He has been awarded two Guggenheim Fellowships and was a Rockefeller Foundation Resident at Baellagio, Italy. He is the author of five books on the history of medicine and education, and two textbooks. Bonner is Distinguished Professor Emeritus and President Emeritus of Wayne State University. The former

He has been awarded two Guggenheim Fellowships and was a Rockefeller Foundation Resident at Baellagio, Italy. He is the author of five books on the history of medicine and education, and two textbooks. Bonner is Distinguished Professor Emeritus and President Emeritus of Wayne State University. The former president of three universities and colleges–the University of New Hampshire, Union College, and Wayne State University–he is the recipient of major, multi-year grants from the National Endowment for the HFor all of us in academic medicine, Iconoclast offers a learned portrait of the distance traveled in medical education during the past 100 years, along with consideration of the curricular and pedagogical problems that persist. One of his fiercest critiques focused on the lecture mode, which enabled colleges to "handle cheaply by wholesale a large body of students that would be otherwise unmanageable and to give the lecturer time for research." Flexner's writing attracted the attention of Henry Pritchett, president of the Carnegie Foundation, who was looking for someone to lead a series of studies of professional education. At that time, there were 155 medical schools in North America with wildly diverse admissions, curricular, evaluative, and graduatBonner offers an engaging and insightful view of one of the most influential figures in twentieth-century American education. After a successful nineteen-year career as a teacher and principal, he turned his attention to medical education. In this, the first biography of Abraham Flexner (1866–1959), distinguished scholar Thomas N. His devastating critique of American higher education in 1936 raised the hackles of educatorsbut ultimately raised important questions as well. Three years later he created and led the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, convincing Albert Einstein to accept the first appointment at the newly created institute.Brilliant, abrasive, tenderhearted, and fundamentally a decent, farseeing man, Abraham Flexner accomplished much good in the world. Upon earning his degree in 1886, he returned to Louisville to foundfour years before John Dewey's Chicago "laboratory school"an experimental school based on progressive ideas that soon won the close attention of Harvard President Charles Eliot. Flexner's subsequent projectsa book on medical education in Europe and a comparative study of medical education in Europe and Americaremain unsurpassed in range and insight. His 1910 surveyknown today as the Flexner Reportstimulated much-needed, radical changes in the field and, Like the butterfly's wings, this initial futile and seemingly inconsequential event sowed the seed for a trans-national environmental movement a movement that became Greenpeace.. Like Darwin's Voyage of the Beagle, the book provides a vivid description of a remote part of the world that few of us have or ever will see. At age 42, he " breaks free" from Louisville and enrolls at Harvard and subsequently at Oxford in Britain and then at Berlin University in Germany. We shared a sixpack of beer and talked about big-picture ecology, life, love - everything we really care about. On his return back to the U.S.A, he is commissioned by Henry Pritchett of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching to survey 155 medical schools in North America. Professor Bonner has done an admirable job in writing this thoroughly researched and definitive biography which will serve as a highly dependable reference work for future researchers. government. I agree totally. It is not quite as well known that Hunter was a founding member of Greenpeace and was on the ill-fated voyage of the Phyllis McCormack that fall of 1972. Professor Bonner informs us about his fascination with Abraham Flexner's work in the Introduction by reading his first book "The American College" followed by the famous "Flexner Report- Medical Education in the US
- Title : Iconoclast: Abraham Flexner and a Life in Learning
- Author : Thomas Neville Bonner
- Rating : 4.63 (157 Vote)
- Publish : 2014-6-29
- Format : Hardcover
- Pages : 424 Pages
- Asin : 0801871247
- Language : English


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