). Occupations included six farmers, a carpenter, a corn miller, and a schoolmaster who was also the parish clerk.
Samuel Israel Mulder (born Amsterdam 20 June 1792; died there 29 December 1862) was a Dutch-Jewish educationalist. He was educated by his father and by David Friedrichsfeld, and then studied with his brother-in-law H. A. Wagenaar. His friends were Lemans, Somerhausen, and Ullman, all of them members of the circle Tongeleth, who applied themselves to the study of the Hebrew language. Mulder composed at this time a Hebrew romance, "Beruria," and a psalm (see Delitzsch, "Zur Geschichte der Jüdischen Poesie," Leipzig, 1836).
He died in 1975 and his oldest child Gulbadan Begum of Natore (1923-2005) succeeded him as the head of the Singranatore family. In 1950 during the abolition, the Singra Natore Zamindari was at its fullest extent, annexing villages formerly governed by High caste Hindu families. Most of his children were married off to notable land holding and feudal noble families of aristocratic lines. An educationalist and philanthropist, he was a patron and educator of the Rajshahi Collegiate School, the oldest school of the Indian Subcontinent.
Born in village Janjhi, Taluka Chhachhro, district Tharparkar, In the home of Muhmmad Sachal who was an educationalist and a well known social worker at Thar. Saqi passed his matriculation examinations from Local Board High School, Chachro in 1962. Later, he studied at Government College, Sachal Sarmast Arts College Hyderabad, and Sindh University, Jamshoro from where he did his Masters. In an interview Jam Saqi recounted later that a retired primary teacher Inayatullah Dhamchar put him in touch with the underground Communist Party of Pakistan.
Head married fellow teacher Avril Nell Pope (great-granddaughter of the educationalist James Henry Pope) in Hāwera on 31 December 1949. They had four children—two boys and two girls—one of the girls dying at an early age. In 1988, at age 61, Head met his birth mother, Agnes Isobel "Nessie" Rolls (née Peillon), for the first time. She was the granddaughter of a French goldminer, Paul Peillon, originally from near Lyon, who was killed in the explosion at the Brunner Mine disaster in 1896.
The various temporary statutes under which Turkestan was administered from 1867-1886 gave von Kaufmann a great deal of latitude in policy. In 1868 he contacted experts in Moscow to identify Alexei and Olga Fedchenko to create an expedition to document the countries natural history. Whilst Kaufmann was still extending the borders of the Russian Empire, he was creating a team to investigate and document the new territory. Kaufmann's team included statisticians, the Fedchenkos, the war artist Vasily Vereshchagin and later the educationalist Nikolai Ostroumov.
Professor Chacha Nyaigotti-Chacha (born 1952 in Kuria District, Nyanza Province, Kenya) is a Kenyan playwright and consummate educationalist. He has served as an executive secretary of the Inter-University Council for East Africa (2000-2010), and was the first CEO of the Kenyan Higher Education Loans Board (1995-2000). He is currently serving as the Chairman of the Kenyan Commission for University Education (CUE). He was educated at Kenyatta College, receiving a BEd (Swahili Language), and later studied at Yale University, gaining an MA in Anthropological Linguistics and a Ph.D. in Swahili Language Linguistics.
The Foster Baronetcy, of Norwich in the County of Norfolk, was created in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom on 3 August 1838 for William Foster. The title became extinct on the death of the fourth Baronet in 1960. The Foster Baronetcy, of Bloomsbury in the County of London, was created in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom on 5 February 1930 for the university administrator and educationalist Gregory Foster. He was Provost of University College London between 1907 and 1929 and Vice-Chancellor of the University of London between 1928 and 1930.
Rev Dr John Charles Allanson Barrett (born 1943) is an English Methodist and chairman and elected president of the World Methodist Council, succeeding Nigerian Sunday Mbang at the World Methodist Conference in Seoul on 24 July 2006."World Methodist Council elects Barrett as chairperson" Before stepping down in 2009 after five years as the first Principal of the international Anglo-Chinese School in Singapore,"Rev. Dr. John Barrett Steps Down as Principal of ACS (International)" Barrett had a long career as an educationalist. Barrett was educated at Culford School from 1951–61, Newcastle University (B.
Alex de Rijke (born 1960) is an EU architect, timber architecture advocate, educationalist and architectural photographer. De Rijke founded the architecture practice, dRMM, in 1995 with Philip Marsh and Sadie Morgan. De Rijke’s research into, and application of, contemporary materials, technologies and methods of construction have helped make dRMM a globally recognised pioneer and authority in engineered timber design. De Rijke is an advocate of learning through experiment and making, and has taught at various architecture education institutions, including the Architectural Association School of Architecture in London and Düsseldorf School of Architecture.
The School got affiliated to the Central Board of Secondary Education, Government of India on 21 May 1983. Prominent personalities like R.Prakasham, who worked as the Secretary of the managing committee, Educationalist Dr.B.K. Nair, Parliamentarians like Mr.Dennis(Nagercoil), Mr.Vijayaraghavan(Palakkad), Mr.Neela Lohitadas (Trivandrum) and then. Central Minister Mr. A.A.Rahim and then State Ministers Mr. Vakkom Purushothaman and Mr.K.Sadasivan helped the institution with proper guidance to get the affiliation to CBSE. A National Integration Hostel was established with the help of then Chief Minister Mr.K.Karunakaran, who donated Rupees One Lakh from the Government for the project.
John James Guy (born 1950 in Oxford) is a British educationalist. He gained his first degree in Chemistry before becoming a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in X-ray Crystallography at Cambridge University. He was a Chemistry teacher in various schools before securing his first headship at St Philip’s Sixth Form College in Birmingham in 1985. He was appointed Principal in 1992 of the Sixth Form College, Farnborough, one of the first four Learning and Skills Beacon Colleges in the UK. He is a board member of Oxford, Cambridge and RSA Examinations and Cambridge Assessment.
Andrew McRae Davidson (10 November 1894 - 14 October 1982) was a New Zealand teacher, principal, welfare worker and educationalist. He was born in Dunedin, New Zealand on 10 November 1894. He was headmaster of Kurow School from 1927, where he helped create a free medical service for the workers at the Waitaki hydroelectric station. In 1935, he became headmaster at the Macandrew Road School in Dunedin and when the Macandrew Intermediate School was established on the same site in 1840, he became its head until his retirement in 1954.
Keenan was born in Glasnevin, County Dublin, Ireland, to Elizabeth Agnes (née Quin) and Sir Patrick Joseph Keenan. His father was an educationalist and a member of the Privy Council of Ireland. Keenan was sent to Downside School (in Somerset, England) for his secondary schooling, and then studied law at Trinity College, Dublin. He was admitted to King's Inns in 1890, allowing him to practise as a barrister in Ireland, and was later also admitted to the Middle Temple, allowing him to practise as a barrister in England and Wales.
LeFanu was Vice-President of the Royal Irish Academy from 1918 to 1920 and again from 1925 until 1930. He was President of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland between 1933 and 1936. He married Florence Sophia Mabel Sullivan, daughter of the Reverend James Sullivan, on 3 July 1890. They had two children: their daughter Lucie Catherine Le Fanu (1901-1996), who married the educationalist John Traill Christie; and their son William Richard LeFanu (1904-1995), who became a librarian and was the husband of the composer Elizabeth Maconchy.
Regina Hesse was born in Christiansborg, Accra in 1832 to a Euro-African merchant, Herman Hesse and a Ga woman, Charlotte Lamiaakaa, who hailed from a trading family at Shai Hills. The Hesse family was an influential Euro-African trading family from Osu Amantra with German- Danish ancestry and active in coastal commerce. Hesse’s paternal grandfather, Dr. Lebrecht Wilhelm Hesse, was an eighteenth century German-Danish physician. Her sister, Pauline Hesse (1831–1909), was a trader whose husband, Alexander Worthy Clerk, a Jamaican Moravian missionary-educationalist co-founded the Salem School, Osu.
Thomas Valpy French was born on New Year's Day in 1825, in Abbey, Burton upon Trent, Staffordshire, England, the son of Rev. Peter French and his wife, Penelope Arabella the daughter of the educationalist, Richard Valpy of Reading, Berkshire. Thomas' father was vicar of Holy Trinity Church for forty-seven years, and he grew up in the house, which was once part of the Benedictine Abbey, on the banks of the River Trent. French started his schooling at Reading Grammar School, and at age fourteen, he joined the Rugby School.
Himansu Sekhar Khatua is an Indian director, educationalist, and journalist. He directed the national film award winning movies Sunya Swaroop and Kathantara in 1996 and 2005 respectively. He is the managing director from the house of Kalinga Media and Entertainment Private Limited (KMEPL) and also heads as CMD Kalinga TV, a 24x7 news channel and KNews Odisha, a leading digital platform. Khatua is the National Film Award recipient for Best Film direction in 2005 and National Award recipient for best debut film Sunya Swaroop in 44th National Film Festival.
The Institute archive collections date back from 1797, and holds over 130 deposited collections as well as the records of the Institute itself. The deposited collections contain the personal papers of educationalist and other notable people involved with education and the records of educational organisations such as trade unions, and education projects. The collection covers a wide area of education, from pre-school all the way through to adult education, from formal education settings to informal settings. The Archives are open to both internal and external researchers by appointment only.
Gordonstoun temporarily relocated to Aberdyfi, Wales during World War Two, while the British Army used the Gordonstoun estate as barracks. Hahn worked with friends and fellow educationalist, Lawrence Durning Holt and Jim Hogan. Holt was a partner in the Alfred Holt and Company who owned the Blue Funnel Line. Hogan was the Warden of The Blue Funnel Line’s sea school in Aberdyfi, which provided four-year character-building courses and practical training to young, prospective officers. The courses included preparations for a land-based expedition as the course’ finale.
MakeBelieve Arts is guided by thinking such as that of the British educationalist Sir Ken Robinson, who has written that '...creativity is as important to education as literacy, and we should treat it with the same status.'Good Reads, 2010 The company has embedded this philosophy into all its work.LONSAS, 2010 The group considers that a creative approach to education allows children and young people to develop into enterprising adults with more job prospects in the future. Trisha Lee stated in The Times that: > We aim to give the children life-long skills.
158 Armstrong-Jones's paternal grandfather was Sir Robert Armstrong-Jones, the British psychiatrist and physician. His paternal grandmother, Margaret Armstrong-Jones (née Roberts), was a graduate from Somerville College, Oxford and was the daughter of Sir Owen Roberts, the Welsh educationalist. A maternal uncle was Oliver Messel (1904–1978); a maternal great-grandfather was the Punch cartoonist Linley Sambourne (1844–1910); and his great-great-uncle Alfred Messel was a well- known Berlin architect. Additionally, his great-great-grandmother, Frances Linley, was a first cousin of Elizabeth Linley, wife of Richard Brinsley Sheridan.
Lt. General Aftab Ahmad Khan was married to Nasreen Hayat Khan in 1960 and had a daughter Umbereen A. Khan and a son Shahbaz A. Khan. Mrs. Nasreen Aftab Khan died of a protracted illness in 2001. He had an elder brother Professor Namdar Khan (late – died 2002), a renowned educationalist, who taught Comparative Education at University of California's School of Education (Tollman Hall) from 1972 to 1976,a younger brother Air Marshall Iftikhar Ahmad Khan, (HI)M & (SBt) Sitara-e-Basalat and two sisters Mrs. Ismat Akhtar and Mrs.
Walter Kendall Stanton (29 September 1891, Dauntsey, Wiltshire - 30 June 1978, Sedgehill, Wiltshire) was an English organist, educationalist, and composer of sacred music. W.K. Stanton was educated at Choristers’ School, Salisbury Cathedral before undertaking an organ scholarship at Lancing College, Sussex. He then went to Merton College, Oxford (1909–1913) where he was an organ scholar and was awarded M.A., B.Mus. He proceeded to Mus.D. in 1935. Stanton taught at St John’s School, Leatherhead, Surrey (1914–1915), St Edward's School, Oxford (1915–1924), and Wellington College, Berkshire (1924–1937).
The paddy fields are fertile because they are close to Periyar river and its branches which fertile the land with abundant crops. Nedumbassery is also the home town of Jacobite Syrian Bishop late 'Gewargis Mor Gregorios, BA, LT of Vayaliparambil Pynadath family(1899–1966), Mor Gregorius Gewargis Vayaliparambil (1899-1966) a leader, agriculturist and an educationalist who managed "High school to an Engineering college" (1960s) and started a silent educational revolution in India as early as 1939 in pre-independent British India. HG.Mor Gregorios Vayaliparambil was the first Chairman of Mor Athanasious College Association, Kothamangalam.
For the Greek state, however, the possibility of Orthodox Albanian speakers being recruited into the ranks of Albanian nationalists was a source of constant anxiety. However, despite efforts of state and national activists the local population was not nationalised in this period.Tsoutsoumpis, 2015, p. 121. Thus Kyrios Nitsos, a Greek educationalist in 1909 noted that local Orthodox Albanian speakers did not refer to themselves as Greek yet instead as Kaur which connoted Christian and did not find the term insulting, while Muslim Albanian speakers identified themselves as Muslims or Turks.
Erasmus Darwin House in Lichfield, Staffordshire is the former home of the English poet and physician Erasmus Darwin, grandfather of naturalist Charles Darwin. The house is a Grade I listed building, and is now a writer's house museum commemorating Erasmus Darwin's life. Erasmus Darwin, the renowned physician, scientist, inventor, poet, and educationalist lived on Beacon Street from 1758 until 1781. A founding member of the Lunar Society, it was here that he received many famous 18th-century personalities, including Josiah Wedgwood, Matthew Boulton, Benjamin Franklin and James Watt.
Blairmore School was established in 1947 as an independent prep school for boys aged 8–13 by Colonel D.R. Ainslie D.S.O., B.A., a keen educationalist, Cambridge graduate and retired Seaforth Highlander. The school turned co-ed in 1975. Pupil numbers peaked at 90 in 1989 but the economic recession of the early 1990s caused a decline in UK prep school subscriptions and in June 1993, with fewer than 30 pupils enrolled for the coming academic year, Blairmore became impossible to sustain financially and the school was forced to close.
He also served as a member and chairman of the Aberdare Burial Board. Similarly, he was a member of the Aberdare School Board from 1874 and served as its chairman from 1877 until 1898. As an educationalist his activities ranged from advocating industrial schools to take children out of the workhouse to his membership of the Governors of the University College Cardiff. Rhys was made a county magistrate for Glamorgan in 1867 and at the time of his death he was the longest serving member of the bench.
Rev. Dr. Joseph William Kirwan (1796 – 24 December 1849) was an Irish clergyman and educationalist, who served as the first president of Queen's College Galway. Kirwan was born in Galway in 1796. He entered the National Seminary at St Patrick's College, Maynooth, in 1817, and was ordained to the Roman Catholic priesthood in 1822, having been awarded the degree of Doctor of Divinity (D.D.). Returning to his native Diocese of Galway, he was appointed Parish Priest of Oughterard in 1827, where he initiated construction of a new parish church.
Colm Ó hEocha (; 19 September 1926 – 19 May 1997) was an Irish scientist and educationalist, who served as president of University College Galway and Chairman of the New Ireland Forum. Ó hEocha was born in Dungarvan, County Waterford, in 1926. His father, Séamus Ó hEocha, known as An Fear Mór, was headmaster of the Irish-language college at An Rinn (Ring), and was known as a roving teacher of Irish for the Gaelic League. Ó hEocha enrolled at University College Galway in 1945, and obtained his B.Sc. and M.Sc. in chemistry.
The school was operated by James Elphinstone, a Scottish educationalist, from 1756 to March 1776, as a boys' school. A school may have operated continuously from that time until 1802 when the property was sold by Sir Gerard Noel, 2nd Baronet, the grandson of Mary Edwards, to Thomas Wetherell of Hammersmith, London. Louis Philippe was a teacher of geography, history, mathematics and modern languages, at a boys' boarding school in Reichenau, Switzerland. Prince Charles Victor de Broglio, a French émigré nobleman and cleric, leased the building for a French Jesuit school.
In 1878, after taking additional evening classes, she was appointed to give a course in grammar and composition at the Sociedad de Amigos de la Educación Popular, following in the footsteps of the influential politician and educationalist José Pedro Varela who had just died. She was the only woman who taught at the institution. In 1882, she founded and headed what was originally called Internado Normal de Señoritas, a women's teacher training college. It consisted of 15 women students from the Uruguayan provinces, all of whom were boarders.
Herbert Jeffrey "Jeff" Wooller (born 6 March 1940) is an English accountant and educationalist. He is noted for his accountancy tuition initiatives, and for campaigning for reform of his professional institute, the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales. The institute eventually excluded him from its membership because of his association with the Irish International University, Irish University Business School and International University Business School. Wooller has founded several educational institutions such as the Jeff Wooller College, Institute of Professional Financial Managers and Irish University Business School.
The Kay-Shuttleworth Baronetcy, of Gawthorpe in the County Palatine of Lancaster, was created in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom in 1849 for the first Baronet, the physician, social reformer and educationalist James Kay-Shuttleworth. Born James Kay, he assumed by Royal licence the additional surname of Shuttleworth on his marriage in 1842 to Janet Shuttleworth, only child and heiress of Robert Shuttleworth of Gawthorpe Hall. Two of the first Baronet's brothers also gained distinction. Joseph Kay was a noted economist while Sir Edward Kay was a Lord Justice of Appeal.
Pratap Bhanu Sharma (born 6 March 1947) is an Indian politician and a senior leader of the Indian National Congress. He has been member of the 7th and 8th Lok Sabha (Lower House of the Indian Parliament) from Vidisha, Madhya Pradesh. Mechanical Engineer, industrialist and educationalist, he has also undertaken various social activities including implementing rural development program, specially transfer of technology for rural uses and to help weaker sections; assisting unemployed youth and young entrepreneurs for promoting self- employment schemes and industries during his tenure as Member of Parliament.
Heike Fleßner (born 1944 in Esens in East Frisia) is a German educationalist and professor, whose work focuses on social education and social work. She was a Professor of Social Pedagogy at the Carl von Ossietzky University of Oldenburg from 1996 until her retirement in 2009. Her scientific work focuses on analytics and conceptual developments in the field of gender- and diversity-conscious social education. For many years, Fleßner was involved in social policy and the institutional anchoring of public toddler care and early childhood education (crèche and kindergarten).
It was housed in the Gatehouse of St Bartholomew-the-Great church in Smithfield but moved to Bethnal Green in the 1970s. It has been run along Montessori method principles developed by the educationalist Maria Montessori and began serving children from 2 – 16 years of age, and at the time of its founding, was untraditional in its educational philosophy. The school's 60th anniversary in 2008 was marked by a service in the school's original home, St Bartholomew's in Smithfield. The school integrates children with a wide range of disabilities with able-bodied children.
MacKillop Catholic College is an independent Roman Catholic co-educational secondary school for Years 7 to 10 in the Hobart suburb of Mornington, Tasmania, Australia.Tasmania Online > MacKillop College, accessed 2 March 2008 The school is named in honour of the Australian educationalist Mary MacKillop, an Australian nun who has been declared a saint by the Catholic Church. The school also has an association with the Christian Brothers founded by Edmund Rice.Christian Brothers - Schools, accessed 2 March 2008 MacKillop and Rice are key sources of inspiration for the school community.
Marsh, Joseph Chamberlain (1994) pp 17-19, 90-91 In 1868 Chamberlain married Harriet's cousin Florence Kenrick, daughter of Timothy Kenrick. Chamberlain and Florence had four children: the future Prime Minister Neville in 1869, Ida in 1870, Hilda in 1871 and Ethel in 1873. On 13 February 1875 Florence gave birth to their fifth child, but she and the child died within a day. The teaching of these four children was taken on by their elder half sister Beatrice who was destined to make her mark as an educationalist.
The Maurice Shock Medical Sciences Building at the University of Leicester, named after Shock Sir Maurice Shock (15 April 1926 – 7 July 2018) was a British university administrator and educationalist. Shock was educated at King Edward VI Aston in Birmingham and later read philosophy, politics and economics (PPE) at Balliol College, Oxford, where he obtained a first-class degree. During his early career, Shock worked for British intelligence. After graduating he had a period of research at St Antony’s College, Oxford and temporary posts at Christ Church, Oxford and at Trinity College, Oxford.
It was established in 1880 by Raja Basudev Sudhal Dev, the ruler of the princely state of Bamra (also known as Bamada). Originally known as Raja Kumar High School and based in a royal palace, it later moved to its own premises and was renamed as Raja Basudev High School. The school was renamed after and is founder, Raja Basudev, who was an educationalist and one of the pioneers of the modern Odisha and the Oriya language. There was only one primary school in Bamra when Raja Basudev took over the reign of the state.
The house was bought from James Stewart's great grandson in late 1968 by Rex Morgan AM, MBE, and Mary Morgan. Rex is a widely noted and three times nationally honoured educationalist. A condition of the sale was that the name of the house be changed resulting in Morgans selection of ‘Abercrombie House’. This was a reference both to the shire of that name in which the property was situated and to General Sir Ralph Abercrombie, under whom William Stewart had served in the 1790s in the West Indies.
Lisa D. Delpit is an American educationalist, acclaimed researcher, and an award-winning author. She is the former executive director and Eminent Scholar at the Center for Urban Educational Excellence at Florida International University in Miami, Florida, Benjamin E. Mays Chair of Urban Educational Leadership at Georgia State University, and the first Felton G. Clark Distinguished Professor of Education at Southern University and A&M; College in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.She earned the MacArthur "Genius" Fellowship for her research on school-community relations and cross-cultural communication. She is a leading voice in education research.
Compton was born to Edmund Compton, involved in South American trade, and a mother from a clerical background. He was schooled at Rugby where he had won a scholarship and developed a love of music. At Oxford University Compton became acquainted with the renowned historian and educationalist H. A. L. Fisher, who was the Warden of New College. Compton was among the undergraduates (of whom Richard Crossman was one) invited by Fisher to socialise with the likes of Gilbert Murray, Hilaire Belloc, General Smuts and David Lloyd George.
Later he found himself working in Dresden at the "Jasmatzi" cigarette factory. Despite having volunteered for military service in 1914, by 1918 Alexander Schwab had joined the anti-war movement. He became friendly with the radical socialist educationalist Otto Rühle (1874–1943) and with the young artist Conrad Felixmüller. In 1917 Schwab joined the Independent Social Democratic Party ("Unabhängige Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands" / USPD) which had broken away from the mainstream Social Democratic Party ("Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands" / SPD) following an intensification of internal party ructions over funding for the war.
Frederick James Gruggen (1820 – 30 March 1872) was an English educationalist and a first-class cricketer who played for Cambridge University in four matches in 1844 and 1845. He was born at Chichester, West Sussex, though the exact date of birth is not known, and he died at Liverpool. In his four first- class cricket matches, two each in the 1844 and 1845 seasons, Gruggen batted as an opening or middle order batsman; he took seven catches in his four games, though he does not appear to have kept wicket.
"The Pet Goat" (often erroneously called "My Pet Goat") is a grade-school level reading exercise composed by American educationalist Siegfried "Zig" Engelmann. It achieved notoriety for being read by US President George W. Bush with a class of second-graders on the morning of September 11, 2001. After being discreetly informed of the September 11 attacks midway through the reading, Bush waited quietly for the reading to finish before dealing with the unfolding crisis. The episode figures prominently in the retrospective assessment of Bush's response to the September 11 attacks.
The Pestalozzi Children’s Village (German: Kinderdorf Pestalozzi) was established in Trogen, Switzerland, in 1946, after the Second World War, to accommodate and educate children from both sides of the war.“Pestalozzi Children Village at Trogen”, UNESCO The concept soon spread to other countries, and in the UK the Pestalozzi Children Village was opened. The charity is named after a Swiss educationalist called Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi who believed in educating the heart, hands and head as a complete educational system. Pestalozzi Village initially offered children vocational courses to equip them with skills from agriculture to carpentry.
Tony and Caroline had four children—Stephen, Hilary, Melissa, a feminist writer, and Joshua—and 10 grandchildren. Caroline Benn died of cancer on 22 November 2000, aged 74, after a career as an educationalist. Two of Benn's children have been active in Labour Party politics. His eldest son Stephen was an elected Member of the Inner London Education Authority from 1986 to 1990. His second son Hilary was a councillor in London, stood for Parliament in 1983 and 1987, and becoming Labour MP for Leeds Central in 1999.
West Bretton J & I School, with 89 pupils on roll aged from 3 to 11, occupies the original Grade II- listed school house. Bretton Hall College opened in 1949 as a teacher training college, and specialist arts college of higher education. Among its more well known alumni are the TV comedy team known as The League of Gentleman, writers Colin Welland, Kay Mellor and John Godber and educationalist Sir Ken Robinson. John Godber wrote a play about life as a drama student at the college, It Started With a Kiss.
Beloff was born on 2 July 1913 at 21 York House, Fieldway Crescent, Islington, London and was the oldest child of a Jewish family who had moved to England in 1903 from Russia.The Times, 24 March 1999, p23 He was the elder son in a family of five children of merchant Semion (Simon) Beloff (born Semion Rubinowicz) and his wife Maria (Marie) Katzin. His sister Anne later married German-born Nobel Prize–winning biochemist Ernst Boris Chain in 1948. His sister Renee Soskin was a politician and educationalist.
This made Koidula's poetry much more accessible to the popular reader. But the major importance of Koidula lay not so much in her preferred form of verse but in her potent use of the Estonian language. Estonian was, still, in the 1860s, in a German dominated Baltic province of Imperial Russia, the language of the oppressed indigenous peasantry. It was still the subject of orthographical bickering, still used in the main for predominantly patronising educationalist or religious texts, practical advice to farmers or cheap and cheerful popular story telling.
Thomas Stanislaus MacDonagh (; 1 February 1878 – 3 May 1916) was an Irish political activist, poet, playwright, educationalist and revolutionary leader. He was one of the seven leaders of the Easter Rising of 1916, a signatory of the Proclamation of the Irish Republic and Commandant of the 2nd Battalion, Dublin Brigade of the Irish Volunteers, which fought in Jacob's biscuit factory. He was executed for his part in the Rising at the age of thirty- eight. MacDonagh was assistant headmaster at St. Enda's School, Scoil Éanna, and lecturer in English at University College Dublin.
Vishnu Manchu (born 23 November 1982) is an Indian film actor, producer and director known for his works in Telugu cinema and television. He had a brief stint as a child artist with the 1985 film Ragile Gundelu. Years later, he starred in the 2003 Telugu action film Vishnu, for which he won the Filmfare Best Male Debut. He is the co-owner of the film production house 24 Frames Factory and is an educationalist through Sree Vidyanikethan Educational Trust, founded by his father and veteran Telugu actor Mohan Babu.
According to the All-Ukrainian independent rating “TOP-200 Ukraine” the University is the second among agrarian universities and the 61st among 200 best educational establishments of Ukraine due to the devised and realized innovation “Program of Sustainable Development”. The University was awarded with Honourable Diplomas from Kharkiv Regional Administration, Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine, and with 1st class ‘Exemplary Educationalist of Agrarian Science” of the Ministry of Agrarian Policy and Foodstuffs of Ukraine for the great contribution in AIC reforms support and training of high quality specialists for agriculture.
Joy Chinwe Eyisi (born 3 September 1969) is an Igbo Nigerian professor, author, scholar, educationalist, and philanthropist. Between 2006 and 2011, she was Head of Department, English Language and Literature, Faculty of Arts, Nnamdi Azikiwe University, (NAU), Awka, Anambra State. She is now Deputy Vice- Chancellor (Academic) of National Open University of Nigeria (NOUN), a position she assumed on 26 October 2017. Eyisi, who was hitherto the Centre Director of NOUN’s Study Centre in the National Assembly in Abuja, emerged winner of the election held by the University Senate on 25 October 2017.
Shettima Ali Monguno, CFR (1926 – 8 July 2016) was a Nigerian educationalist and politician, born 1926 in Monguno-Borno state. He attended Monguno primary school, Teacher’s College Bauchi and Katsina, college of arts, science and technology Zaria, Moray House college of education and the University of Edinburgh. He was M.P. in 1959, education secretary and councilor for education, works and social welfare Borno, local Government 1959-65. Federal minister for Air Force and internal affair 1965-66, federal commissioner for trade and industries 1967-71 minister mines and power, petroleum and energy 1972-75.
Arthur Farwell Starting left, back row: Arthur Farwell, Peter William Dykema, Walter Kirkpatrick Brice, front row, from left: John Christian Freund, and Harry Horner Barnhart in 1917 at the Community Chorus luncheon in Manhattan Arthur Farwell (March 23, 1872 – January 20, 1952) was an American composer, conductor, educationalist, lithographer, esoteric savant, and music publisher. Interested in American Indian music, he became associated with the Indianist movement and founded the Wa-Wan Press to publish music in this genre. He combined teaching, composing and conducting in his career, working on both coasts and in Michigan.
Bartlett-Ranking BGD (2004) One of Alinsky's associates, Presbyterian minister Herbert White, became a missionary in South Korea and the Philippines and brought Alinsky's ideas, books and materials with him. He helped start a community organization in the Manila slum of Tondo in the 1970s. The concepts of community organizing spread through the many local NGO and activists groups in the Philippines. Filipino community organizers melded Alinsky's ideas with concepts from liberation theology, a pro-poor theological movement in the developing world, and the philosophy of Brazilian educationalist Paulo Freire.
Jane Naana Opoku Agyemang (born 22 November 1951 as Jane Naana Sam in Cape Coast, Ghana) is a politician and educationalist who served as Minister for Education in Ghana. She was appointed in 2013 by President John Mahama after the 2012 Ghanaian general election and served until January 2017 when President- elect Akufo Addo was sworn into office. In July of 2020, she was chosen as the running mate to the flagbearer of the National Democratic Congress (NDC), H.E. John Dramani Mahama. She is a member of the National Democratic Congress (NDC).
Waldorf-inspired home schools typically obtain their program information through informal parent groups, online, or by purchasing a curriculum. Waldorf homeschooling groups are not affiliated with the Association of Waldorf Schools of North America (AWSNA), which represents independent schools and it is unknown how many home schools use a Waldorf- inspired curriculum. Educationalist Sandra Chistolini suggests that parents offer their children Waldorf-inspired homeschooling because "the frustration and boredom some children feel in school are eliminated and replaced with constant attention to the needs of childhood [and] connections between content and the real world".
Biometric vendors claim benefits to schools such as improved reading skills, decreased wait times in lunch lines and increased revenues.Fingerprint Software Eliminates Privacy Concerns and Establishes Success (FindBiometrics) They do not cite independent research to support this. Educationalist Dr. Sandra Leaton Gray of Homerton College, Cambridge stated in early 2007 that "I have not been able to find a single piece of published research which suggests that the use of biometrics in schools promotes healthy eating or improves reading skills amongst children... There is absolutely no evidence for such claims".
Prestfelde School is an independent co-educational day and boarding preparatory school, located on London Road in Shrewsbury in Shropshire, England, for children between the ages of 3 and 13. there are 300 pupils on roll. Since 1949, the school has formed part of the Woodard Schools group, founded by the Christian educationalist the Reverend Nathaniel Woodard and as such is affiliated to the largest group of Church of England schools in the country. Originally a school for boys, it diversified during the late 1990s and now has nearly 100 girls.
In Bangladesh, Bachelor of Education (B.Ed.) is an undergraduate professional degree for Hons. (4 years) and Diploma (1/2/3 years) in Education offered by the authorized Teachers Training Institutes or colleges for those aimed their profession as a teacher or as an education and curriculum specialist or as an educationalist in the government and non-governmental educational institutes or any educational organizations such as Save the Children, UNICEF, United Nations Development Programme, BFES, SSUF, ASA etc. B.Ed. degree is mandatory for the teaching profession in both of primary and Secondary school level.
The birth of the first private and truly secular college in the Presidency of Bengal was hailed as a landmark in the academic and cultural ethos of India. It was the great Indian educationalist and social reformer Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar who was associated with the College from its very inception in 1872. The college is a living monument of the untiring labours of Vidyasagar who is known to be the founder of the college. After the passing away of the founder in 1891, the name, Metropolitan Institute, was changed to Vidyasagar College in 1917.
Gurukul is a story of an upright educationalist Nansaheb Vishwanath Gokhale, fondly called as Guruji (played by Nagesh Bhosle) who is the founder and head of Gurukul University. As a teacher Guruji is different from others and deals with the students in a gentle and tolerant manner. He believes along with professional education, students should put emphasis on moral and social values of life. Reflecting the politicisation of education institutions in India, Gurukul is fraudulently grabbed by a local politician Girish Bhao Velangekar (played by Vidyadhar Joshi), saddened by which Guruji leaves for unknown destination.
John Ogden is a photographer, cinematographer, writer and publisher, whose wide ranging career has encompassed producing television commercials, international documentary making, music video production, drama, and fine art photography. Not to be confused with UK based Photographer and Educationalist John Ogden who changed his name and can now be found at www.johnrae.co.uk. Nicknamed 'Oggy', Ogden is South Australian born and of Anglo-Irish descent, Recent family research suggests there may also be Palawa heritage. He has worked all over the world, his projects spanning diverse cultures and nations including SE Asia, Sri Lanka, China, Japan, Europe, South America, the USA, and indigenous Australia.
This was carried out with the active assistance of Mikhail Mikhailovich Ippolitov-Ivanov, a well-known Russian composer, conductor and educationalist who worked in Tbilisi in (1882–1893). Paliashvili's cherished dream came true only in 1891 when he was admitted to the french horn class under F.F. Parizek. A year later, when Parizek left the school, Paliashvili continued to study under A.I. Mosko. He graduated from the French horn class in 1895 and in the same year was admitted to the musical theory class which was conducted by Nikolai Semenovich Klenovsky, a Russian conductor, composer and teacher.
During this period, McLaine worked with William Leonard and John Maclean in running classes for the Scottish Labour College. McLaine attended the 2nd World Congress of the Comintern, along with Sylvia Pankhurst, Marjory Newbold, Willie Gallacher and others, in McLaine's case representing the BSP which shortly afterwards became part of the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB). Whilst in Moscow McLaine was appointed to the Provisional International Bureau of Kultintern. McLaine remained active as an educationalist with the Plebs League and later the National Council of Labour Colleges (NCLC) publishing a series of articles called "Economics without Headaches".
Problem-based learning (PBL) is a principle based on the educational philosophy of the French educationalist Célestin Freinet in the 1920s, and is used in many subject areas including medicine. It was first developed in relation to medical education at McMaster University Medical School in the late 1960s,.Neufeld V R, Barrows H S. The McMaster philosophy: an approach to medical education. Journal of Medical Education 1974, 49, 1040–1050Walsh W. The development of the McMaster programme in medical education. British Journal of Hospital Medicine 1973, 12, 722-730 It was introduced to the UK by Manchester University.
Babson College She not only gave primary instruction, but she also taught secondary school. At the end of the second year of the schools functioning, on December 1, 1876, she decided to send a request to the University Council to ask for the nomination of university commissions to assist to and validate her students' exams.Karin Sánchez Manríquez Due to her lobbying a decree facilitating the admittance of women to higher education was signed by Miguel Luis Amunátegui, Minister of Education, in 1877. A statue to her and fellow women's educationalist Antonia Tarrago by Samuel Román Rocías stands in Santiago de Chile.
Alexander Bain (11 June 1818 – 18 September 1903) was a Scottish philosopher and educationalist in the British school of empiricism and a prominent and innovative figure in the fields of psychology, linguistics, logic, moral philosophy and education reform. He founded Mind, the first ever journal of psychology and analytical philosophy, and was the leading figure in establishing and applying the scientific method to psychology. Bain was the inaugural Regius Chair in Logic and Professor of Logic at the University of Aberdeen, where he also held Professorships in Moral Philosophy and English Literature and was twice elected Lord Rector of the University of Aberdeen.
Joyce Bellamy and Eileen Price, Rackham, Clara Dorothea (1875–1966), Labour Alderman, Social Reformer and Educationalist, in Joyce Bellamy and John Saville (eds), Dictionary of Labour Biography (Macmillan: Basingstoke, 1993), pp. 323–238. She served with Lilian Mary Hart Clark on the governing body of the Cambridge School of Arts, Crafts and Technology, which was renamed the Cambridgeshire College of Arts and Technology in 1958, and Anglia Ruskin University in 2005. A large modern building containing laboratories and teaching rooms was erected on the Cambridge campus in 1972 and named Rackham in her honour. This was demolished in 2009.
Hedda at the Marxist Working Week Geraberg 1923. Group photo, standing from left to right: Hede Massing, Friedrich Pollock, Eduard Ludwig Alexander, Konstantin Zetkin, Georg Lukács, Julian Gumperz, Richard Sorge, Karl Alexander (child), Felix Weil, unknown; sitting: Karl August Wittfogel, Rose Wittfogel, unknown, Christiane Sorge, Karl Korsch, Hedda Korsch, Käthe Weil, Margarete Lissauer, Bela Fogarasi, Gertrud Alexander Hedda Korsch (née Hedwig Franceska Luisa Gagliardi; August 20, 1890 – July 11, 1982) was an educationalist and university professor. Hedda was born into a bourgeois family who provided her with an intellectual and artistic background. Her maternal grandmother was Hedwig Dohm, a prominent feminist.
Alison Claire Britton OBE (born 4 May 1948) is a British ceramic artist, with an international reputation, known for her large sculptural, slab built vessels. Born in Harrow Middlesex UK, the daughter of the educationalist James N. Britton, she studied at Leeds College of Art (1966–7), the Central School of Art and Design (1966–7) and the Royal College of Art (1970–73). She became a Fellow of the Royal College of Art in 1990 and has been a senior tutor there since 1998. She was awarded an OBE for her services to art in 1990.
Smith was twice married, and left by his first marriage (to Anne Read)Anne Read died of fever at age 24, leaving Smith a widower with two young children. two daughters Caroline and Emily; by his second marriage (to a daughter Mary of John Christie of Hackney) an only son, Herman (died 23 July 1897, aged 77). Miranda and Octavia Hill were his granddaughters, among the five daughters of Caroline (c1809-1902) who married James Hill, merchant in 1835, and as Caroline Southwood Hill was known as a writer and educationalist. His other daughter was Emily (b. 1810).
CHRIST (Deemed to be University) was born out of the educational vision of St. Kuriakose Elias Chavara, an educationalist and social reformer of the nineteenth century in South India. He initiated school education for the deprived and marginalised classes in the Southern part of the country. He founded the first indigenous Catholic congregation Carmelites of Mary Immaculate (CMI), in 1831 which administers CHRIST (Deemed to be University). Established in 1969 as Christ College, the University Grants Commission (UGC) of India conferred Autonomy to the Christ College in 2004 and identified it as an institution with Potential for Excellence in 2006.
Li Po Chun United World College of Hong Kong (), established in 1992, is an International Baccalaureate school in Wu Kai Sha, Hong Kong. It is the eighth member of the today 18 United World Colleges, others having been established in Wales, Canada, Norway, Italy, India, Singapore, Eswatini, United States, Costa Rica, the Netherlands, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Germany, Armenia, China, Thailand, Japan and Tanzania. Patrons of the college and the movement include Nelson Mandela, Her Majesty Queen Noor of Jordan and Charles, Prince of Wales. The first college, UWC Atlantic College, was established by the German educationalist Kurt Hahn to promote international understanding and peace.
Frederic Albert Casey (1876 – October 2, 1956) was a working class socialist educationalist who was active in the National Council of Labour Colleges. Casey was born in Bury, Lancashire, England, and became interested in dialectical materialism as presented by Joseph Dietzgen in his book The Positive Outcome of Philosophy, of which the English translation was published in 1906. Although he originally trained as a plumber, after losing his leg in accident, he retrained as a watchmaker, and he supported himself by working as watchmaker for over fifty years. However he was also active as a tutor with the Manchester Labour College.
William Patrick Roache was born in the Basford suburb of Nottingham on 25 April 1932, the son of Hester Vera (née Waddicor) and Joseph William Vincent Roache. He grew up in Ilkeston, Derbyshire, where he attended a Steiner school set up by his grandfather in the family's garden."Spiritual soap star William Roache to give talk in city", Peterborough Today, 25 February 2006; retrieved 7 June 2008. His grandfather was a Freemason who was interested in such things as theosophy, esotericism, hypnotism, spiritualism, and homoeopathy, as well as the teachings of philosopher and educationalist Rudolf Steiner.
In modern times this approach to education has been followed in the Corporation schools of Chennai, from 2003, as an effort to provide special schools for children who had been freed from bonded labour. David Horsburgh was a man of many talents - carpenter, poet, author, educationalist, teacher, classic car enthusiast, artist and linguist. He had many friends and was known for being gregarious, overly generous and full of ideas and pranks. In order to fund the school, and latterly a free dispensary run by his wife and daughter-in-law, he wrote educational text books for India, published by Oxford University Press.
This set of influences is, perhaps, at its clearest in Lo prohibido (1884–85),Montesinos intro to Lo prohibido p. 21 which is also noteworthy for being told in the first person by an unreliable narrator who, in addition, dies during the course of the work – it pre-dates similar experiments by André Gide such as L'immoraliste. Another influence came from the philosophy of Karl Christian Friedrich Krause, which became influential in Spain mainly due to the influence of the famous educationalist Francisco Giner de los Ríos. The clearest example of this influence on Galdós is in his novel El Amigo Manso (1882).
While at Cambridge Reeves began to associate with other young women who shared her intellectual enthusiasms and socialist political leanings, forming a lifelong friendship with Eva Spielmann (later Eva Hubback), who became an educationalist. She became involved in a number of societies, including the debating society. In 1907 she led the inter-collegiate debate with Girton, arguing that "the socialist conception of life is the most noble and the most fruitful, both for the state and the individual". In 1906 she founded the Cambridge University Fabian Society (CUFS) with Ben Keeling, a member of the (somewhat inactive) existing Fabian society in the town.
Henry Vere Poulett-Harris (22 April 1865 - 7 March 1933) was an Australian cricket player, runner, footballer, gold prospector and gold mine owner. Vere Poulett-Harris played five first-class cricket matches for the Tasmania and Western Australia cricket teams between 1883 and 1899. One early news report described him as a "sterling cricketer and footballer" whilst another described him as a "sterling batsman and good field." Vere Poulett-Harris' father was Richard Deodatus Poulett-Harris, an educationalist, priest, the founder of the Masonic Lodge in Tasmania and the co-founder of the University of Tasmania.
Elkin Umbagai (February 19, 1921 — January 24, 1980) was an Aboriginal Australian leader and educationalist. Born in a Presbyterian Mission in the Kunmunya Aboriginal Reserve in Western Australia, Umbagai's family mediated between missionaries and Aboriginal groups, and according to the Australian Dictionary of Biography she was "reputed to be the first Australian to receive the interpreter's badge of the Girl Guides Association". After marrying in a Christian marriage ceremony in 1969, Umbagai and her family founded the Mowanjum Aboriginal Community outside Derby, Western Australia. There she became a pioneering educator in linguistics, archaeology and anthropology, and was a translator between English and Worrorra.
One of these was Lady Hasting's daughter-in-law, Selina Hastings (1707–1791), founder of the evangelical Methodist sect known as the Countess of Huntingdon's Connexion. Methodists were often accused of Jacobitism, because they rejected existing structures and practices; conversely, many "Jacobite" demonstrations during the 1730s were led by Tories hostile to the Welsh Methodist revival. Often associated with social conservatism, crypto Non- Jurors included Mary Astell (1666–1731), an educationalist sometimes called the first English feminist. Daughter of a wealthy, upper-class Non-Juror merchant, in 1709, she set up a girls' school in Chelsea.
Dr. Jayanthasri Balakrishnan as an Educationalist strongly believes in bringing about attitudinal improvement and social development through value based education. Helping people realize their potential and uniqueness is her prime concern which adds depth, dimension and difference to her motivational talk. Dr. Balakrishnan is a former Professor and Reader of English in PSG College of Arts and Science, Coimbatore, with 35 years of teaching experience. She is a double doctorate, having been awarded two Ph.D Degrees, one in English by the Pondicherry University in 1998, and the second one in Tamil by Bharathiar University, Coimbatore in 2009.
Stuart Memorial in Dunedin D.M. Stuart bust outside Knox Church Donald McNaughton Stuart (1819 - 12 May 1894) was a New Zealand presbyterian minister and educationalist. Stuart was the son of Alexander Stuart and Janet (McNaughton) his wife, was born in the hamlet of Styx Kenmore,, or Stichs, Perthshire, Scotland. In 1837 he started a school at Leven, Perthshire, and two years later entered at the University of St Andrews. Having supported Dr. Thomas Chalmers for the Lord Rectorship after the disruption, he was expelled, with the majority of the students, for refusing to submit to an admonition from the senators.
Sir Alexander Bradshaw Clegg (13 June 1909 – 20 January 1986 in Yorkshire) was an English educationalist. He was the innovative Chief Education Officer of the West Riding of Yorkshire County Council for whom he worked from 1945 to 1974. The son of a schoolmaster, Clegg was born in Long Eaton, Derbyshire, where he was educated at Long Eaton Grammar School.‘Clegg, Sir Alec (Alexander Bradshaw Clegg)’, Who Was Who, A & C Black, 1920–2007; online edn, Oxford University Press, Dec 2007 accessed 15 Nov 2008 Bootham School He attended Clare College, Cambridge, where he took a degree in modern languages.
Her grandmother Woodhill died on 21 June 1887 and she inherited a considerable fortune, which allowed her to travel to Constantinople (Istanbul), Palestine, India, and Egypt with her friend the educationalist and campaigner for women's right to higher education, Madeline Daniell. While in India she became interested in its society, particularly regarding equality and the position of women. She returned to England in June 1888 and bought a house on Park Street, Grosvenor Square, which she shared with Daniell. She raised funding to allow Indian women to study medicine and became a member of the National Indian Association.
She is the great-granddaughter of Akbar Hydari, former Prime Minister of Hyderabad state (colonial India) and the grandniece of Muhammad Saleh Akbar Hydari, former Governor of Assam. Aditi is the granddaughter of Raja J Rameshwar Rao, who headed the administration of Wanaparthi state during colonial India, and Shanta Rameshwar Rao, a much respected educationalist in the city of Hyderabad, the founder of Vidyaranya school and the chairperson of the publishing house Orient Blackswan. Filmmaker Kiran Rao, the wife of actor Aamir Khan, is her maternal first cousin.Drama Queen Filmfare 2 July 2013 Hydari's parents separated when she was 2 years old.
Finstergrün Castle belongs to the Evangelical Youth of Austria In connexion with Jugendburgen one frequently comes across the names Gustav Wyneken, Robert Oelbermann and Karl Oelbermann. In 1910, the progressive educationalist, Gustav Wyneken, was the chairman of the Bund für freie Schulgemeinden and publisher of its magazine. He also tried to found a new school or "Jugendburg" to serve his progressive educational project based on the concept of upbringing as the "Formation of People in the Sense of a Worldview" (Formung des Menschen im Sinne einer Weltanschauung). For Wyneken it was about a redefinition of the relationships between teacher and pupil.
Pittencrieff Park (known locally as "The Glen") is a public park in Dunfermline, Fife, Scotland. It was purchased in 1902 by the town's most famous son, Andrew Carnegie, and given to the people of Dunfermline in a ceremony the following year. Its lands include the historically significant and topologically rugged glen which interrupts the centre of Dunfermline and, accordingly, part of the intention of the purchase was to carry out civic development of the area in a way which also respected its heritage. The project notably attracted the attention of the urban planner and educationalist, Patrick Geddes.
He found the empty grave nearby, with a ladder in it, and with the help of his assistant, arranged his apparatus and chemicals at the bottom, placed a second ladder over the top and made the grave completely dark with the use of yellow curtains. Before his death, Thomas selected 3,113 glass plate negatives which were bought by the educationalist and historian Owen Morgan Edwards to illustrate his Welsh language magazine Cymru. The negatives are now in the collection of the National Library of Wales. Edwards commented "that no-one has such a complete collection of views of Welsh historic sites".
Anne Laugharne Phillips Griffith-Jones OBE (June 1891 - 1973) was a British educationalist who founded Singapore's Tanglin Preparatory School, which is now known as the Tanglin Trust School. Born in London, England, Griffith-Jones was the youngest of 11 children and daughter of a Welsh barrister. Her brother, John, was father of Mervyn Griffith-Jones, the prosecuting barrister (later judge) involved in the 1960 prosecution of Penguin Books for the publication of D. H. Lawrence's Lady Chatterley's Lover and the 1963 trial of Stephen Ward relating to the Profumo affair. She, along with many women of her time, had no formal qualifications.
Dr. Shyama Prasad Mukherjee, a political figure and educationalist at that time, took interest in this young man and insisted that Katyayanidas shifts to Calcutta and takes admission to Ashutosh College (named after his father Sir Ashutosh Mukherjee) in BA Course with Honours in Philosophy. Professor Kalidas Sen who was the Principal of Ashutosh College at that time provided support and encouragement to Katyayanidas. As a student of the college he started writing scholarly articles in college magazine viz."Glimpses in the Psychology of Laughter",Asutosh College Magazine, Volume XVI, September 1940, Page 24-26 (www.accskol.
UWC (or United World Colleges) is a global network of schools and educational programmes with the shared mission of "mak[ing] education a force to unite people, nations and cultures for peace and a sustainable future". The organisation was founded on the principles of German educationalist Kurt Hahn in 1962 to promote intercultural understanding. Today, UWC consists of 18 schools on four continents, some of which are also open to younger years (from Kindergarten). Young people are selected for the IB Diploma Programme from over 150 countries through a system of volunteer-run national committees, "no matter their personal or financial circumstances".
S. Thomas' Preparatory School was founded on 17 May 1938 by William Thomas Keble, the school's first headmaster, while Sri Lanka was under British colonial rule. Keble was an eminent British scholar, author, educationalist, and an alumnus of Keble College, Oxford, which was named after his maternal great-uncle John Keble. He arrived in Ceylon in 1928 to join the staff of S. Thomas' College, Mt. Lavinia, during the tenure of warden Kenneth McPherson. He was the author of several books, including Ceylon, Beaten Track, A History of St. Thomas' College, Colombo, and Astrapani: A Romance of Sigiriya, a novel based on Sigiriya.
Kushabhau Thakre University of Journalism and Mass Communication (KTUJM) is a journalism and mass communication university located in Raipur, Chhattisgarh. The University established by Government of Chhattisgarh vide Act no 24 of 2004. Former Prime Minister a visionary statesman and a dedicated journalist Shri Atal Bihari Vajpayee inaugurated the University on April 16, 2005 at Raipur amidst the greasing of eminent journalist, educationalist, literature, social workers and senior politicians. Previously the university is named after Late Sri Kushabhau Thakre who was a Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh Acticist, the University foundation day is celebrated on 16 April every year, in 2020 new firmed Govt.
The congress on the Dialectics of Liberation was an international congress organised in London between 15 and 30 July 1967. It was organised by the American educationalist Joe Berke. The scope of the conference was to "demystify human violence in all its forms, and the social systems from which it emanates, and to explore new forms of action".1967 Dialectics of Liberation, accessed 2 June 2011 A short film, Ah, Sunflower, directed by Robert Klinkert and Iain Sinclair, and featuring R. D. Laing, Allen Ginsberg, Stokely Carmichael and others, was filmed around the Dialectics of Liberation conference.
Kappa Delta Pi was founded in 1911 at the University of Illinois in order to foster excellence in education and promote fellowship among those dedicated to teaching. In 1912, a petition to merge Kappa Delta Pi and Phi Delta Kappa (PDK) was declined by the latter because PDK could not agree to the terms that women be allowed in an "honor fraternity". In 1920, William Chandler Bagley installed a Kappa Delta Pi chapter at Teachers College, Columbia University. Four years later (1924) American pragmatist philosopher and educationalist John Dewey was inducted as the first member of the Society's Laureate Chapter (see below).
Initially a member of the Centre Party, Laufenberg joined the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) in the early 1900s. He became associated with a faction on the left of the party led by Wilhelm Schmitt and Peter Berten and when this group gained the upper hand within the Düsseldorf party in 1904 Laufenberg was appointed editor of the party organ Volkszeitung.Mary Nolan, Social Democracy and Society: Working Class Radicalism in Düsseldorf, 1890-1920, Cambridge University Press, 2003, p. 95 Laufenberg also worked as an educationalist within the party, offering basic courses on socialism to party members of Düsseldorf.
Alfred William Rowe (1 July 1837 – 12 March 1921) was an English clergyman and educationalist by career, and also a cricketer who played first-class cricket in two matches in the 1859 season. He was born in Cambridge and died at Mapperley, Nottingham. Rowe was educated at Lancing College and at Uppingham School and then at Trinity College, Cambridge. As a cricketer, his batting and bowling styles are not known, but from his record in Cambridge University Cricket Club trial matches in 1858 and 1859, the university side appears to have regarded him primarily as a bowler.
The current buildings on Northgate In 1854 QEGS moved to its present site in Northgate, Wakefield, into premises designed by the architect Richard Lane and formerly occupied by the West Riding Proprietary School. The attached Junior school for boys aged 7 to 11 was founded in 1910. A new building (Savile Building) was opened in 2005 by Ted Wragg, the famous educationalist, who taught at the school in the early 1960s. The new building provides a new 6th form centre, English department, state-of-the-art theatre and Learning Resources Centre for the pupils of QEGS.
Edmund Ignatius Rice, (; 1 June 1762 – 29 August 1844), was a Catholic missionary and educationalist. He was the founder of two religious institutes of religious brothers: the Congregation of Christian Brothers and the Presentation Brothers. Rice was born in Ireland at a time when Catholics faced oppression under Penal Laws enforced by the British authorities, though reforms began in 1778 when he was a teenager. He forged a successful career in business and, after an accident which killed his wife and left his daughter disabled and with learning difficulties, thereafter devoted his life to education of the poor.
Gerhard Storz (19 August 1898 - 30 August 1983) was the son of a Lutheran pastor from Württemberg who at various stages distinguished himself in theatre productions, as a scholar, an educationalist, a politician and an author- journalist, sometimes pursuing one career at a time and sometimes several in combination. Throughout his adult life he liked to see himself as a "language therapist". "Human speech seems to have been encoded, sealed into formulaic structures, and pressed into service for mechanistic operations" ("Menschliche Rede scheint chiffriert worden zu sein, versiegelt in Formeln, hineingepreßt in mechanische Funktionen"), he once wrote.
Waterford Kamhlaba United World College of Southern Africa (WKUWCSA), one of 18 international schools and colleges in the UWC educational movement, is located in Mbabane, Eswatini, and became a UWC in 1981. The UWC movement originated in the ideas of the educationalist Kurt Hahn in the 1950s and the first UWC college, Atlantic College, opened in Wales in 1962. Waterford Kamhlaba was established one year later by Michael Stern, in 1963. The school's mission was similar to the philosophy of the UWC movement, and Waterford became the fourth member school of the UWC movement in 1981.
Because of her background as an educationalist, Warnock was appointed in 1974 to chair a UK inquiry on special education. Her report, published in 1978, brought radical change in the field, by placing emphasis on the teaching of learning-disabled children in mainstream schools and introducing a system of "statementing" children in order for them to gain entitlement to special educational support. Warnock subsequently expressed dissatisfaction with the system that she helped to create, calling it "appalling" because of the expense of its administration and its tendency to deny support to mildly disadvantaged children. She recommended the establishment of a new inquiry.
In conjunction with the banker and educationalist Dr Benjamin Haywood and a Mr Holland, Parker campaigned for a Sheffield School of Design, which was established in 1843. However, ‘[Parker] had indulged a hope that, as a reward of his exertions he might be offered the post of teacher, but the Government sent down a nominee of their own, and ignored his claims to consideration. The disappointment, and the loss of his wife in 1844, unsettled him. Some time afterwards he resigned his connection with Wesley College, and launched himself into the great world of London.’Welford, Men of Mark. pp. 252–3.
Hogarth; used to emphasise the healthy nature of a drink safer than most water Until the late 19th century, lack of access to clean drinking water meant particularly in urban areas, it was often safer to drink so-called small beer. These had relatively low levels of alcohol and were routinely drunk throughout the day by both workers and children; in 1797, one educationalist suggested for '...more robust children, water is preferable, and for the weaker ones, small beer ...'. This meant malt was seen as an essential part of dietary health for the poor and taxing it caused widespread dissent.
Smith' sister, Mary Smith, married Dr. William Broughton Davies (1831–1906), a Sierra Leonean physician of Yoruba Liberated African stock. Through his father's second marriage to Ann Spilsbury, the granddaughter of Dr. George Green Spilsbury, a colonial physician, Robert Smith was the half brother of Adelaide Casely- Hayford, a well known Sierra Leonean educationalist and writer. Smith was also the brother-in law of Dr. William Awoonor-Renner, a Sierra Leonean physician and Peter Awoonor-Renner, a Sierra Leonean barrister. Smith had inherited property from his paternal grandfather, Kenneth Macaulay, and owned a house at Gloucester Street.
Group photograph of Marjorie Rackstraw with four other women Marjorie Rackstraw (1888–1981) was an educationalist and social worker. She was a lifelong friend of the prison reformer Margery Fry, Labour Councillor for Hampstead in London, and undertook significant relief work before, during and after the Second World War. Some time after graduating with an arts degree from the University of Birmingham, Marjorie worked as a lecturer in education at the University of Sheffield for several years. She was appointed warden of Masson Hall, University of Edinburgh, in 1924 and General Advisor to Women Students at the University in 1927.
Harris Sam Sahayam Lawrence (; 28 July 1923 – 21 April 2009) was an Indian educationalist born in Nagercoil, Tamil Nadu. As Special Officer for restructuring Educational Pattern in Tamil Nadu and as Director of School Education, Lawrence planned and implemented the All India 10+2+3 pattern of education in 1978. During 1993–1994, Lawrence was Chairman of a High Level Committee on Vocational Education, constituted by the Government of Tamil Nadu, and solved the long-standing problem of salaries for the vocational teachers by raising it and installed a strong management structure for Vocational Education in Tamil Nadu. He was conferred the title of "Father of Vocational Education in Tamil Nadu".
The SRM TRP Engineering College is named after the well-known Educationalist, Philanthropist and Social entrepreneur Dr.T.R.Paarivendhar. The Institution continues the blazing glory in the field of education, deservedly bequeathing it from the SRM Group of Institution. SRM Engineering College is an ISO 9001:2000 certified institution and approved by the All India Council for Technical Education and affiliated to Anna University, Chennai. The College is located on NH-45 at Irungalur near Thiruchirappalli, famous for its Samayapuram Maari Amman Temple and at a distance of about 25 km from Tiruchirappalli, a city well known for its education, industrial development and the connectivity with all parts of the state.
Emanuel Bosák (2 September 1924 – 22 December 2011) was a Czech physical educationalist and sports official. He was born in Jičín, and studied physical education at the Charles University in Prague. He spent his entire career, until 1990, at the Faculty of Physical Education and Sport of the same university; from 1964 to 1967 he served as pro-dean of his faculty. He served as a member of the IAAF European Commission from 1952 to 1970, of the IAAF Council 1968 until 1972, as president of the Czechoslovak Association of Physical Education and the Czechoslovak Olympic Committee from 1967 to 1970 and Minister of Sports from 1969 to 1970.
The Dawn Society was established in July 1902 in Calcutta, British India under the stewardship of Indian educationalist Satish Chandra Mukherjee. The organisation arose in response to agitation against the report of the Indian Universities Commission 1902 which was seen to be align more power within the Colonial settlers. At a time of rising nationalism in India, the Dawn Society, through its magazine of the same name, sought to promote Indian views, achievements, heritage and success. The members of the society included noted intellectuals and intelligentsia of Bengal of the time, including Rabindranath Tagore, Aurobindo Ghosh, Rajendra Prasad, Raja Subodh Chandra Mullick, Radha Kumud Mukherjee and Brajendra Kishore Roychowdhury and others.
Dawn was an English-language magazine launched in 1897 by Bengali Indian educationalist Satish Chandra Mukherjee. The magazine arose at a time of growing nationalism in India and particularly Bengal in the last part of the 19th century, and propagated Mukherjee's views on national education in the context of the emerging nationalist movement in India, and promoted Mukherjee's message of recalling India's cultural and philosophical heritage. The magazine achieved widespread circulation by early 1900s, and particularly criticised the movement towards colonial domination of institutes of higher education that became ratified in the Universities bill, 1904. The magazine was considered a journal of high standard and taste amongst Bengali intelligentsia.
Edith Helen Major, CBE'The New Year Honours' The Times (London, England), January 1, 1931, Issue 45709, p.6 (15 February 1867 – 17 March 1951)'Miss E. H. Major' The Times (London, England), March 19, 1951, Issue 51953, p.8 was an Irish educationalist. Major was born in Lisburn and educated at Methodist College BelfastTHE INTERMEDIATE EXAMINATIONS Freeman's Journal, Friday, September 14, 1883 and Girton College, Cambridge.Girton College Register, 1869–1946: Cambridge; CUP; 1948 She was Assistant Mistress at Blackheath High School from 1891 to 1900; Headmistress of Putney High School from 1891 to 1910; and Head Mistress of King Edward VI High School for Girls from 1910 until 1925.
TAS is a member of Round Square, an international organisation of more than 140 schools worldwide which subscribes to the philosophy of Kurt Hahn (1886-1974), a renowned educationalist, who founded the idea of experiential education through such initiatives as the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award Scheme and Outward Bound. The philosophy is based on five pillars or IDEALS: Internationalism, Democracy, Environment, Adventure, Leadership and Service. The Round Square network affords member schools the opportunity to arrange local and international student and teacher exchanges on a regular basis between their schools. Students and staff also have the opportunity to participate in local and international community service projects and conferences.
Many Muslim community leaders, like the prominent educationalist Syed Ahmed Khan, viewed the Congress negatively, owing to its membership being dominated by Hindus. Orthodox Hindu community and religious leaders were also averse, seeing the Congress as supportive of Western cultural invasion. The ordinary people of India were not informed of or concerned about its existence on the whole, for the Congress never attempted to address the issues of poverty, lack of health care, social oppression, and the prejudiced negligence of the people's concerns by British authorities. The perception of bodies like the Congress was that of an elitist, then educated and wealthy people's institution.
1946 The Boys' Brigade in Malaya started in the state of Penang with the founding of the 1st Penang Company by Mr. Robert Davis with Mr. Geh Hun Kheng, an educationalist, as the Company Captain. The Company was under the sponsorship of Madras Lane Chinese (English Speaking Section) Methodist Church. 1954 From Penang, the BB began to spread to other parts of Malaya beginning with the 1st Kuala Lumpur Company, which was formed under the sponsorship of Wesley Methodist Church, Kuala Lumpur. The movement then began spreading rapidly to other towns and small rural areas of Malaya to meet the needs of the Members.
Efua Theodora Sutherland (27 June 1924 – 21 January 1996) was a Ghanaian playwright, director, dramatist, children's author, poet, educationalist, researcher, child advocate, and cultural activist. Her works include Foriwa (1962), Edufa (1967), and The Marriage of Anansewa (1975). She founded the Ghana Drama Studio, the Ghana Society of Writers,Danquah, Moses, "Ghana, One Year Old: a First Independence Anniversary Review", Accra: Publicity Promotions, 1958. the Ghana Experimental Theatre, and a community project called the Kodzidan (Story House). As the earliest Ghanaian playwright- directorBusby, Margaret, "Efua Sutherland", Daughters of Africa: An International Anthology of Words and Writings by Women of African Descent (1992), Vintage, 1993, p. 314.
Sri Gowthami Educational Institutions are being run under "SGURID & ES". The first institution of SGEIs was started in 2000; "Sri Gowthami Junior College" at Darsi in Prakasam district with few rural villages’ students. Later responding to the civic need, SGURID & ES extended its institutional services to further elaboration of establishing Sri Gowthami Degree College in 2005. Understanding the lack of training colleges or institutions for the teaching and educationalist postulants of Darsi and surrounding Mandals, it started "Sri Gowthami College of Education" in 2006, followed by in the year 2010 started Post Graduate College "Sri Gowthami PG College" and in the succeeding year in 2011, SGEIs started PG Course in Mathematics.
Moves to open a secondary school to service the Swan Hill, Kerang and Quambatook Parishes began in 1981; prior to this Catholic education was only available to primary school children in the area. The school was opened in 1987, having operated classes for students in Years 7 and 8 out of St Mary's Primary School since 1983.MacKillop College Swan Hill , accessed 1 March 2008 Educating young people in remote areas is central to both orders.MacKillop College Swan Hill - AJASS, accessed 7 March 2008 The school is named for the Australian educationalist Mary MacKillop, and the school motto is that of the MacKillop family.
William Smith (22 September 1756 – 31 May 1835) was a leading independent British politician, sitting as Member of Parliament (MP) for more than one constituency. He was an English Dissenter and was instrumental in bringing political rights to that religious minority. He was a friend and close associate of William Wilberforce and a member of the Clapham Sect of social reformers, and was in the forefront of many of their campaigns for social justice, prison reform and philanthropic endeavour, most notably the abolition of slavery. He was the grandfather of pioneer nurse and statistician Florence Nightingale and educationalist Barbara Bodichon, a founder of Girton College, Cambridge.
Thomas Oliver Newnham (20 November 1926 – 15 December 2010) was a New Zealand political activist and educationalist. He was involved in several left wing causes: attacking institutional racism in New Zealand, and opposing the 1981 Springbok Tour and apartheid in general (both carried out in his role as Secretary of CARE). He spoke Cantonese and Mandarin fluently after living in China and was heavily involved in helping Chinese immigrants in his later years. He wrote the book Dr Bethune's Angel: The Life of Kathleen Hall about the New Zealand missionary nurse who worked with the Canadian physician, Dr Norman Bethune, in China in the 1930s.
On the last day of the event, Uncle Pai, a renowned educationalist and creator of Indian comics, in particular the Amar Chitra Katha and Tinkle was presented a Lifetime Achievement Award by Cartoonist Pran, one of the most successful Indian cartoonists, best known as the creator of Chacha Chaudhary. Mumbai Comic Con 2011 The first Comic Con Express was held in Mumbai during weekend of 22 and 23 October 2011. The Comic Con Express is the travelling version of the Annual Indian Comics Convention. The two-day event had 60 participants, 45 exhibits and many interactive sessions, contests and fun events for comic lovers.
Two more, who later survived, were also taken to the Lying-in Hospital at Salford's New Bailey Prison. William Grime's two daughters were among the survivors. Sir James Phillips Kay-Shuttleworth was one of the doctors who helped resuscitate passengers pulled from the river Several surgeons were called to the scene of the accident, including Kinder Wood, Joseph Jordan, and the politician and educationalist James Phillips Kay. His attempts to resuscitate some of the passengers included the use of a hot-bath, and then the use of a pair of bellows into an incision he had made into the wind-pipe; in two instances this proved successful.
Sir Cattamanchi Ramalinga Reddy (10 December 1880 – 24 February 1951), also popularly known as Sir C. R. Reddy, was an educationist and political thinker, essayist and economist, poet and literary critic. He was a prominent member of the Justice Party and an ardent champion of the non-Brahmin movement, joining the movement to unite the non-Brahmin communities. He wrote his works in Telugu and English; these reveal his deep love for Indian classics and his learning in these texts, as well as the modernity of his outlook. Reddy was the educationalist who played a major role in shaping the educational policy in India.
His younger sister was the educationalist Betty Archdale. In 1934 he was in a Broadway production of The Wind and the Rain at the Ritz Theatre, New York City. In 1937 he acted in Jeffrey Dell's play Night Alone at the Embassy Theatre in London, England with Richard Bird, Julian Somers, and Anna Konstam in the cast. In the same year he acted in J. B. Priestley's play Time and the Conways at the Duchess Theatre in London, with Jean Forbes-Robertson, Raymond Huntley, Barbara Everest, Mervyn Johns, Helen Horsey, Eileen Erskine, Wilfred Babbage, Molly Rankin, Rosemary Scott, and Irene Hentschel in the cast.
It was founded in the 1960s on the belief that communications technology could bring high quality degree-level learning to people who had not had the opportunity to attend campus universities. The idea for a "wireless university" was first discussed at the BBC (British Broadcasting Corporation) by the educationalist and historian J.C. Stobbart. From these early beginnings, more ideas came forth until finally the Labour Party under the leadership of Harold Wilson formed an advisory committee to establish an Open University. With the goal of bringing higher education to all those who wanted to access it, the committee came up with various scenarios before settling on the name Open University.
Elizabeth's distant relative, poet and playwright William Congreve Although women were not officially permitted to become members, she was closely connected to the Society for the Propagation of Christian Knowledge; this brought her into contact with wealthy philanthropist and Non-Juror Robert Nelson (1656–1715), whose works were apparently read as homilies at Ledston. Together with Lady Catherine Jones, in 1709 she funded a girls' school in Chelsea, supported by the Society. It is thought to be the first in England that had an all-women Board of Governors. The school and its curriculum was run by Mary Astell (1666–1731), an educationalist sometimes called the first English feminist.
Le Rosey's philosophy is inspired by what Harvard educationalist Howard Gardner has called "multiple intelligences": "its aim is to develop all Roseans’ talents through academic, sporting and artistic programmes." The school offers a demanding bilingual and bicultural education with the language of instruction being French or English depending on the student's academic program; however, students may take many language classes while at Le Rosey. Students may sit either the International Baccalaureate, the most widely recognized pre-university educational program, or the Francophone-oriented French Baccalaureate. To sustain an international atmosphere at Le Rosey, there exists a quota where no more than 10% of the students may come from a single country.
His sister, Sophia Mary Maud Furness (1871–1950), was an authority on the painter Georges de La Tour and published a book on the artist's work in 1949.Georges de la Tour of Lorraine, 1593–1652, by S.M.M. Furness. Published by Routledge and Kegan Paul Ltd, London, 1949 His brother, John Monteith Furness (1869–1944), was a Cambridge Apostle as an undergraduate at King's (from which he also graduated with a first in the Classical Tripos) and later an educationalist, becoming Headmaster of Richmond School, the Kedive School in Cairo and later Director of Egyptian Education in London. He was a close friend of Oscar Browning.
The second of four sisters, Joan Crowfoot was born in 1912 in Giza (Egypt) to the educationalist and archaeologist John Winter Crowfoot (1873–1959) and Molly Crowfoot (nee Hood) (1877–1957). She and her older sister, the future Nobel-prize-winning chemist Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin, attended the Sir John Leman Grammar School in Beccles, Suffolk. From 1929 to 1932 Crowfoot Payne studied at the London School of Medicine for Women but was unable to complete her medical training due to an eye condition. The following year, in 1932–1933, she attended the University of Cambridge as a Research Student on the Diploma Course in Archaeology.
Also at this time, he came into contact with the third great influence of his life, the friendly society movement which gave him a belief in self-help. By his late teens, he had found work with the Ordnance Survey, carrying instruments and taking simple measurements with a firm of surveyors in the Tysoe area; it was while working with the survey that he met Bolton King, the educationalist and sociologist, who was at that time a young Oxford graduate. King had found his vocation in social reform. Through his association with King and his contacts with local Liberalism Joseph began writing on the problems of rural life.
Past lecturers include Odile Crick, wife of Francis Crick, who created the simple iconic image of DNA. The musician Syd Barrett, songwriter and leading guitarist of the band, Pink Floyd is an alumnus. Author Tom Sharpe was a lecturer in History at CCAT between 1963 and 1972 and Anne Campbell, the Labour MP for Cambridge from 1992 to 2005, was formerly a lecturer in Statistics at CCAT. A blue plaque is to be erected to the leading educationalist, Dame Leah Manning in 2019 at the former ragged school in New Street which was acquired by the university in 2006 and converted into the Anglia Ruskin University Institute of Music Therapy.
Appointees hoped that these furnishings would fulfil the main purpose of the school, which was to reduce travelling distances while still providing for scholars from as far afield as Beeston. During a period of intense construction in 1953, Carlton le Willows recruited its first pupils, consisting of two single-sex forms. They were initially educated elsewhere; the boys at the Henry Mellish Grammar School and the girls at the West Brigford Grammar School, until co-educational, on-campus teaching was introduced in September 1954. Carlton le Willows Grammar School was officially opened on 30 June 1956 with a speech from educationalist Sir John Wolfenden.
He has been particularly noted for the influence he had as a youth chaplain and subsequently on those now playing leading roles in the Catholic community such as the evangelist and charismatic Catholic Sr Maria Natella OP and the ministerial adviser and author Francis Davis; and also for his work as an adult educationalist and as an ecumenist. He then served as an assistant priest at the Cathedral and chaplain to St Edmund's comprehensive school in Portsmouth. Four years after ordination he was appointed secretary to Bishop Emery and chancellor. During this time he also worked on the Diocesan Youth Commission, which he later chaired.
In 1841, the Anglo-Catholic Nathaniel Woodard, who was to become a highly influential educationalist in the later part of the 19th century, became the curate of the newly created St. Bartholomew's in Bethnal Green. He was a capable pastoral visitor and established a parochial school. In 1843, he got into trouble for preaching a sermon in which he argued that The Book of Common Prayer should have additional material to provide for confession and absolution and in which he criticised the "inefficient and Godless clergy" of the Church of England. After examining the text of the sermon, the Bishop of London condemned it as containing "erroneous and dangerous notions".
Dienes blocks in use Base ten blocks, also known as multibase arithmetic blocks (MAB) blocks or Dienes blocks (after the mathematician and educationalist Zoltán Pál Dienes who promoted their use), are a mathematical manipulative used by students to learn basic mathematical concepts including addition, subtraction, number sense, place value and counting. The student can manipulate the blocks in different ways to express numbers and patterns. Generally, the 3-dimensional blocks are made of a solid material such as plastic or wood and come in four sizes to indicate their individual place value: Units (one’s place), Longs (ten’s place), Flats (hundred’s place) and Blocks (thousand’s place).Van de Walle, John (2008).
The Ven Arthur William Upcott , DD, MA (6 January 1857 - 22 May 1922) was an Anglican priest and educationalist. He was born in Cullompton on 6 January 1857 “Who was Who” 1897-2007 London, A & C Black, 2007 and educated at Sherborne and Exeter College, Oxford. Ordained in 1886,The Times, Friday, Sep 24, 1886; pg. 6; Issue 31873; col B Ordinations he was Chaplain "The Clergy List, Clerical Guide and Ecclesiastical Directory" London, Hamilton & Co 1889 then Head Master of St Mark's School, Windsor until 1891. He held two further headships: St Edmund's School, Canterbury (1891–1902); and Christ's HospitalChrist’s Hospital ( 1902–1919).
Harold Rosen (25 June 1919 – 31 July 2008) was an American-born British educationalist who lived for most of his life in the UK. His particular field was teaching English, and he eventually became an academic at the Institute of Education, part of London University. He was a communist activist in the 1930s; after World War II, he became an English teacher and later a teacher trainer; he became a major figure in leftwing thinking in education after leaving the Communist Party in 1957; and he played an important part in debates and developments in the fields of language teaching and primary education, particularly in the 1960s and 1970s.
Colin Mills (born 6 January 1951) is a British educationalist and writer on children's literature, literacy and policy research. He has written on children's literacy and literature, including Language and Literacy in the Primary School, (1988) with Margaret Meek, Connecting, Creating: new ideas in Teaching Writing (with Sue Ellis) 2005, and contributions to The Routledge Encyclopedia of Children's Literature (2003), and the International Companion Encyclopedia of Children's Literature' (2007). Later work focused on education policy and research, including the edited collection, with Professors Helen Gunter and David Hall, on Education Policy Research (Bloomsbury, 2014) and Consultants and Consultancy: the case of Education (with Helen Gunter). Springer Publishers, 2017.
The Cannans left the mill in 1916 and it was subsequently rented by the celebrated American actress of the day, Doris Keane. John Haden Badley born 1865, a progressive educationalist and author who founded Bedales School now located in Steep, Hampshire in 1893, lived in Cholesbury after retiring in 1935, having served as headmaster for 42 years. After the death of his wife, Amy he returned to live in the grounds of the school until his death in 1967. General Robert Money after a distinguished military career during the First and Second World War lived in the village from the 1950s until his death in 1985.
Mom Rajawongse Pia Malakul (, 16 April 1867 – 14 February 1917), better known by his noble title Chaophraya Phrasadet Surentharathibodi (), was a Thai educationalist who was influential in the development of Siam's modern education system during the early twentieth century. He served as Minister of Public Instruction under King Vajiravudh from 1912 to 1916, and laid out the country's first formal education plan. He was also a writer; his manual on modern etiquette, Sombat Khong Phudi (Qualities of a Gentleman), is one of his most influential works. In recognition of his contributions to education, the 150th anniversary of his birth was celebrated in association with the UNESCO in 2017.
Heritage School, Cambridge is a mixed independent day school for pupils aged 4–16, located in Cambridge in the English county of Cambridgeshire. The school is housed in three Victorian Buildings within walking distance of Cambridge City Centre, close to the University Botanic Garden, with sports facilities a short distance away. There are approximately 180 pupils, class sizes are small with 16 pupils per class in the Junior school and 18 pupils per class in the Senior school. Heritage School has been influenced by the philosophy and practice of noteworthy Victorian educationalist Charlotte Mason the founder of the PNEU movement at the end of the 19th century.
Back in Indonesia, he remained active, administering the Kindergarten, lecturing, writing, reading widely, and above all fulfilling with love and care all his responsibilities as head of his large extended family, whether in Jakarta or Padang. He was the very model of a Minangkabau Mamak. He did not forget his family in Australia, nor they him, and they were represented at his eightieth birthday five years ago. He was a person of total dedication: to his Islamic Faith, to his ideals as an educationalist in the widest sense of the word, and to the family that was always a central part of his life.
The current Physics department building of Imperial College is named the Blackett Laboratory. Daulat Singh Kothari (Padma Bushan & Padma Vibhushan), Scientific Advisor to Ministry of Defence, Government of India is an Outstanding Physicist, Educationalist and considered as the Architect of Defence Science in India. Founder of most of the DRDO labs in India i.e. Naval Dockyard Laboratory (later renamed Naval Chemical and Metallurgical Laboratory), Mumbai, Indian Naval Physical Laboratory, Kochi, Centre for Fire Research, Delhi, Solid State Physics Laboratory, Delhi, Defence Food Research Laboratory, Mysore, Defence Institute of Physiology and Allied Sciences, Chennai, Directorate of Psychological Research, New Delhi, Defence Electronics Research Laboratory, Hyderabad, Scientific Evaluation Group, Delhi, Terminal Ballistic Research Laboratory, Chandigarh.
Originally launched to be the flagship publication of the Saint Austin Press in 2001, it is now published by St. Augustine's Press. It is distributed by St. Augustine's in North America, and was distributed in Europe by Family Publications before it ceased trading. The journal is trans-atlantic in content, containing material from both America and Europe, although the review tend to lean towards material from America. In addition to the editors, regular contributors have included apologist Fr. Dwight Longenecker, Jesuit Fr. Peter Milward, Fr. James V. Schall, Susan Treacy, educationalist and founder of Chavagnes International College Ferdi McDermott, editor-in-chief of Baronius Press Dr. John Newton, Dr. Patrick Riley, and artist and essayist Jef Murray.
At its sixth session in April 1921, the Sarvadeshak Hindu Sabha formally changed its name to Akhil Bharat Hindu Mahasabha on the model of the Indian National Congress. Presided over by Manindra Chandra Nandi, it amended its constitution to remove the clause about loyalty to the British, and added a clause committing the organisation to a "united and self-governing" Indian nation. Amongst the Mahasabha's early leaders was the prominent nationalist and educationalist Pandit Madan Mohan Malaviya, who founded the Benaras Hindu University, and the Punjabi populist Lala Lajpat Rai. Under Malaviya, the Mahasabha campaigned for Hindu political unity, for the education and economic development of Hindus as well as for the conversion of Muslims to Hinduism.
Abhayanand is an IPS officer and educationalist who, along with Anand Kumar, conceptualised Super 30 to teach poor students to crack IIT JEE. Following his graduation from Patna Science College, Abhayanand was selected as the IPS officer for the Bihar cadre after clearing UPSC Civil Services Examination in 1977. He was the ADG (headquarters) in 2006 and as such he concentrated on the speedy trial of Arms Act cases in Bihar. Later, during his tenure as the ADG of Bihar Military Police, Patna, he motivated the constables to donate from their salaries to convert a dilapidated government hospital into a modern nursing home with state-of-the-art facilities for treatment of the police force and their family members.
He points to educationalist Anant Pai's work with an elementary school in White Bear Lake, Minnesota as well as University of Washington's Foldit program. He counters the argument that the immersive environment of video games don't teach the right kind of attention by pointing to the concept of fluid intelligence. Zichermann believes the intense mental engagement of video games is tied to the dopamine released in game participants as the players receive rewards in game. Zichermann also refutes the idea that gamification is necessarily pernicious or simply a fad by pointing to the positive results of gamification applied outside of the entertainment industry, although he has acknowledged that a dark side does exist to this technology.
Among them are Timothy Bazarrabusa (RIP) an educationalist who served as Uganda's first High Commissioner to London, Amon Bazira (RIP), who served as Director of Intelligence, as Chair of the Security & Defence Parliamentary Committee, and as State Minister of Lands, Waters and Mineral resources in Uganda from 1981–85. Gen. James Kazini (RIP) was commander of the Uganda people's defense force, Lt Col Jet Mwebaze (RIP) a commander within the UPDF. Other notable Basongora include the Noble Sirasi Kisankara (RIP), The Prophet Yombo Yowasi [RIP], the Rwabukurukuru family, Wilson Isingoma, Boaz Kafuda, Prof. Mbabi-Katana, Enoch Rukidi, Kosia Mpazi (RIP), the Rwamashonje family, the Rubuubi family, the Rwakashamba family, Yefesi Saiba, and Ananais Mulumba.
Established in 1882, and initially located in Byng Place, It initially catered for female students (having been co-founded by educationalist and suffragist Annie Leigh Browne, Mary Stewart Kilgour, Mary Browne (Lady Lockyer) and Henrietta Müller)Jane Martin, ‘Browne, Annie Leigh (1851–1936)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 12 Jan 2017 The first Principal was Eleanor Grove who arranged for lease of the house in Byng Place, assisted by Rosa Morison, who volunteered to take the posts with no salary. College Hall was incorporated into the University of London in 1910. It moved to nearby Malet Street in 1932. College Hall provides 357 rooms to women and men.
Gilman was born on July 3, 1860, in Hartford, Connecticut, to Mary Perkins (formerly Mary Fitch Westcott) and Frederic Beecher Perkins. She had only one brother, Thomas Adie, who was fourteen months older, because a physician advised Mary Perkins that she might die if she bore other children. During Charlotte's infancy, her father moved out and abandoned his wife and children, and the remainder of her childhood was spent in poverty. Since their mother was unable to support the family on her own, the Perkins were often in the presence of her father's aunts, namely Isabella Beecher Hooker, a suffragist; Harriet Beecher Stowe, author of Uncle Tom's Cabin and Catharine Beecher, educationalist.
Its activities came to an end in 1939, though after the war the New London Film Society was something of a successor body. The national body for film societies in the UK is the British Federation of Film Societies (BFFS). Most university and college students' unions have film societies, including the Warwick Student Cinema at University of Warwick, St. John's College Film Society at St. John's College, Cambridge, University of Cambridge, and one of the country's oldest UCLU Film & TV Society at University College London. In 2006, FILMCLUB was launched by BAFTA award- winning filmmaker Beeban Kidron and educationalist Lindsay Mackie to open up the world of film to primary and secondary school children in the UK.
See also R.A.D. Markham, A Rhino in High Street (Ipswich Borough Council, 1991); J. Russell-Gebbett, Henslow of Hitcham: Botanist, Educationalist and Clergyman (Lavenham 1977). His drawing of William John Burchell dated 1854 was engraved by M. & N. Hanhart. The complete name list is: His Royal Highness Prince Albert, George Biddell Airy, George Allman, David Thomas Ansted, Robert Ball, Sir Henry T. de la Beche, Thomas Bell, Sir John Boileau, Charles Lucien Bonaparte, James Scott Bowerbank, The Marquis of Bristol, Robert Brown, Very Rev. William Buckland, William Carpenter, Sir William Cubitt, John Curtis, Edward Doubleday, Charles Darwin, Michael Faraday, Edward Forbes, Edward Forster, John Gould, Robert Edmond Grant, John Edward Gray, William Henry Harvey, Rev.
Martin Joseph Newell (Máirtín Ó Tnúthail) (1910 - 1985) was an Irish mathematician and educationalist, who served as President of University College Galway from 1960 to 1975. Martin J. Newell was born in 1910, and received his secondary education at St. Joseph's College, Galway, before entering University College Galway (UCG).The History of Mathematics: David R. Wilkins, Trinity College, Dublin Dr. Martin J. Newell (1910-1985) by Sean Tobin He was auditor of the College's Literary and Debating Society for the 1928-1929 session, and graduated with a B.Sc. in 1929 and an M.Sc. in 1930, both with first class honours. He then proceeded to St. John's College, Cambridge, where he spent three years engaged in research on quantum theory.
Konstantin Miladinov (right), together with the Bulgarian national activists Lyuben Karavelov and Petar Hadzhipeev in Moscow, 1858. The two brothers' educationalist activity and deaths ensured them a worthy place in the history of the Bulgarian cultural movement and the Bulgarian national liberation struggle in the 19th century. The brothers are known also for their keen interest in Bulgarian folk poetry as a result of which the collection "Bulgarian Folk Songs" appeared. The songs were collected between 1854 and 1860 mostly by the elder brother, Dimitar, who taught in several Macedonian towns (Ohrid, Struga, Prilep, Kukush and Bitola) and was able to put into writing the greater part of the 660 folk songs.
Evan Davies (26 June 1826 - 22 August 1872) was a Welsh educationalist. He was born in the Llanycrwys area of Carmarthenshire, and attended school at Llansawel, where he was taught by William Davies (1805–1859). He later studied in Alfred Day's school, Bristol, and in Glasgow, on a scholarship, from where he graduated and obtained his M.A.; in 1852 he was awarded an LL.D. For a time he taught at the new Voluntaryist college (set up without government assistance) for teachers in Brecon (1846), where after a period of training, he was appointed principal. It later became "Swansea Training College", for women teachers, and Davies moved there with the institution, remaining for the rest of his life in Swansea.
Mayor Ngwasoh Abel Langsi, originally a trained educationalist and a science teacher, was elected in July 2007 along with 4 deputy mayors and 35 councillors. His term of office runs up until 2014. The Mayor has demonstrated an interest in pursuing sustainable development in Bafut, working on empowering local Cameroonian youth through the creation of Green Jobs and developing projects such as the Bafut Ecovillage project and the Green Heart of Bafut conceived with Ecovillage Designer Joshua Konkankoh. The latter programme (through its extensive reforestation projects, especially on the upper mountain slopes) has intended to combat severe soil erosion and re-establish degraded water catchments, and thus to protect the huge farmlands located in the lower valleys of Bafut.
The Royal Coat of Arms, which is that of Queen Elizabeth I, was erected in the courtroom in 1589. An "inner room" for the storage of court records was created in 1616. The last quarter sessions were held in the courtroom in 1951 and the last petty sessions, by then known as magistrates' courts, were held there in 1985. The council chamber was the meeting place of the municipal borough of Much Wenlock which was incorporated under the Municipal Corporations Act 1835; it was fitted out with ornate Jacobean style panelling which had been retrieved from a local country house and installed at the expense of the educationalist, William Penny Brookes in 1848.
Chris Sarra is an Australian educationalist, and the founder and Chairman of the Stronger Smarter Institute. Sarra grew up in Bundaberg, Queensland as the youngest of ten children to parents of Italian and Aboriginal heritage, and he experienced first-hand many of the issues faced by Indigenous students throughout their schooling. In 1998, Sarra became the first Aboriginal Principal of Cherbourg State School in South East Queensland where his leadership, in his own opinion, improved the educational outcomes of its students. In 2005, Sarra left as principal of Cherbourg School, and in 2006, with the support of the Queensland government, he established the Indigenous Education Leadership Institute, the forerunner to the Stronger Smarter Institute.
The Woodroffe School was the brain-child of MBE, JP, a prominent local landowner and educationalist who, in 1932 supervised the construction of the original building on the hillside site overlooking the harbour town of Lyme Regis. For the first thirty years, the school was a small mixed Grammar School drawing students from a wide rural and coastal area of West Dorset and East Devon. In 1950, a decision was taken to add boarding houses to the school with strong links being formed with Armed Services parents and those working overseas. In 1962 the Grammar School was reorganised into an 11 - 18 mixed Comprehensive School serving two-hundred square miles or so around Lyme Regis.
Geoffrey Douglas Langlands CMG, MBE, HI, SPk (21 October 1917 – 2 January 2019) was a British educationalist who spent most of his life teaching in and leading schools in Pakistan, instructing many of the country's elite. In World War II he served as a Major in the British Army, and afterwards in the British Indian Army, where he worked to keep the peace during the partition of the British Indian Empire in 1947. He transferred to the Pakistani Army at the birth of the country, and returned to a career in education, first of army officers. Then, at the invitation of the President, he joined the so-called "Eton of Pakistan", Aitchison College in Lahore.
The castle seen from St Donat's Church Hearst died in August 1951. The castle remained on the market for the following decade until bought in 1960 by Antonin Besse II, son of the late Sir Antonin Besse, and donated to the founding council of Atlantic College. Besse was a patron and honorary vice- president of the United World Colleges. The idea for an international school arose from a meeting between the educationalist Kurt Hahn, who founded Gordonstoun, and Air Marshal Sir Lawrence Darvall, the commandant of the NATO Defense College. They conceived of a college for 16–19-year-old students drawn from a wide range of nationalities, with the aim of fostering international understanding.
William Penny Brookes (13 August 1809 – 11 December 1895) was an English surgeon, magistrate, botanist, and educationalist especially known for inspiring the modern Olympic Games, the Wenlock Olympian Games and for his promotion of physical education and personal betterment. Motivated by the plight of the working classes, he founded the Wenlock Agricultural Reading Society (WARS) in 1841 for the "diffusion of useful knowledge" which included a library for working-class subscribers. Interest groups called "classes" met at the Corn Exchange, the WARS headquarters, and in 1850, the Olympian Class was formed to encourage athletic exercises, ranging from running to football, by holding an annual games offering prizes for sports competitions. Later, competitions for "cultural" events were added.
The history of AVM High School is linked with the history of the late Satya Narayan Bahadur Shrestha, who is regarded by many as a selfless educationalist who spent his whole life in the field of education. With 120 students at a rented building known as Bhairab Bhavan (which was later acquired by the Himalaya Hotel at Kupondol, Lalitpur, Nepal), AVM High School has six modern buildings, three playgrounds, and two basketball courts. The school offers education from grade 1 to School Leaving Certificate level (equivalent to O levels offered by University of Cambridge). AVM High School has also been conducting a 10+2 program since 2058 B.S., in the fields of Science and Management.
Marschall von Bieberstein's government also changed the rules so as to permit legal cases against the tax authorities. Inter-denominational marriages between Catholics and Lutherans were no longer prohibited. Some years later, in 1817, based on the detailed work of the lawyer-educationalist Carl Ibell, and with the enthusiastic (and very necessary) backing of Marschall von Bieberstein, education provision was removed from church control and interdenominational schooling was introduced. A wide range of administrative reforms included the imposition of "trading tax" ("Gewerbesteuer") on all persons deemed to earn a living through "work and industry" (§ 31 of the Edict on Taxes of February 1809) which included government officers, lawyers, physicians and private tutors.
Platforms Piece, Brixton station, 2011 Kevin Atherton (born 1950) is a Manx artist with an international practice who since 1999 has been based in Ireland. His work includes performance, sculpture, film and video, installation and site-specific public art. Before moving to Ireland with his late wife (married in Worcestershire 1977), the educationalist Vicky Robinson (1950-2005), Atherton had lived and worked in London for twenty-five years teaching part-time at The Slade School of Fine Art (UCL), the Royal College of Art and Middlesex Polytechnic having first been an invigilator at the Whitechapel Gallery for five years.Atherton, K. (2005) REWIND Artists' Video in the 70's and 80's p.
António de Sena Faria de Vasconcelos Azevedo (1880–1939) was a Portuguese educator and educationalist. Faria de Vasconcelos studied law in Coimbra before going to study at the New University of Brussels in 1902 . Like many Portuguese teachers in the first half of the twentieth century, he spent some time at the Rousseau Institute in Geneva,Carlos Alberto de Magalhães Gomes Mota, António Sérgio: Pedagogo e Político, 2000 where he was a student of Édouard Claparède.Faria de Vasconcelos, António de Sena · 1880 - 1939 He was headmaster of an experimental school at Bierges-les-Wavre, though the school did not survive World War I, and a professor at the New University of Brussels.
Harold Drasdo (21 February 1930 – 3 September 2015) was an English rock climber, writer and educationalist. Drasdo was born in Bradford, Yorkshire, England. He began rock climbing just after World War II and became a founding member of a loose association of young climbers from the area who came to be known as "the Bradford Lads". Active throughout the United Kingdom, particularly the gritstone edges of Yorkshire and Derbyshire, the fells of the English Lake District, and the mountains of North Wales. Harold climbed regularly in the late 1940s and 1950s with most of the leading northern rock climbers of the day including Joe Brown and members of the famous Rock and Ice Club.
This longstanding practice was only revealed in 1985, and by the time Rosen requested access to his files, they had been destroyed.; In 1974, Mind Your Own Business, his first book of poetry for children, was published. In due course, Rosen established himself with his collections of humorous verse for children, including Wouldn't You Like to Know, You Tell Me and Quick Let's Get Out of Here. Educationalist Morag Styles has described Rosen as "one of the most significant figures in contemporary children's poetry" and one of the first poets "to draw closely on his own childhood experiences and to 'tell it as it was' in the ordinary language children actually use".
The Online Encyclopaedia of Informal Education. Although pedagogy was early on concerned with changing social conditions through education – Rousseau is most famous for his Social Contract (1762) – its primary focus had been on the individual and his or her upbringing, which Rousseau had aimed to protect from the negative influences of society. Pedagogic thinkers like Pestalozzi and later on Montessori followed in his tradition of developing a child-centred pedagogy, which was increasingly criticised by an emerging school of thought that promoted a pedagogy focused on the collective, on the community and how to use pedagogic ideas for social betterment – or a social pedagogy, as the German educationalist Karl Mager had written in 1844 for the first time.
Sir Henry Cubitt Gooch (7 December 1871 – 15 January 1959) was a British barrister, educationalist and Conservative politician. Henry Cubitt Gooch was the second son of Charles Cubitt Gooch and Mary Blake, and an older brother to George Peabody Gooch. He was born in Paddington and educated at Eton College and Trinity College, Cambridge before being called to the bar at the Inner Temple. He had a keen interest in education, and was a member of the London School Board from 1897 until its abolition in 1904.Obituary: Sir Henry Gooch, 19 January 1959, p. 10 In 1907 he was elected to the London County Council, representing Dulwich for the Conservative-supported Municipal Reform Party.
Shadrach Pryce was a Welsh Anglican priestWelsh Biography On-line and educationalist "Gender stereotyping and the training of female elementary school teachers: the experience of Victorian Wales" Evans,W.G:History of Education, Volume 21, Issue 2 June 1992 , pages 189 - 204 in the last part of the 19th century and the first decade of the 20th. Pryce was born in Dolgellau, Merionethshire“Who was Who” 1897-2007 London, A & C Black, 2007 the son of Hugh Price (1793-1851), a draper, and educated at Queens’ College, Cambridge. Ordained in 1863,"The Clergy List, Clerical Guide and Ecclesiastical Directory" London, Hamilton & Co 1889 he began his career as a teacher at Dolgelly Grammar School after which he was Rector of Yspytty then Vicar of Llanfihangel Aberbythych.
St Mary's College was originally established as St Mary's Hall in 1918, catering to women primarily from the country, and directly affiliated with the nearby male-only Newman College.St Mary's College: History Formerly housed in a stately home on the Avenue in Parkville known as 'Barbiston', the college moved to its present location in 1966. It was in that year, following the approval of Archbishop Daniel Mannix, that it became independent - a college in its own right - under the inspired leadership of Mother Francis Frewin. A renowned educationalist with a great love of English and French literature, Mother Frewin was a noted art expert and established the college's excellent fine art collection, as well its comprehensive academic library, before her retirement in 1969.
The immediate cause, however, was the Ministry of Education's decision to appoint some 100 senior assistants and supervisors to Chinese-medium primary schools. Concerns were raised by Chinese politicians and organizations that those appointed were Chinese who were not Chinese-educated, implying that students and parents might be forced to use English or Malay to communicate with the school personnel. Chinese educationalist groups contended that the move would limit the usage of Chinese in these schools. On 11 October 1987, a 2,000-strong gathering was held by the United Chinese School Committees Association of Malaysia (UCSCAM, the association of Chinese school teachers and trustees, also known as Dong Jiao Zong) at the Hainanese Association Building beside the Thean Hou Temple in Kuala Lumpur.
In keeping with his convictions, from January until March 1947, Oorthuys, accompanied by his writer the educationalist Albert de la Court, travelled through Java and Borneo in Indonesia commissioned by ABC- Press and the publishing house Contact. In July 1947 the resulting book Een staat in wording (A Nascent State), promoted a peaceful solution to the Indonesian struggle for independence, and reviews reveal its impact on changing attitudes to the colony as the Netherlands tried to re-exert its control,Beb Vuijk, 'De Republik Indonesia: een staat in wording', In De Vrije Katheder, 25 June 1947. but before the book appeared, the violent Indonesian National Revolution was in full swing. From 1945 to 1975 he produced numerous books and reports on the post-war reconstructionKempers, B. (1998).
In 1934, through his lectures in London to the New Education Fellowship, Hahn met the educationalist T. C. Worsley and persuaded him to spend a summer term at the newly founded Gordonstoun in the capacity of consultant. In his memoir Flannelled Fool: A Slice of a Life in the Thirties, Worsley records his impressions of Hahn's penetrating character analysis, and his energy and commitment in the cause of human development, but as time went on he became critical of Hahn's "despotic, overpowering personality": > He revealed himself as having a fierce temper, a strong hand with the cane, > and a temperament which hated being crossed. Especially damaging to my very > English view, was his dislike of being defeated at any game. Hahn was an > avid tennis player.
Ralph Ignatius Thomas Alles (3 October 1932 − 28 November 2013) was a Sri Lankan educationalist. He served as the State Secretary for Ministry of Education from 1989 to 1993, was the founding principal and creator of D. S. Senanayake College Colombo 07, and was the founder of the Gateway Group and acted as its chairman until his death.President Rajapaksa pays his last respects to R.I.T. Alles Alles was educated at St. Aloysius' College, Galle and later moved to prestigious St. Anthony's College. He started his career as a teacher, eventually becoming an assistant principal at Royal College Colombo R.I.T. Alles passes away in Colombo, a leading public school in Sri Lanka, and helped to establish D. S. Senanayake College, Colombo.
In 1962, the school was founded by the German educationalist Kurt Hahn, who had previously set up Gordonstoun School in Scotland and the Schule Schloss Salem as well as the Stiftung Louisenlund in Germany. Hahn founded the institutions as a practical response to the search for new and peaceful solutions in a post-war world riven by political, racial and economic divisions. Hahn had been invited to address the NATO Defence College, where he saw former enemies from several nations working together towards a common goal. With a number of colleagues Hahn realised how much more could be done to overcome the hostility of the Cold War if young people from different nations could be brought together in a similar way.
By the time of her retirement at the end of 1944 she had taught at the school for more than fifty years. In the south of the country the Welsh language was in retreat due to the large-scale immigration from England that accompanied industrialisation, and Edwards became conscious of a shortage of appropriate published children's literature, which she remedied for her own purposes by writing short stories that she could read to her classes. During the early twentieth century the polymath-educationalist Owen Morgan Edwards, one of whose varied functions was as a schools inspector, came across her at work and urged her to publish. The result, for Fanny Winifred Edwards, was a sixty-year career as a published author.
Three years later, she began an apprenticeship at a teaching seminary. In 1853 she became the wife of writer and actor Ernst Dohm (Elias Levy; 1819–1883), editor-in-chief of the Kladderadatsch satirical magazine, with whom she had five children: # Hans Ernst (1854–1866), the only son # Gertrude Hedwig Anna (1855–1942), married the mathematician Alfred Pringsheim (1850–1941) # Ida Marie Elisabeth "Else" (1856–1922) # Marie Pauline Adelheid (1858–?) # Eva (1859–?) By her daughter Gertrude Hedwig, she became grandmother of Katharina "Katia" Pringsheim (1883–1980), the wife of Thomas Mann, and of the musician Klaus Pringsheim, Sr. (1883–1972). Bt another daughter, Marie Pauline Adelheid, she became grandmother of Hedda Korsch, a communist activist and educationalist who married Karl Korsch.
Cognitive scientist and usability engineer Donald Norman used learned helplessness to explain why people blame themselves when they have a difficult time using simple objects in their environment. The UK educationalist Phil Bagge describes it as a learning avoidance strategy caused by prior failure and the positive reinforcement of avoidance such as asking teachers or peers to explain and consequently do the work. It shows itself as sweet helplessness or aggressive helplessness often seen in challenging problem solving contexts such as learning to computer program. How-to-rid- your-primary-computing-classes-of-learned-helplessness The US sociologist Harrison White has suggested in his book Identity and Control that the notion of learned helplessness can be extended beyond psychology into the realm of social action.
Though not a qualified medical practitioner, Vijayan worked for many years as a pro bono counsellor, using Freudian techniques. Many writers, intellectuals, journalists and political activists have described him as an intellectual mentor. The November 2007 issue of Samayam Masika was devoted to articles by a variety of public figures about Vijayan and his influence, both on them personally and upon others, including M. T. Vasudevan Nair (writer, film director, Jnanpith Award winner), N .Prabhakaran (writer, academic), Mohanan Cherukadu (writer), Appukkuttan Vallikkunnu (journalist), P. Surendran (writer), Dr. Abdul Azeez (Doctor), Kunhappa Pattanoor (poet), Umesh Babu K.C. (Poet and political activist), A. V. Pavitran (writer), Anil Kumar A. V. (journalist, political activist), Vatsalan Vatuseeri (writer), Prabhakaran Pazhassi (writer, Professor), Choorayi Chandran (Political activist, Educationalist), N. Shasidharan (writer).
He associated closely with other Fellows of the Royal Society, including Isaac Newton. JJ Bodmer and his friend Johann Jakob Breitinger (1701–1776) were among the most prominent purely literary writers in the city. Another famous Zürich writer was Solomon Gesner, the pastoral poet, and yet another was JK Lavater, now best remembered as a supporter of the view that the face presents a perfect indication of character and that physiognomy may therefore he treated as a science. Other well-known Zürich names are those of JH Pestalozzi (1746–1827), the educationalist, of Hans Caspar Hirzel (1725–1803), another of the founders of the Helvetic Society, and of Johann Georg Sulzer (1720–1779), whose chief work is one on the laws of art or aesthetics.
John McGlashan buildings in 2009 John McGlashan College is a state integrated boarding and day school for boys, located in the suburb of Maori Hill in Dunedin, New Zealand. The school currently caters for students from years 7 to 13, including 120 boarders and up to 30 international students.John McGlashan College-Introduction (accessed:10 August 2016) The school is named after John McGlashan, a significant Presbyterian lawyer, politician, public servant and educationalist, and was founded after his daughters' gift of the family home and estate in 1918 on the provision that a Presbyterian school was established for boys.Dictionary of New Zealand Biography- John McGlashan (accessed:12-06-2007) Originally established as a Presbyterian private school, John McGlashan College integrated into the state system in 1989.
Sir John Whitmore receiving a Lifetime Achievement Award from the International Association of Coaching After leaving racing and the world of motor-sports, he became interested in transpersonal psychology and its emphasis on the principle of will, intention, or responsibility. He went on to apply his learning and skills first to the world of sport and then to business. In 1970, he studied at the Esalen Institute in Slates Hot Springs, California, with the likes of William Schutz (creator of team development model FIRO-B), and then trained with Harvard educationalist and tennis expert Timothy Gallwey, who created the Inner Game methodology of performance coaching. Sir John founded the Inner Game in Britain in 1979 with a small team of Inner Game coaches trained by Gallwey.
The school UWC Red Cross Nordic (UWCRCN), formerly known as Red Cross Nordic United World College, was founded in 1995 and is the ninth member of the today 18 United World Colleges, others having been established in Wales, Canada, Hong Kong, Italy, India, Singapore, Swaziland, United States, Costa Rica, the Netherlands, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Germany, Armenia, China, Thailand, Japan, and Tanzania. Patrons of the college and the movement include Nelson Mandela, Her Majesty Queen Noor of Jordan and Queen Sonja of Norway. The first college, UWC Atlantic College, was established by the German educationalist Kurt Hahn to promote international understanding and peace. Students are selected by UWC National Committees or selection contacts in over 150 countries on merit and many receive full scholarships.
1221–1254) and his relatives, the late Byzantine historian Doukas,. and the megas papias Demetrios Doukas Kabasilas in the mid-14th century.. The name spread far and wide across the Greek-speaking world as well as in Albania, and remains fairly common to this day. Among the more notable bearers of the Doukas name in the post-Byzantine period were the 16th-century Cretan scholar Demetrius Ducas, the 17th-century rulers of Moldavia George Ducas and Constantine Ducas (their descent is variously given as Greek, Vlach or Albanian) or the 19th-century scholar and educationalist Neophytos Doukas.. Several variations also developed, such as Doukakes (Δουκάκης) (cf. former Massachusetts state governor Michael Dukakis), Doukopoulos (Δουκόπουλος), Doukatos (Δουκάτος), Makrodoukas or Makrydoukas (Μακροδούκας/Μακρυδούκας), etc.
R. Prabhu was born on 31 May 1947 to eminent Coimbatore based educationalist and industrialist P. R. Ramakrishnan and R. Rajeshwari. His father P. R. Ramakrishnan was the first Indian Alumni of MIT Sloan School of Management and a graduate of Massachusetts Institute of Technology, United States who founded Madras Aluminum Company, South India Viscose, Coimbatore Institute of Technology and many other textile industries and two time Member of Parliament representing Indian National Congress from Coimbatore for the 3rd Lok Sabha during the 1962 General Elections and Pollachi for the 2nd Lok Sabha during the 1957 General Elections. He is also the grandson of eminent industrialist and Indian Civil Service officer Velagapudi Ramakrishna, who founded the KCP group of Industries in Chennai on the maternal side.
Paul Stephen Farmer is a retired British educationalist who developed the use of pop music in school music education in the 1970s, and is reputed to be the first to devise a public examination in the UK exclusively in pop music.A Place for Pop, Times Educational Supplement 16.7.1976, pp 31 & 33; Pop Music in the Secondary School, Music in Education (Novello & Co Ltd) Sept/Oct 1976 vol 40 no 381 page 217 (also mentioned by Lucy Green on pg 151 of Music on deaf ears, 1988 Manchester University Press 0-7190-2647-4); Pop Music in School Studies, Australia Daily News, 19 May 1976 He wrote several music education books and became a London comprehensive school head teacher at the age of 33.
Clarence Edward Beeby (16 June 1902 – 10 March 1998), most commonly referred to as C.E. Beeby or simply Beeb, was a New Zealand educationalist and psychologist. He was influential in the development of the education system in New Zealand, first as a director of the New Zealand Council for Educational Research (NZCER) from 1936, and then as Director of Education (head of the Ministry of Education) from 1940, initially under the First Labour Government. He also served as ambassador to France and on the UNESCO executive. Beeby's wife Beatrice was one of the founders of the New Zealand Playcentre movement, and his son was the distinguished New Zealand diplomat and international lawyer, Chris Beeby, portrayed in Ben Affleck's film, Argo.
After the war there was a growing concern about the development of boys, due to the gap between leaving school at 15 and entering National Service at 18. Against this backdrop The Duke of Edinburgh's Award was set up in 1956, by Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh; Kurt Hahn, a German educationalist; and John Lord Hunt, leader of the first successful ascent of Mount Everest. The Award Programme was introduced in Israel in 1986 by Yehuda Arel, who perceived it to be a practical challenge to Israeli youth. The Programme is operated in Israel as a not-for-profit organisation chaired by Nathan Wolloch, Deputy Mayor of Tel Aviv-Yafo, in a joint effort with the Ministry of Education, Youth and Society Administration.
In 1938 he moved to Cornwall to develop his artistic skills, and came under the influence of Dr Frank Turk, an Exeter University educationalist, and attended lectures on philosophy, ancient cultures and the arts. A son, Paul, and daughter, Janet (who later adopted the name Greta), were born in Cornwall. In the Second World War Berlin registered as a conscientious objector, and worked in the market garden established by the art critic Adrian Stokes at Little Park Owles, Carbis Bay, outside St Ives, where he met fellow artists Ben Nicholson and Barbara Hepworth. He also began research into the naive artist Alfred Wallis, and his book, the first profile to be written, was eventually published by Tambimuttu's Poetry London in 1949.
Elinor Violet Goldschmied ( Sinnott; 15 December 1910 – 27 February 2009) was an English educationalist. Educated at the London School of Economics and qualified as a psychiatric social worker, she worked in an Italian state institution for illegitimate and abandoned children before moving to a home for single mothers in Milan, overseeing changes to the education of children and the training of staff, leading to a transformation of childcare in Italy. Goldschmied developed the concept of "heuristic play" as a means of relax play for babies under the age of two and for maintaining a special relationship with an individual member of staff. She also introduced a "treasure basket" containing non-dangerous household items in a low, open basket, an exploration task that was designed not to have any physical intervention from an overseeing adult.
In 1991 he was elected president of the Philology Section of the Philosophy School and in 2000 he was elected rector of Athens University, a position he held until 2006. He is also president of the Arsakeio-Tositseio Schools Educationalist Society (Φιλεκπαιδευτική Εταιρεία Αρσακείων-Τοσιτσείων Σχολείων), president of the management council of the Greek Civilization Foundation (Ίδρυμα Ελληνικού Πολιτισμού) and president of the Athens Linguistics Society (Γλωσσική Εταιρεία των Αθηνών). In 2009 he was assigned manager of the Council of Primary and Secondary Education (Συμβούλιο Πρωτοβάθμιας και Δευτεροβάθμιας Εκπαίδευσης) and he works on the changes of the examinations system in Greek secondary schools (Lyceums) that allow students to undertake tertiary education. He frequently writes articles for the daily newspaper To Vima and was also scientific advisor for the Greek public television stations.
Hoàng Xuân Hãn (Đức Thọ, 1908 – Paris, 10 March 1996) was a Vietnamese professor of mathematics, linguist, historian and educationalist. He was Minister of Education in the short-lived 1945 cabinet of historian Trần Trọng Kim and drafted and issued the first Vietnamese education program.Hoang Van Dao Viet Nam Quoc Dan Dang 2008 Page 232 "After meeting with Khâm Sai Phan, Kế Toại and Doctor Nguyễn Xuân Chữ, Hoàng Xuân Hãn telegraphed Huế and proposed that the Prime Minister issue a decree to form a political institution, the North Vietnam Political Directors Committee ..." Like many of the academics in the five-month Trần Trọng Kim government, afterwards Hãn returned to academic studies. He was the first Vietnamese historian to fully study the history of Nôm texts by the 17th Century Jesuits such as Girolamo Maiorica.
Sir Harold Charles Shearman (14 March 1896 - 24 March 1984) was a British socialist politician and educationalist, who served as chair of both the London County Council and Greater London Council. Shearman attended Sulgrave National School, then Magdalen College School, Brackley, Wolsingham Grammar School, and finally St Edmund Hall, Oxford, from which he graduated with a first-class honours degree in modern history. In 1912, he became an elementary school teacher in Durham, but he left in 1915 to serve in World War I. He first served with the Royal Army Medical Corps, and then with the Royal Air Force, within which he was a flying officer (observer). After the war, Shearman became active in the Labour Party, and at the 1922 UK general election, he unsuccessfully contested the Isle of Wight.
Harendra Coomar Mukherjee (03/10/1887–07/08/1956), also spelt as H.C. Mukhherjee or H.C. Mukherjee or H.C. Mukherji or H.C. Mukherjee, was the Vice- President of the Constituent Assembly of India for drafting the Constitution of India before Partition of India, and the third Governor of West Bengal after India became a republic with partition into India and Pakistan. He was an educationalist, prominent Christian leader of Bengal, and was the chairman of the Minority rights committee and Provincial constitution committee of the Constituent Assembly—consisting of indirectly elected representatives to draft the Constitution of India, including for provinces of present Pakistan and Bangladesh (then East Bengal) – the assembly considered only Muslims and Sikhs as religious minorities – after India became republic, the same Constituent Assembly became the first Parliament of India in 1947.
Photo of church After this he was Warden of the Trinity College Mission, Camberwell and after that Rural Dean of Kingston before his elevation to the Episcopate. Even though he had retired from Woolwich in 1947, curiously the Archbishop of Canterbury recommended him for the vacant see of Portsmouth in 1948, because Lang was ‘an excellent preacher and a safe pair of hands’. The Prime Minister’s Secretary, however, regraded Lang’s health as ‘doubtful’ and 42 year old Launcelot Fleming was appointed.TNA PREM5/406 A keen educationalist,Report of the Primary Committee of the National Society Lang continued to serve the Church as an Assistant Bishop of Winchester, Archdeacon of Winchester and a Canon Residentiary at Winchester Cathedral until his retirement in 1962; he died on 12 March 1974.
In addition to his son William F. De Saussure, notable relatives of Henry William de Saussure include his grandfather's brother César-François de Saussure (1705-1783), foreign service attaché and social commentator; European cousins Horace-Bénédict de Saussure (1740-1799), Swiss naturalist, Albertine Necker de Saussure (1766-1841), Swiss writer, educationalist, and advocate of education for women, Ferdinand de Saussure (1857-1913), Swiss linguist, and Éric de Saussure (1925-2007), Swiss artist and member of the Taizé Community. Other American descendants include grandson Wilmot Gibbes de Saussure (1822-1886), South Carolina militia general and South Carolina Secretary of the Treasury during the American Civil War and Arthur Ravenel, Jr. (1927-), a member of the United States Congress who represented the First Congressional District of South Carolina from 1987 to 1995.
In 1908 liberal educationalist introduced the use of demotic as the language of instruction in the newly founded Municipal Girls' High School of Volos and thereby achieved considerable improvement in test scores and pupil satisfaction. Katharevousa was still on the curriculum, but for the first time in a Greek school the girls were encouraged to express themselves freely in written demotic. Reminiscing a few years later, Delmouzos related how the girls moved from a state of ragiadismos (enslavement: a term implying the mentality of subjection to the Turks during the Ottoman period) to "spiritual/intellectual and moral xesklavoma" (liberation).Delmouzos, Alexandros 1913. 'Tria chronia daskalos', (part 1), Deltio tou Ekpaideftikou Omilou 3: 1-27 Putting aside Katharevousa, a "mask for the soul", they were able to "externalise their inner logos".
Dina Iordanova (born 1960) is an educationalist and Professor of Film Studies at the University of St. Andrews.The University consistently ranks in the top ten British Universities in the League tables of British universities and in The Times Good University Guide A specialist in world cinema, her special expertise is in the cinema of the Balkans, Eastern Europe, and Europe in general. Her research approaches cinema on a meta-national level and focuses on the dynamics of transnational film; she has special interest in issues related to cinema at the periphery and in alternative historiography. She has published extensively on international and transnational film art and film industry, and convenes research networks on film festivals and on the Dynamics of World Cinema, with funding from the Leverhulme Trust.
Following along the ideals of the religious and social reformer, Swami Dayanand Saraswati and to impart knowledge in combination with that of the Vedas, the school was founded in the year 1966 by the D.A.V. College Managing Committee in New Delhi. Honouring the principles of Mahatma Hansraj, the school is a part of the 900+ schools and colleges managed by D.A.V. College Managing Committee in India and overseas. The founder principal of the school was Mr. Tilak Raj Gupta, a renowned educationalist mostly remembered for his innovative scheme of imparting free education to children of various sections of the society in the year 1984 for which he has also conferred the lifetime achievement by the National Progressive Schools’ Conference, India. Mrs. Heemal Handu Bhat is the current Principal of the school.
Bhiria City is also famous for the best quality of guavas and mangoes, KHEER PERA is a popular sweet of the town, people buy and do gift to their family and friends in other counties as well .Citrus growers - province of Sindh , Government of Sindh, Agriculture Department Bhiria City is also famous for its education in older times, K.C Academy was one of the oldest educationalist institution of Sindh after one at Hyderabad, Sindh madrasa Karachi and high school Shikarpure, it was formed by DEWAN KORO MAL CHANDEN MAL a leading educationist of Sindh in 1886 this institute served for more than 100 years and produced many famous personalities, excellent library and a huge drama hall were its unique qualities. Old buildings of school, hostel, drama hall and library are now houses but still existing at Memon Mohalla on Tharu Shah road Bhirya .
William Andrews, D.D. was an Anglican priest"Sixty Sermons Preach'd on Several Occasions" Smalridge, G. p24:Oxford; Theater; 1724 and educationalist""Kilkenny College" p228:Kilkenny;Kilkenny Archaeological Society;1850 in Ireland during the first half of the 18th century."Parergon Juris Canonici Anglicani, Or, A Commentary by Way of Supplement" Ayliffe, J. p6: London; D.Leach; 1726 Andrews was educated at Trinity College, Dublin.Alumni Dublinenses : a register of the students, graduates, professors and provosts of Trinity College in the University of Dublin (1593-1860)" Burtchaell, George Dames/Sadleir, Thomas Ulick (Eds) p131: Dublin, Alex Thom and Co, 1935 He was Head Master of Kilkenny College from 1702 to 1714;A Supplement to the Entrance Register of Kilkenny School, 1684-1800 Dobbs, W.E.J. The Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland Vol. 76, No. 3 (Oct.
Vaughan married firstly Hon. Augusta St John, daughter of Henry Beauchamp St John, 13th Baron St John on 20 December 1803. They had six children but she died on 30 January 1813. He married secondly Lady Louisa St John, widow of St Andrew St John, 14th Baron St John of Bletso and daughter of Sir Charles William Rouse-Boughton, 9th Baronet on 4 August 1823 and had a son and daughter.John Debrett, William Courthope Debrett's Baronetage of England: with alphabetical lists of such baronetcies Vaughan and his first wife had issue, including a son Sir (Henry) Halford Vaughan (27 August 1811 – 19 April 1885), Regius Professor of History at Oxford University 1848-1858He used his middle name, according to his granddaughter's RCP obituary and father of William Wyamar Vaughan (1865-4 February 1938) a British educationalist.
In 1969 Fleming designed both a symbol and the launch publications for the new Ontario Science Centre, a symbol for the Metropolitan Separate School Board (now today as the Toronto Catholic District School Board), the NE Thing Company logo, and a style guide for Canada Post that set the bar for the next 20 years. As a public educationalist, he was also a driving force behind such exhibitions as Art at the Service of Intention: Graphic Designers at Work (Art Gallery of Ontario), and appeared on Robert Fulford's TV program, 'On Books'. Two of UTP's publications designed by Fleming -- The Economic Atlas of Ontario and Rural Ontario—won AIGA awards in 1969. The following year, Fleming designed a logo for the Metropolitan Educational Television Authority and one for Gray Coach Lines, and was appointed to the National Design Council.
CULC was also close to the Cambridge Labour Party, gaining the attendance of Cllr William Briggs, Hugh Dalton, Cllr Clara Rackham, and Alec Firth. More broadly, the Club organised summer schools with the University Labour Federation (ULF), ran a library, held Sunday teas, and ran research committees. Perhaps CULC was a little too assiduous in its political education and canvassing: in January 1922 it was forced to move its premises as the landlord refused to renew the club’s lease 'on the grounds that the Club did not drink enough beer'. Despite its exposed left flank CULC grew rapidly and became the largest student political society by the late 1920s. By 1924 there were around 100 paying members and in 1925 David Hardman was elected as the first ever socialist President of the Cambridge Union Society; two CULC members, A L Hutchinson and the future educationalist Lionel Elvin, would succeed him.
French journalist François Gautier wrote that: Lal Khan, a Pakistani political activist and founder of the Marxist organization The Struggle, suggested that undoing the partition is a necessity because it would resolve the Kashmir conflict, as well as reduce the power of the "security-bureaucratic machine", thus guaranteeing a true secular, socialist and democratic society. Advocating for a common revolution, Khan declared that "Five thousand years of common history, culture and society is too strong to be cleavaged by this partition." His views are described his book "Crisis in the Indian Subcontinent, Partition: Can it be Undone?" in which Khan states that "revolutionary transformation of the economies and societies is an essential prerequisite for the reunification of the subcontinent." Educationalist P. A. Inamdar commented at the Rangoonwala College of Dental Science in July 2017 that the reunification of Pakistan and Bangladesh with India would "keep India prosperous and peaceful".
Timothy Phillips Woods (born 24 December 1943) is a South African schoolmaster and educationalist. One of the sons of Arthur Phillips Woods and his wife Katherine Isabella Woods, he was educated at Cordwalles Preparatory School, Natal, Michaelhouse, Natal, Rhodes University, where he graduated BA (first class Honours) in History, MA and UED, and at the University of Oxford, where he took his degree of DPhil.WOODS, Timothy Phillips MA, DPhil in Who's Who 2007 (London, A. & C. Black, 2007)Rhodos May 2006 , page 6, citation by Professor Pat Terry dated 8 April 2006 A Cape Province Rhodes Scholar in 1968, in 1971 he was appointed an assistant master at Felsted School, Essex, England, where he became Head of History four years later. He was Headmaster of Gresham's School, Holt, from 1982 to 1985 and then Head of History at Trent College, Derbyshire, from 1985 to 2004.
The environmental aspects of the school were also critical; maximisation of natural daylight, use of natural ventilation, recycling of rainwater for use in toilets and the use of biomass, recycled timber waste, to generate heat and power. The school was designed collaboratively by the architects, an educationalist and also the school itself. At one time, Whitefield School had four sites - Whitefield Lower Mixed, the lower mixed-sex site located in Alexandra Park in Fishponds,(subsequently an Adult Education Centre), Whitefield Lower Girls on Fishponds Road, Eastville (subsequently demolished for housing) and Whitefield Lower Boys located at Greenbank. Students 11-13 spent the first three years at one of the lower schools, before transferring to the Whitefield Fishponds Upper School, adjacent to the current site of the Bristol Metropolitan College, for years 14-18 (or Sixth Form as the last two years of school were then known).
Charles Frederick Christian Padel MA (20 July 1872 – 11 March 1958) was an English educationalist, headmaster of Ashby Grammar School from 1909 to 1912 and of Carlisle Grammar School, 1912 to 1932PADEL, Charles Frederick Christian’, Who Was Who, A & C Black, 1920–2008; online edn, Oxford University Press, Dec 2007 accessed 14 Jan 2012Alumni Cantabrigienses Mr. C. F. C. Padel (Obituaries) The Times Wednesday, Mar 12, 1958; pg. 13; Issue 54097; col E Padel was born in York, the son of Christian Gottlieb Padel. He was educated at St Peter's School, York, and Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, gaining a 1st Class degree in the Classical Tripos in 1894. Padel worked as an assistant master at several public schools; Haileybury College (1895), Merchiston Castle School (1895–1896), Rossall Preparatory School (1896–1898), The Leys School, Cambridge (1899), Sherborne School (1900–1901), Eastbourne College (1901–1907) and Marlborough College, (1907–1909).
Girard had a great reputation in France, being a Knight of the Legion of Honour, and a corresponding member of the Académie des Sciences morales et politiques. In Switzerland, he was hailed as a second Pestalozzi. He had a genius for teaching, his method of stimulating the intelligence of the children at Fribourg and interesting them actively in learning, and not merely cramming them with rules and facts, being warmly praised by the Swiss educationalist François Naville (1784–1846) in his treatise on public education (1832). Girard's undogmatic method and his Liberal Christianity brought him into conflict with the Jesuits, but his aim was, in all his teaching, to introduce the moral idea into the minds of his pupils by familiarizing them with the right or wrong working of the facts he brought to their attention, and thus to elevate character all through the educational curriculum.
Dr Isaac Watts' Statue (September 2005). Such an elaborate planting scheme for a park cemetery may also be a reflection of the symbolic importance the founding directors attached to the land that formed Abney Park Cemetery. As nonconformists, who treasured the independence of their religious beliefs—and therefore practised Christianity outside of the established Church of England—they held the land itself to be of immense significance, for it had previously been two neighbouring and inter-related 18th-century parkland estates, the grounds of Abney House and Fleetwood House, where the non- conformist Doctor of Divinity, educationalist and poet Dr. Isaac Watts lived and taught, and indeed wrote several of his popular books and hymns. Due to these religious associations, Abney Park Cemetery rapidly became the most attractive Victorian resting place for nonconformist or dissenting ministers and educationalists, principally those from a Protestant dissenting tradition.
Oorvazi started her career as the Director of her home media production company SBI Impresario Pvt. Ltd. incorporated by her father in 1975. She has been involved with international critically acclaimed film projects with her company in the area of research, production and direction. Apart from running the home production company, Oorvazi also took up the role of a film educationalist. She currently heads the subject of film at the ‘SVKM J.V.Parekh International School’. Besides this, she also has conducted Film Appreciation modules at various prestigious institutions including The Mumbai University Post Graduate One Year Diploma Course for Film and Television, The Digital Academy Film School Mumbai, Kishore Namit Kapoor Acting Institute, The Institute of Creative Excellence – ICE, the Education division of Balaji Telefilm and ‘Understanding Cinema’ module of the BMM syllabus at The Ghanshyamdas Saraf Girls College, Mumbai (Affiliated to the University of Mumbai).
He was also an educationalist; an Anglican priest he was known as "Parson Andrew" in Nelson, New Zealand where he was head of Nelson College, and he was a supporter of the new University of New Zealand. Andrew's role within the University of New Zealand was a supporter of its inception as a member of the house of representatives advocating a federal university structure for New Zealand. He was appointed to The University of New Zealand senate in 1874 and then appointed as Vice Chancellor of The University of New Zealand in 1885, he maintained the position of Vice Chancellor until 1903. Andrew oversaw the founding and establishment of Victoria University College (now Victoria University of Wellington) as Victoria University's founding Vice Chancellor and was a vocal advocate for a University of New Zealand college being established in Wellington, as Wellington was the capital of New Zealand.
By 1978, Damavand College had a heritage of more than a century of service rendered by the American Presbyterian Mission in Tehran. Sage College, Alborz College, and Iran Bethel School which was established in 1874 were institutions founded under the auspices of this mission. Many graduates of Iran Bethel including, Iran Teymourtash, daughter of Reza Shah’s powerful court Minister; Molouk Khanoum Jalali, daughter of an Isfahani governor; Mehrtaj Rakhshan, educationalist and daughter of Agha Emam al Hokama; Satareh Farma Farmaian, founder of the professional field of social welfare in Iran and daughter of Qajar Prince Abdol Hossain Mirza Farman Farma; and Parvin E'tesami, a celebrated poet and daughter of Journalist and publisher Yusof E’tesami; are among some of Iran Bethel School’s graduates. Miss Jane Doolittle served for many years as the Principal of Iran Bethel School for Girls which was the immediate forerunner of Damavand College.
Kanekar was born in Madgaon (Margao) in Goa in 1965 and lived in Navelim, a nearby village, till the age of two, before leaving for the US and subsequently for Mumbai where she taught architectural history at the Kamla Raheja Vidyanidhi Institute for Architecture at Juhu, and Comparative Mythologies at the University of Mumbai. Her father Suresh Kanekar was jailed twice by the then Portuguese government for his participation in the movement against colonial rule. Her maternal aunt was Mitra Bir, educationalist, who was sentenced to twelve years in jail at the age of 22, and later went on to open schools for girls at Madgaon (Margao), Verem, Kakora and other locations in Goa, as also centres for adult and vocational education for women, before her death in 1978. Mitra was married to the late Madhav Bir, member of the Goa legislative assembly and Gandhian.
Important figures whom he got to know during his travels included the socialite philosopher Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi whom he visited in Düsseldorf, and members of the theological reformist circle in Münster such as Adelheid Amalie Gallitzin, Franz Friedrich Wilhelm von Fürstenberg, Bernhard Heinrich Overberg and the lawyer-poet Friedrich Leopold zu Stolberg-Stolberg. He formed a particularly warm friendship with Stolberg who at this point invited Nicolovius to join him on a two-year tour to Italy and Sicily. This enabled him to make a further range of contacts with the writers Friedrich Gottlieb Klopstock, Matthias Claudius and Johann Kaspar Lavater as well as with the pioneering educationalist Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi. After returning to Germany during the first part of 1793, Nicolovius stayed with his friend Stolberg for a further six months as the latter's guest at his home in the Duchy of Holstein.
After attending the from 1833 to 1838, Schaefer studied philology and history at the University of Leipzig. His teachers included Moritz Haupt (1808–1874), Gottfried Hermann (1772–1848) and Wilhelm Wachsmuth (1784-1866). After his graduation, Schaefer initially attempted a habilitation project on Old High German, supervised by Moritz Haupt. Due to a favourable job offer from the educationalist Karl Justus Blochmann (1786–1855) Schaefer was persuaded to relocate to Dresden, where he subsequently taught classes in history and ancient languages at the . Schaefer was already producing a large number of publications at this time, including the school textbook Commentatio de libro vitarum decem oratorum (Commentary on the Book of the Lives of the Ten Orators, 1844) and Geschichtstabellen zum Auswendiglernen (Historical tables for memorisation, 1847), a practical handbook for students, which contained important dates in world history from antiquity to his own day, divided into three sections: general history, epochal history, and cultural history.
Phil Cohen (born 1943) is a British cultural theorist, urban ethnographer, community activist, educationalist and poet. He was involved in the London underground counter culture scene and gained public notoriety as 'Dr John', a leader in the squatter's rights movement but is now better known for his work on youth culture and the impact of urban regeneration on working class communities, particularly in East London, with a focus of issues of race and popular racism. More recently the scope of his work has widened to includes issues of identity politics, memory and loss, and the future of the Left in Britain Cohen’s academic work is trans-disciplinary and draws on concepts from linguistics and narratology, psycho-analysis and anthropology, cultural history and social phenomenology. He is currently (2020) Emeritus Professor at the Centre for Cultural Studies at the University of East London, a research fellow at the Young Foundation and Research Director of the Livingmaps Network.
Important works by Agopyan include The Beggar from Van, Porters Crossing the Bridge in Karaköy, A Muslim Beggar, Turkish Neighborhood, Portrait of Sultan Abdulhamit II, and the Selamlik of Sultan Abdülaziz in Ortaköy (which was sold at an auction of Islamic art held by Ader Picard Tajan in Paris on November 18, 1988), six scenes of the Victory won by Gazi Ahmed Muhtar Pasa, The Medresse of Sofulu Seyyif Mehmed Pasa Mosque in Kadirga, a portrait of educationalist Reteos Berberian, A Dervish Beggar in the Courtyard of Mihrimah Sultan Mosque in Üsküdar (1911), and a portrait of Mahrukizade Cafer Bey (1894; which is owned by his grandson Cem Mahruki). He painted a series of Ottoman military successes in his Six Scenes of Victories of Gazi Ahmed Muhtar Paşa on the Eastern Front (1910) which was commissioned by Ahmed Muhtar Pasha’s family. He also has paintings of Istanbul tradespeople such as simit sellers, fishmongers, and chimney sweepers. Agopyan also painted religious subjects.
To increase public and patient involvement in the Institute of Infection and Global Health, he established the Saturday Science Programme at World Museum Liverpool. To mark the first World Encephalitis Day, creation of the Encephalitis Society, he initiated the "World’s Biggest Brain", winning a Guinness World Record for the largest human image of an organ. At TEDx Liverpool 2014, he gave a talk on "Sex, Drugs and Emerging Viruses", appearing alongside Beermat Entrepreneur Mike Southon, and educationalist Sir Ken Robinson. Tom Solomon also writes for The Guardian and The Independent newspapers and The Conversation on issues relating to biomedical science, particularly on emerging infections, neuroscience, and women in science, and appears on television and radio. He discussed the threat to the UK of Ebola virus with Andrew Neal on BBC Television’s The Sunday Politics. On BBC Radio 4’s Great Lives he discussed the children’s author Roald Dahl, whose fascination with medical science impacted both on his life and his writing.
Philip Idenburg (1968) Philip Idenburg in public information film about the census (9 May 1947) Philippus Jacobus Idenburg (Hillegersberg, 26 November 1901 – Wassenaar, 29 December 1995) was a Dutch educationalist and statistician.. Philip joined the Centraal Bureau voor de Statistiek (the Dutch Central Bureau of Statistics) where he worked except for a short break until retirement in 1966. In 1940 he was involved with Gerd Arntz in salvaging the work of the Mundaneum in The Hague, transferring the material to the Dutch Foundation for Statistics which he set up under the leadership of Jan van Ettinger and Arntz. In 1943 Arntz was conscripted into the German Army, and when he returned to the Netherlands in 1946, Idenburg vouched for him and enabled him to return to his previous job. Philip Jacobus Idenburg was a younger brother of Petrus Johannes Idenburg (1898-1989), a Dutch professor of constitutional law and founder of the Afrika-Studiecentrum, Leiden.
In early 2014, it was announced that the All India Football Federation, the national federation for football in India, and IMG–Reliance would be accepting bids for ownership of eight of the nine selected cities for the inaugural Indian Super League (ISL), a franchise tournament modelled along the lines of the Indian Premier League for cricket. On 13 April 2014 it was announced that the rights to the Kerala franchise were won by former India cricket captain, Sachin Tendulkar, and serial entrepreneur, philanthropist, and educationalist, Prasad V Potluri. Then, on 27 May 2014, the team's official name was unveiled as the 'Kerala Blasters FC' which is based on the nickname of co-owner Sachin Tendular, the master blaster. Construction of the team for the first season started on 22 July when the Kerala Blasters, along with the other seven franchises, took part in the domestic draft to select the first fourteen Indian players in each team.
David Manley, artist, educationalist and arts administrator was born in Devon and lives and works in North West Leicestershire, UK. He received a Diploma in Art & Design, Fine Art from Falmouth School of Art (now Falmouth University) in 1972 and a Higher Diploma in Art & Design, Fine Art from Birmingham School of Art, Birmingham Polytechnic (now Birmingham City University) in 1974. He also has a Master of Arts (MA) in Photography from De Montfort University, Leicester, UK. In 1975 Manley was awarded a painting fellowship at Gloucestershire College of Art and Design. There followed a career in arts administration including Visual Arts Director and Head of Public Affairs at East Midlands Arts, UK. In 1994 he was appointed Assistant Dean of the School of Art and Design at the University of Derby and became Dean of the school in 1995. In 2003 he was appointed Dean of the new Faculty of Arts, Design and Technology at the University of Derby and in 2007 Director of Cultural Development.
Edited Volume titled Indian Economy in the Globalized World, published by New Century Publication, New Delhi was rated as the Best Seller by the Booknews Inc, Portland, USA in August 2007 • Honoured by Dr. Ambedkar Institute of Legal Studies for Producing the highest number of PhD in Humanities and Social Sciences in Kerala in Jan 2008 • KalaKerala Award For The Best Educationalist in the State of Kerala during 2005 • Gurusmirithy Award 1999 for the Best Social Worker instituted by Guruseva Samithy, Palathuruthi, Cochin (Presented by Mr. S. Sharma, Minister for Cooperation, Government of Kerala) . Best Teacher in Kerala Award 2009 by Sree Narayana Janakeeya Vedi (Presented by Sri. V.S.Achuthanandan,Hounarable Chief Minister of Kerala) . Sree Narayana Guru Commerce Award for the contributions towards the development of Commerce 2009 by Dharma Prabodhanam Trust (Presented by Sri. Varkala Radhakrishnan,Former Speaker,Legislative Assembly kerala) • Gold Medal of the Kerala University Students’ Union for the First Rank in M.Com.
It was set up to encourage the preservation of Irish culture, its music, dances and language. Also in that year appeared Hyde's The Love Songs of Connacht, which inspired Yeats, John Millington Synge and Lady Gregory. Thomas A. Finlay founded the New Ireland Review, a literary magazine, in 1894, which he edited until 1911, when it was replaced by Studies. Many of the leading literary lights of the time contributed to it.Thomas J. Morrissey, SJ Thomas A. Finlay SJ, 1848–1940, Educationalist, editor, social reformer. Four Courts Press, Dublin, 2004. In 1897 Hyde became editor, with T. W. Rolleston and Charles Gavan Duffy, of the New Irish Library, a series of books on Irish history and literature issued by the London publisher, Fisher Unwin. Two years later Hyde published his Literary history of Ireland. Yeats, Lady Gregory and Edward Martyn published a Manifesto for Irish Literary Theatre in 1897, in which they proclaimed their intention of establishing a national theatre for Ireland. The Irish Literary Theatre was founded by Yeats, Lady Gregory and Martyn in 1899, with assistance from George Moore.
His early teaching career, his Vice Chancellorship of the Madras University and his various activities in his entire life had their focal point in education. A major part of his UNESCO service was spent in formulating educational programmes for the developing world. The General Conference of UNESCO in its fifteenth session authorized the publication of a work designed to clarify the basic concepts concerning the contribution of education, science and culture to development. In the course of the discussions about the resolution, reference was made to the many speeches of Adiseshiah on related themes delivered in Oxford, United Kingdom in 1961; Cambridge, UK and Tananarive, Madagascar in 1962; Madras, India in 1963; Toronto, Ontario, Canada in 1964; Washington, DC, USA in 1968 and many others. He was requested to write a book based on the facts and ideas presented in those speeches About that book, U Thant, then Secretary-General of the United Nations, in his ‘Foreword’ writes: That was the respect which he commanded in UN as an educationalist of eminence.
Phiri was an exceptional student, despite his tendency to play truant to play football which he preferred to the rigors of study, and was noticed by Mr. Green, a manager at the Rhodesia Iron and Steel Company, subsequently known as Zimbabwe Iron and Steel Company, where Phiri's father Abel was now Head Clerk. Mr. Green took personal interest in Phiri's education and encouraged him to do well in school and gave him books, and along with his father's stern educationalist beliefs and disciplinarian approach to achieving the highest grades, Phiri would continue to excel educationally and became involved in many charitable trusts providing scholarships to young Africans, including the Beit Trust in Zambia. His son, Guy David Zingalume Phiri, spoke of this belief at his memorial service at the Anglican Cathedral in Lusaka on 20 January 2012, whilst relating a story of how Phiri got his first watch. Phiri was forced to enroll in Latin classes and at the end of the school year proudly presented his report to his father, wherein it showed that Phiri had come second in his Latin class.
During the First World War he was an adviser to the Northern Command, becoming Lieutenant-Colonel-Chief Chemical Adviser (Anti-gas Training) (1916-1919),for which in 1918 he was appointed a Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George (CMG). In 1923 he became Director of the Salters’ Institute of Industrial Chemistry a role that involved assessing applications for grants, he remained a director until 1937. His research was predominantly focused on flames, the process of burning and flame spectroscopy As well as being a Fellow of the Royal Society (elected 1901) becoming vice- president in 1916, he was also a Fellow of the Institute of Chemistry (elected 1887) serving on the Council and holding the posts of Vice-president from 1915-1917, 1923-1926 and 1930-1933 and President (1927-1930), and was made an Honorary Fellow of the Society for Analytical Chemistry (elected 1927). His son, Philip Ashton Smithells, was a physical educationalist and university professor at the University of Otago in New Zealand.
In 1917, Edward Thomas John, a Welsh nationalist and Member of Parliament for Anglesey, attempted to revive the former Celtic Association under the new name of "The Celtic Congress", thus initiating the second wave of inter-Celtic relations. For O'Farrelly and indeed her closest friend Douglas Hyde, who also took an active interest, the Celtic Congress held much in common with the Gaelic League with which they had for so long been involved: its raison-d’être was to nurture and promote scholarship and culture (albeit 'Celtic' rather than Irish); the congress was in theory to be held annually (similar to the Oireachtas); and its leading members were now drawn from educationalist and linguistic circles rather than the more exclusive Dublin Castle circle with which it had been associated at the turn of the twentieth century. Mary Hayden, Osborn Bergin, Eoin Mac Néill and Robin Flower were among those also involved in the Irish wing of the Celtic Congress. When E.T. John died in early 1931, O'Farrelly took on a heavier administrative role within the Celtic Congress, and in the Breton Francois Jaffrennou-Taldir's words, "the Association was given a new life in 1935 [sic], thanks to Miss Agnes O'Farrelly".
Colchester Royal Grammar School, circa 1908 Having been an assistant master at the Clifton College for three years, he was offered a position as headmaster at a new school which was to be founded in Argentina by the educationalist Michael Ernest Sadler, but could not get the funding to travel there, instead he assumed the role of headmaster at Colchester Royal Grammar School (known locally as CRGS). It is unclear exactly what date he can be said to have joined the school, because although agreement between the school and the governing legislature was reached in May 1899, the process of finding a new headmaster went on under the guidance of an interim one. Certainly, his official term as headmaster started on 1 September 1900 and by the end of 1900 he had already made his mark on the school—achievements included the introduction of a new school song, "Carmen Colcestriense", which used the same tune as, and a variation of the lyrics for, the school song of The Skinners' School. He retired his post as headmaster in 1916, but kept a lasting interest in the school.

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