Harold Alberty, Teacher & Guide

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Harold Alberty, Teacher and Guide By: Victor B. Lawhead From Teachers and Mentors, Edited by Craig Kridel This recollection is based on an association spanning the thirty-one years from 1940, when I first met Harold Alberty on the campus of Ohio State University, to his death in 1971. During those years I had the good fortune of being a student in most of his courses, claimed him as my graduate advisor for doctoral studies, and served as a colleague in various capacities within the scope of our continuing professional association. While most of these encounters were reasonably formal, I cherished the special but limited opportunities to come to know him as a friend and mentor. His patient effort and encouraging support brought me to a fuller understanding of what it means to work with a master teacher in the serious study of educational problems. My earliest acquaintance with Alberty's educational ideas came in 1939, my senior year at DePauw University, when I began a two-semester sequence of "practice teaching" in the local high school. Encouraged by Professor Earl Bowman, an earlier student of Alberty's, my classmate Paul Klohr and I (along with others from art and music) agreed to teach as a team a unit of correlated studies to which my critic teacher, Glenn Skelton, had attached the unfamiliar label, "core curriculum." My class in American history was to be the point of departure for teaching a unit of study on the Civil War enriched whenever possible by the contributions of my fellow students from other subject fields. I was not to realize immediately the long-term effects of this experience, for I can recall only a few details of our joint venture; rather, I remember more vividly my looking forward to Thursday -- the day for "Current Events. " The war in Europe had broken loose at the end of August that year, and most of us who were about to graduate sensed a new urgency to deal with the inevitable turn of events which would soon redirect our lives in countless ways. I did not pursue further the notion of a core curriculum at the time but instead persisted in nurturing a host of unanswered questions about the value and potential of "integrating" as an essential component of the learning process. Alberty's synthesis of ideas around a core program of general education, already having its impact, was still in the formulative stage and was not to be articulated fully until the publication of Reorganizing the HighSchool Curriculum in 1947. My first meeting with Harold Alberty himself was fairly incidental and came in the summer of 1940 when Klohr and I, still motivated by Professor Bowman's enthusiasm for Ohio State's College of Education, enrolled there as graduate students. To help some students "get started in life," DePauw in those days provided Rector Scholars upon graduation with the tidy sum of $100, ample support for a summer term in most universities. Thus replenished, we proceeded in June to Columbus to take up studies with Boyd Bode and other luminaries from our undergraduate reading list. Without having attended a full week of lectures, we were "recruited" by Professor H. Gordon Hullfish to participate in what was to be the second from the last of the well-known workshops sponsored jointly by the Progressive Education Association and the University's College of Education. It was then that I met Harold Alberty, who with other members of the College staff, participated in the workshop on an occasional basis. Was it in spite of or because of an ominous threat of war and the totalitarian challenge to democratic values that this was a time of boundless optimism among progressive educators? Few documents of the time were more typical of the expressions of faith in democratic education than the draft report of the P.E.A.'s Committee on Philosophy, "Progressive Education: Its Philosophy and Challenge" (Alberty et al., 1941). The report sketched a bold proposal for linking democratic values to educational practice and placed particular emphasis on understanding human development and the valuing process. In seeking wide discussion of the report prior to its publication, Professors Alberty and Hullfish, as Committee chair and member, respectively, distributed mimeographed copies to Workshop participants for their reactions and comments. For me this initial skirmish with progressive thought and the exhilarating experience of the Workshop itself was to set a life course and allow me to enter upon a human


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