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This illustrated history of the Indiana University-Bloomington School of Education tells the dynamic, 100-year old story of the state's leading research and teacher education institution. The dynamic story begins with the founding of Indiana University in 1820. Against great odds, Indiana University's School of Education advanced from a handful of students and professors in the early nineteenth century to one of the top schools of education. As a one-hundredth anniversary volume, the book shifts to 1923 when the School was authorized to award its own degree. From its first research…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This illustrated history of the Indiana University-Bloomington School of Education tells the dynamic, 100-year old story of the state's leading research and teacher education institution. The dynamic story begins with the founding of Indiana University in 1820. Against great odds, Indiana University's School of Education advanced from a handful of students and professors in the early nineteenth century to one of the top schools of education. As a one-hundredth anniversary volume, the book shifts to 1923 when the School was authorized to award its own degree. From its first research publication, first doctoral degree, and the opening of a laboratory school in 1938, the School grew rapidly. The return of servicemen and women from World War II on the G.I. Bill filled classrooms and brought significant expansion to teacher education. Likewise, the National Defense Education Act of 1958 extended the School's counseling and guidance programs. International programs flourished, development of educational technology became a national trendsetter, and from 1958 to 1973 the School operated 29 research centers and institutes. Teacher education anchored enrollment at IU's regional campuses. By the early 1990s, the School had a new home in a national demonstration site for technology in education. The last thirty years have witnessed significant growth in every aspect of the School's portfolio - state, national, and international service, research, teaching, diversity, and inclusion. IU's first all-online doctoral program launched in 2011 in instructional systems technology. A living-learning center for teacher education students opened in 2014. In 2020 the School celebrated 50 years of its Global Gateway for Teachers, placing student teachers in 21 countries, the Navajo Nation, and an urban program in Chicago. Looking back on its one hundred years, the School has turned adversity into a thriving institution providing Indiana and the world with outstanding teachers, counselors, educational leaders, and ground-breaking research.
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Autorenporträt
Frederic W. Lieber Author Born in Indianapolis, Frederic W. Lieber has Indiana roots. His great grandfather Richard Lieber founded the Indiana State Park system in 1916. His grandfather Clarence Efroymson was a freshman at IU in 1914, and in 1985 IU President John Ryan conferred an honorary degree on him. Lieber's great uncle Lander MacClintock was professor of French and Italian at IU from 1920 to 1960. His family created the Frederic Bachman Lieber and Herman Frederic Lieber teaching awards at IU in the 1950s. He attended Shortridge High School in Indianapolis, the state's first free high school. Graduate of Brown University, Lieber received his doctorate from IU's Department of Counseling and Educational Psychology in 1995. He served as visiting assistant professor while working as a psychotherapist in private practice. He coordinated elementary teacher education in the School of Education and taught counseling, classroom management, history of psychology, and social psychology. For 12 years he taught history of ideas for Hutton Honors College. He is a poet and intellectual historian. He lives in Bloomington, writing a history of empathy.