American Decades
Boyer, Ernest L. 1928-
CHANCELLOR OF STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW
YORK; US. COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION;
PRESIDENT OF CARNEGIE FOUNDATION FOR
THE ADVANCEMENT OF
TEACHING
From Teacher to Administrator.
Ernest L. Boyer was one of the most influential voices in the calls for educational reform in the 1980s. As the head of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, beginning in 1980, the issues he addressed received national attention. Born in Dayton, Ohio, Boyer moved west to receive his doctoral degree in audiology at the University of Southern California in 1957. He became a professor of speech pathology and audiology and academic dean at Upland College, but in 1960 he reached what he called a "crucial crossroad" in his life when he switched from teaching to administration. When he accepted a position with the Western College Association, the California Board of Education had ordered all public schoolteachers to obtain a...
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1980's Education
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Academic and Athletic Reform
- Aids: Catalyst for Change in the Schools
- Apartheid Spurs Campus Protests
- Bilingual Education
- Black Educational Progress Slows
- Federal Education Intervention: Harmful or Helpful?
- Guns, Drugs, and Suicide
- 1983: "The Hinge of History" for Reform
- Rise in Censorship
- Teachers Under Fire
- Women's Issues in Education
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Education, 1980–1989
