Frank Nugent Freeman (1936)
Director, School of Education, University of Chicago Dean, School of
Education, University of California at Berkeley Author of The Teaching
of Handwriting (1914); Experimental Education (1916); How
Children Learn (1917); The Handwriting Movement (1918); Motion
Pictures in Education (1925); Mental Tests (1926); Correlated
Handwriting (1927); Twins: A Study of Heredity and Environment (1937); Modern
Psychology (1941); Chicago Mental Growth Battery (1943);
and Education and the Creed of the Free World (1952).
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Frank Nugent Freeman
(17 April 1880–17 October 1961) was born in Rockwood, Ontario, Canada,
to John Weldon and Amanda T. (Nugent) Freeman. At the age of nine,
he moved with his family to the United States.
While he attended Wesleyan University in Middletown, Connecticut, Freeman’s
interest in philosophy gravitated toward the fledgling discipline of
psychology. He graduated from Wesleyan in 1904 with a bachelor’s degree
and continued to study psychology at Yale University, where he earned
a master’s degree in 1906 and a Ph.D. in 1908. He was mentored at Yale
by Charles H. Judd who received his Ph.D. at Leipzig University in
Germany under Wilhelm Wundt, the father of experimental psychology.
Judd was well known for applying Wundt's philosophy and methodology
to the psychological factors of education.
While studying for his doctorate, Freeman served as an assistant at
Yale and was an acting professor at Washington College in Maryland.
After he received his Ph.D., Freeman spent a year at Leipzig University
as a Yale traveling fellow. While there, he was further influenced
by Wundt’s experimental psychology.
Freeman returned to the United States in 1909 and joined the faculty
of the University of Chicago where he was Director of the School of
Education. For 30 years, Freeman taught educational psychology at Chicago
and served as Director of the Orthogenic School for students with emotional
and behavioral problems. He rose to the position of Chairman of the
Department of Psychology before he moved to the University of California
at Berkeley in 1939. At Berkeley, he served as Professor of Educational
Psychology and, eventually, Dean of the School of Education. He retired
from Berkeley in 1948 as Professor Emeritus.
Freeman’s contributions came at a time when debate in psychology had
shifted from philosophical speculations to scientific investigation.
His writings demonstrate his interest in several areas, including handwriting,
the application of scientific method to problems in education, the
effects of new media and technology on education, the principles and
applications of mental tests, and heredity versus environment in psychological
development. Two of Freeman’s books stand out as having particular
significance, Mental Tests: Their History, Principles and Applications
(1926) and Twins: A Study of Heredity and Environment (1937).
Mental Tests was a university textbook that offered a critical and
comprehensive look at the state of mental tests. Psychologist Lee Cronbach
(1967, 67–68) wrote that this pivotal book “stands at the divide between
the catalogue of test descriptions and the modern text that covers
general principles of testing and measurement theory.” According to
Cronbach, Freeman’s close examination of the principles and limitations
of mental tests grounded in empirical evidence rather than psychological
theory helped lay the groundwork for the next generation of investigation.
Twins: A Study of Heredity and Environment was a groundbreaking scientific
investigation into the nature/nurture issue, which was hotly debated
among psychologists. In a collaborative effort, Freeman, H. H. Newman,
and K. J. Holzinger, after years of seeking out subjects, were able
to examine a statistically significant number of fraternal and identical
twins who were raised apart and together. Batteries of psychological
tests were administered. The results were correlated in an attempt
to shed light on the relative effects of heredity and environment.
No definitive conclusions could be drawn from their research to shed
light on the controversy. Their summation was that the human animal
was far more complex than imagined. However, the scientific integrity
of the study was so powerful that the work is still referenced today.
In his later writings, Freeman reflected on both the strengths and
weaknesses of a purely scientific approach to the study of education.
His work in educational psychology was recognized in 1939 by Wesleyan
University with an honorary Doctor of Science degree. He also was awarded
an LL.D. in 1951 by the University of California.
Freeman’s broad and enthusiastic involvement in professional organizations
demonstrated the scope of his interests and influence:
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Secretary (1919–1928) of
the psychology section and Chairman (1929) of the educational
section of the American Association for the Advancement of
Science. |
| • |
Secretary (1922–1923) and Chairman of
the Editorial Board (1930–1937) of the American Educational
Research Association. |
| • |
Director (1930–1937) and Chairman (1937–39)
of the National Society for the Study of Education. He chaired
the committee that produced the Society’s 37th yearbook, The
Scientific Movement in Education (1947), and served as its
editor. |
| • |
Council member (1937–1941) of the American
Psychological Association. |
| • |
Member of the American Council on Education,
chairing committees on educational research, memory problems,
and planning. |
| • |
Vice-president of the American Association
of Applied Psychology and Chairman (1938–1939) of its section
on educational psychology. |
| • |
Chairman (1938–1940) of the Society
for Research in Child Development. |
| • |
President (1940–1941) of the Society
of College T eachers of Education. |
| • |
Member of the United States Educational
Commission to post-World War II Japan (1946), for which he
received the King Christian X Medal of Liberation from Denmark. |
| • |
Member of the New York State Commission
for a State University (1947). |
| • |
President (1947–1948) of the American
Association of Colleges and Departments of Education. |
After retirement in 1948, Freeman taught as a visiting
professor at the University of Hawaii and lectured at the University
of Southern California. At age 81, just a few days before his death,
Freeman chaired meetings of the Handwriting Association in Chicago.
In addition to his professional interest in psychology and education,
he was an award-winning photographer. A box containing correspondence
and manuscripts by Freeman from his tenure at the University of
California is housed at Berkeley’s Bancroft Library. In addition
to article manuscripts, these papers include materials related
to conferences on junior colleges and to preparations for the 1947
yearbook of the National Society for the Study of Education.
Contributed by Terry E. Martin, Baylor University
References
__________. 2003. Online archive of California: Frank Nugent Freeman
papers, 1939–1947. Berkeley, Calif.: Regents of the University
of California. Available at: http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt8c60067f
Cattell, J. M., J. Cattell, and E. E. Ross, ed. 1941. Leaders
in education, a biographical directory. New York: The Science
Press. Cronbach, L. J. 1967. ‘Mental tests’ by Frank N. Freeman. The
School Review 75(1): 67–75.
Murchison, C., ed. 1929. The psychological register. Worchester,
Mass.: Clark University Press.
Ohles, J. F., ed. 1978. Biographical dictionary of American educators.
Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press. Russell, D. H., R. M. Eakin, and
E. T. Grether. 1963. In memoriam: Frank Nugent Freeman. Berkeley,
Calif.: University of California History Digital Archives. Zusne,
L., ed. 1975. Names in the history of psychology: A biographical
sourcebook. Wash., DC: Hemisphere Publishing Corporation.
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