Francis parker alumni
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History
At the time of Parker′s founding, progressive education was an innovative approach to teaching and learning. Today, many schools have embraced or imitated concepts of “learning by doing” or “maker” principles. Parker has been a paragon and leader of the progressive education movement since 1901.
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Guide to the Francis Wayland Parker Papers 1857-1904
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University of Chicago Library
© 2006 University of Chicago Library
| Title: | Parker, Francis Wayland. Papers |
|---|---|
| Dates: | 1857-1904 |
| Size: | 1 box and 13 volumes |
| Repository: | Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center |
| Abstract: | Francis Wayland Parker (1837-1902), Educator. The collection consists primarily of scrapbooks containing clippings of newspaper and magazine articles by and about Parker, and notices containing information on institutions, organizations, educational movements, and teaching methods with which he was associated. Also contains some manuscripts and correspondence. |
Information on Use
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Citation
When quoting material from this collection, the preferred citation is: Parker, Francis Wayland. Papers, [Box #, Folder #], Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center, University of Chicago Library
Biographical Note
Francis W.
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Parker, Col. Francis Wayland (1837-1902)
Father of american educational reform
Source
From the War to the Schools.Francis Wayland Parker, who had risen to the rank of colonel in the Union army during the Civil War, began his influential career in education as a strict conformist to the schooling practices of the postwar era. He knew how to drill and discipline, and as principal of North Grammar School in Manchester, New Hampshire, he “had everything in good shape.” As he relates in his autobiography, “I had battalion drill and marching, and everything went like clockwork. I ranked my scholars, changing their places from week to week.” However, when he organized a normal school (a secondary school that provided for teacher training) in Dayton, Ohio, he ran into a wall of opposition from the teachers already in service. When an aunt died and left him $5,000, he left to study in Germany, determined to educate himself better in modem teaching methods. There he studied Friedrich Wilhelm August Froebel and Johann Friedrich Herbart, two pedagogical ref
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