American educator and poet
Louisa Parsons (Stone) Hopkins |
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Born | 1834 |
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Died | 1895 |
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Louisa Parsons Hopkins (1834–1895) was an American educator and poet, who spoke and wrote on progressive education.[1][2][3]
Life
Born in Newburyport in 1834, she attended the Putnam Free School, and was part of a small writing group under Thomas Wentworth Higginson, along with Jane Andrews and Harriet Prescott Spofford.[4] Her husband's business "suffered a reversal in fortune", which led her to create a small primary school in her home for extra income.[4][5] Her students did well, and she wrote up an article for the Journal of Education on her methods. This led to fame in educational circles, and ultimately to a string of books[6] and speaking engagements. She was appointed to the Board of Supervisors of the Boston Public Schools, and paced by Governor William E. Russell on a commission to investigate the use of manual training in Europe. Her work on that commission was noted by contemporaries as being singular in nature.[7]
She retired from that position due to illness and died a few years later.
Works
- Breath of the Field and Shore (1881)
- Motherhood: A Poem (1881)
- Handbook of the Earth: Natural Methods in Geography (1883)
- Educational Psychology: a Treatise for Parents and Educators (1886)
- Natural-history Plays, Dialogues, and Recitations for School Exhibitions (1885)
- The Spirit of the New Education (1892)
- Observation Lessons in the Primary Schools: A Manual for Teachers (1896)
References
External links
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