Heinrich Vogeley

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Heinrich Vogeley (born March 2, 1907 in Kassel , † June 1994 in Meppen ) was a German educational scientist , literary didactician and university professor.

After attending secondary school , Vogeley studied theology, German and English philology and philosophy for two semesters each in Marburg and Heidelberg. In 1929 he passed the gymnastics and sports teacher examination in Heidelberg. Another five semesters followed in Marburg (German and English Philology and Philosophy) up to the scientific examination for teaching at secondary schools in 1931; then he entered the traineeship. In 1932 he submitted a dissertation on the topic: " Georg Büchner and Shakespeare". In 1932 he studied at Oxford , where he was employed as a teacher at St. Edward's School. Back in Kassel in 1933, the assessor exam followed in 1934.

He then worked from 1934 to 1938 as a teacher and educator at the reform-pedagogical Hermann Lietz School in the Rhön. In 1938 he became a lecturer for German and the methodology of German teaching at the University for Teacher Training in Trier. After military service and a short period of imprisonment in Husum, the family found themselves in Fritzlar. Vogeley worked here as a translator for the English occupation forces and gave English lessons to Polish foreign workers who wanted to emigrate to Canada.

Then the Adolf Reichwein University was founded in Celle in 1946 , aiming at a new form of teacher training . In 1953 the university moved to Osnabrück , where Vogeley was a full professor for the German language and methodology of German teaching. From 1959 to 1962 he was director of the Osnabrück University of Education and in 1973 was just a member of the new Osnabrück University until he retired in the same year. Vogeley published reading books for elementary and secondary schools: “Stories Reports Poems” (1968 together with Horst Haller, his former assistant) and “Reading, Representing, Understanding”.

Vogeley had been a member of the GEW since 1948 , in whose Oberaudorf district he worked for the university commission on university reform. He was also a member of the Humanist Union . He had been married since 1935 and had four children.

Web links

supporting documents

  1. Horst Haller: curriculum vitae. TU Dortmund University, accessed on January 18, 2019 .
  2. ^ Manfred Heidemann: From Studium Generale to university reform. The "Oberauforfer Talks" . Academy, Berlin 1996, ISBN 978-3-05-002901-6 .