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Tuesday, December 11, 2007
Leta Hollingworth was a psychologist who conducted revolutionary work on the psychology of women as well as on the education of outstanding children. Hollingworth was born Leta Anna Stetter on May 25, 1886 on a ranch outside of Chadron, Nebraska. Subsequent to graduating from the University of Nebraska in 1906 Stetter pursued a writing profession, but economic considerations lead her to take on a teaching position in her home state. On December 31, 1908 Stetter wedded Harry Levi Hollingworth, a graduate subordinate of James McKeen Cattell's at Columbia University in New York City. Once married Hollingworth was unable to gain employment for the reason that married women were not hired as teachers in New York City. This left Hollingworth aggravated at her helplessness to be more than a housewife. ultimately, the Hollingsworth's were proficient to save enough money to permit Leta to attend graduate school, and in 1911 Hollingworth begin graduate work in educational psychology at Columbia under the control of Edward Lee Thorndike Having qualified impediments to delicate achievements as a result of her sex, Hollingworth was moved to empirically examine the factors that were reflection to make women substandard to men. So, Hollingworth was a foremost figure in the growth of the psychology of women. A job occasion at the Clearing House for psychological Defectives allowed Hollingworth the opportunity to disprove the variability hypothesis, and constituent of the social Darwinism of the stage, and a base for many claims of female inadequacy. By investigative case records Hollingworth indomitable that though men outnumbered women, the relation of men to women decreased with age. Hollingworth explained this as the result of men facing better community prospect than women, leading to the earlier uncovering of deficiencies in men
posted by Psychegames at
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