Bernhard Dilger

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Bernhard Dilger's grave in the Querenburg cemetery in Bochum.

Bernhard Dilger (born March 1, 1931 in Dresden ; † June 2, 2016 in Bochum ) was a German educator and university teacher .

Life

Bernhard Dilger studied history , law , German studies , philosophy and education at the Free University of Berlin and the Universities of Bonn and Vienna from 1953 to 1960 . 1960–1961 he was an exchange student at Leningrad University . 1963–1964 he worked as a research assistant at the Eastern European Institute of the Free University of Berlin, 1964–1968 as a research assistant (male and female) at the Institute for Pedagogy of the Ruhr University Bochum (RUB). In 1968 Dilger was awarded a Dr. phil. PhD and thus regular research assistant in Bochum. In 1970 he was appointed to the Academic Council , in 1971 to the Academic Senior Council and in 1974, after a refused call to the University of the Federal Armed Forces in Hamburg , as professor at the RUB, where he became a university professor in 1984 . In 1996 he retired.

The focus of Dilger's work was comparative education, particularly with regard to the educational systems in the People's Republic of China , the Soviet Union and other then socialist states . He was also very involved in teaching and testing. He leaves three children, including Alexander Dilger , and eight grandchildren.

Fonts (selection)

  • AD Gradovskij's political views , in: Mathias Bernath, Horst Jablonowski and Werner Philipp (eds.): Research on Eastern European History , Volume 15, Berlin 1970, pp. 145–306, also a dissertation at the Free University of Berlin 1968.
  • Education in the People's Republic of China since 1969: A Bibliography , together with Jürgen Henze, Bochum 1978.
  • The Education of Minorities , in: Comparative Education 20 (1), 1984, pp. 155-164.
  • Comparative educational research: GDR, Eastern Europe and intercultural perspectives - Festschrift for Oskar Anweiler on the occasion of his 60th birthday , published together with Friedrich Kuebart and Hans-Peter Schäfer, Berlin 1986.

Individual evidence

  1. Alexander and Katrin Dilger (eds.): Family and work: Bernhard Dilger for his 80th birthday. Dortmund 2011, p. 51 f.