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American teacher and police officer [110] Frank Popper: 1918–2020: 102: Czech-born French-British historian of art and technology, professor and author [111] [112] Norman Porteous: 1898–2003: 104: British academic; Dean at the University of Edinburgh [113] Eva Gabriele Reichmann: 1897–1998: 101: German historian and sociologist [114 ...
View history; Tools. Tools. move to sidebar hide. Actions Read; ... (5 C) American women ... American academics (37 C, 250 P) American art educators (227 P) D ...
Teachers who have been widely recognized as extraordinarily successful and whose teaching effectiveness has been shown to have had influence beyond their own institutions United States: Edyth May Sliffe Award: Mathematical Association of America: Five teachers selected from each of the ten American Mathematics Competition Regions United States
On November 20, 1818, the Georgia General Assembly approved the formation of the co-educational school to be called Jackson County Academy in Jefferson, Georgia.. The Jackson County Academy operated under this name, and informally as the Jefferson Academy, until December 1859 when a judge in the Inferior Court of Jackson County from 1819–1827, William Duncan Martin, willed upon his death a ...
Perhaps its most famous teacher was history teacher Dr. Irwin Guernsey, known to generations of students as "Doc" Guernsey. He came to Clinton in the fall of 1914 and retired in the spring of 1959, due to illness. Using two "Irish" canes, he taught from the chair and won twice in his lifetime the title of Master Teacher in New York City.
This is a list of notable Georgetown University faculty, including both current and past faculty at the Washington, D.C. school. As of 2007, Georgetown University employs approximately 1,202 full-time and 451 part-time faculty members across its three campuses . [ 1 ]
Horace Mann was born in Franklin, Massachusetts. [4] His father was a farmer without much money. Mann was the great-grandson of Samuel Man. [5]From age ten to age twenty, he had no more than six weeks' schooling during any year, [6] but he made use of the Franklin Public Library, the first public library in America.
An African-American teacher. African-American teachers educated African Americans and taught each other to read during slavery in the South. People who were enslaved ran small schools in secret, since teaching those enslaved to read was a crime (see Slave codes). Meanwhile, in the North, African Americans worked alongside Whites. Many ...