Clarence Albert Ives

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Clarence Albert Ives (born July 17, 1869 in Vernon , Louisiana , † September 6, 1966 in Baton Rouge , Louisiana) was an American educator and university professor .

Life

Clarence Albert Ives, the second youngest of ten children of the Superintendent Christopher Edwin Ives (1821-1892) and its from Milledgeville in the state of Georgia originating wife Martha Meade Bonner (1828-1912), wrote after visiting private schools in Vernon and Ruston at Louisiana State University in Latin . Clarence Albert Ives, who also completed a scientific course there, received a Bachelor of Science degree in 1893 . In 1923 his alma mater awarded him a Master of Arts degree .

Clarence Albert Ives, a member of the Methodist Episcopal Church, married Jessie Bond (1870-1941) on July 19, 1898. The renowned engineer Clarence Albert Ives junior (1899–1970) came from this connection . Clarence Albert Ives, who resided on Park Boulevard in Baton Rouge, died in the late summer of 1966 at the old age of 97. He was buried in the Roselawn Memorial Park and Mausoleum.

Professional background

After Clarence Albert Ives was employed as a teacher and principal in Louisiana from 1888 , he took up the position of principal at the high school in Shiloh , Illinois , after completing his bachelor's degree . The following year he moved to Louisiana State University as an instructor . From the following year Ives resumed teaching and principal duties in Louisiana before he was elected a member of the State Department of Education in 1912 , where he took over the position of the State Conductor of Teachers' Institute , and in 1914 he was promoted to State High School Inspector . Ives moved to Louisiana State University in 1923 as Professor of Education and Dean of the Teachers' College , and in 1945 he retired .

Clarence Albert Ives, director of the Baton Rouge Building & Loan Association , member of the National Education Association , the Louisiana State Teachers Association , the American Association of University Professors , the Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools (there he held the office from 1936 to 1938 of the President), the Phi Delta Kappa and the Sigma Nu , emerged in particular as the author of important educational treatises.

Publications

  • The high school history recitation, Baton Rouge, 1917
  • Suggestions to high school teachers and principals on thorough work, mental arithmetic, attendance, overcrowding, marking students, teaching of literature, Baton Rouge, 1919
  • A comparison of the 7-4 and 8-4 plans of school organization in certain schools of Arkansas, Mississippi and Louisiana, Baton Rouge, 1923
  • Handbook in curriculum development for Louisiana schools, Louisiana State University, Teachers college, Baton Rouge, La., 1936
  • Teacher training at Louisiana State University. [Radio address delivered Sept. 18, 1939], Louisiana State University, University, La., 1939
  • Some suggestions in the interest of education in Louisiana, Baton Rouge, 1944
  • Notes on Vernon, formerly the parish seat of Jackson Parish, Louisiana, Baton Rouge, 1960
  • As I remember, Baton Rouge, 1962
  • Can America recapture Americanism ?, Baton Rouge, 1962
  • with Rodney Cline: Essays on public issues, 1961 to 1966, Baton Rouge, 1966

literature

  • Who was who in America. : volume V, 1969-1973 with world notables , Marquis Who's Who, New Providence, NJ, 1973, p. 365.

Web links