American Decades
The Military Goes to School
The "Brainpower Lag."
In the fall of 1960 a U.S. captain set his compass wrong and flew over Canada, not California as planned. A major made an arithmetic error that significantly affected the fuel calculations, forcing an entire group of jets to land at the wrong airport. Observers began to question the competency of military officers. Of the air force top brass, only 43 percent of 119,000 line officers held a college degree. The military took its problem of lack of brainpower seriously, and $63 million was set aside annually for a military-education program. Among the goals were to double the number of officers with advanced degrees and to revise standards for commissions.
Classrooms in the Military.
By 1964 the military's program was in full force, and two researchers, Dr. Harold Clark of Teachers College, Columbia University, and Harold Sloan, research director at Fairleigh-Dickinson College, had spent two years...
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1960's Education
- Overview
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Topics in the News
- Expansion of the Federal Role in Education
- The Changing Curriculum
- College Officials and the Morals Revolution
- How Student Unrest Changed Higher Education
- The Origins of Bilingual Education
- Progressive Education Versus Basic Education
- Shortages of Teachers, Professors
- The Military Goes to School
- Technology and Education
- Public-School Integration
- Montessori Schools
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Education, 1960–1969
