Background
Lagemann, Ellen Condliffe was born on December 20, 1945 in New York City. Daughter of John Charles and Jane Grace (Rosenthal).
( The Carnegie Corporation, among this country's oldest a...)
The Carnegie Corporation, among this country's oldest and most important foundations, has underwritten projects ranging from the writings of David Riesman to Sesame Street. Lagemann's lively history focuses on how foundations quietly but effectively use power and private money to influence public policies.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0226467805/?tag=2022091-20
( This is a thorough evaluation of the experience shared...)
This is a thorough evaluation of the experience shared by a crucial generation of American women, widely known but never fully understood: the progressive social reformers of the early twentieth century. Lagemann portrays five such reformers, Grace Dodge, Maud Nathan, Lillian Wald, Leonora O'Reilly, and Rose Schneiderman, all of New York. Her work breaks new ground with its analysis of the forces that shaped the development of these women, their personalities, their careers, and their consciousness. Lagemann's concern is education--not in the limited sense of going to college, but education as a lifelong "process of interaction that changes the self." She deals with the combined influences of pedagogy--especially that of parents, vocational mentors, and colleagues--work, and feminism. Lagemann skillfully demonstrates the effects of social, cultural, economic, and intellectual currents on the education of women in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The relationships Lagemann shows between education and individual achievement and between education and social change create a new understanding of feminism and progressivism in the early twentieth century.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0674344715/?tag=2022091-20
( Since its beginnings at the start of the 20th century, ...)
Since its beginnings at the start of the 20th century, educational scholarship has been a marginal field, criticized by public policy makers and relegated to the fringes of academe. An Elusive Science explains why, providing a critical history of the traditions, conflicts, and institutions that have shaped the study of education over the past century.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0226467732/?tag=2022091-20
Dean history and education professor
Lagemann, Ellen Condliffe was born on December 20, 1945 in New York City. Daughter of John Charles and Jane Grace (Rosenthal).
AB cum laude, Smith College, 1967. Master of Arts, Columbia University, 1968. Doctor of Philosophy with distinction, Columbia University, 1978.
Teacher, Roslyn H.S., Roslyn, New York., 1967-1969; executive director, WMCA: Call for Action, New York City, 1969-1971; assistant director, Bank Street School for Children, New York City, 1971-1972; teaching and research assistant, Institute Phil. and Politics of Education, Teachers College Columbia University, New York City, 1974-1978; assistant professor, then associate professor Teachers College, Columbia University Department History, New York City, 1978-1987; professor of history of education, Columbia University Department History, New York City, since 1987. Director Markle Foundation, New York City, Greenwall Foundation, New York City, trustee, Russell Sage Foundation, New York City, Center for Advanced Study in Behavioral Sciences, Standford, California, governor county Rockefeller Archive Center, advising committee Center Nonprofits and Philanthropy, Urban Institute, Washington.
( This is a thorough evaluation of the experience shared...)
( Since its beginnings at the start of the 20th century, ...)
( The Carnegie Corporation, among this country's oldest a...)
(Book by Lagemann, Ellen Condliffe)
(Will be shipped from US. Brand new copy.)
Member National Academy Education (president 1998-2001), History of Education Society (president 1987-1988), American History Association, Organization American Historians, American Educational Research Association, Century Association, Cosmopolitan Club.
Married Jonathan Kord Lagemann, June 28, 1969. 1 child, Nicholas Kord.