- John Curtis Gowan
John Curtis Gowan (
May 21 ,1912 -December 2 ,1986 ) was a psychologist who studied, along with E. Paul Torrance, the development of creative capabilities in children and gifted populations.Life
John Curtis Gowan was born
May 21 ,1912 inBoston ,Massachusetts . Graduating fromThayer Academy ,Braintree, Massachusetts , in 1929, John Gowan was only 17 when he enteredHarvard University , earning his undergraduate degree four years later. A master's degree in mathematics followed; he then moved toCulver ,Indiana , where he was employed as a counselor and mathematics teacher atCulver Military Academy from 1941 to 1952. Earning a doctorate fromUCLA , he became a member of the founding faculty at the California State University at Northridge, where he taught as a professor ofEducational Psychology from 1953 until 1975, when he retired with emeritus status.Dr. Gowan became interested in gifted children after the Russians gained superiority in space with the 1957 launch of
Sputnik . He formed theNational Association for Gifted Children the following year. He was the group's executive director and president from 1975 to 1979 and over the years wrote more than 100 articles and fourteen books on gifted children, teacher evaluation, child development, and creativity.While at Northridge, he developed a program to train campus counselors, was nominated in 1973 as outstanding professor, and had been a counselor, researcher,
Fulbright lecturer, and visiting professor at various schools including theUniversity of Singapore , theUniversity of Canterbury inChristchurch ,New Zealand , theUniversity of Hawaii , and Connecticut State College. He was a fellow of theAmerican Psychological Association and was also a colleague of theCreative Education Foundation .Besides his work in
Educational Psychology as specifically related to gifted children, he also had an interest inpsychic (orpsychedelic ) phenomena as it relates to human creativity. His work in this area was inspired by the writings ofAldous Huxley andCarl Jung . Based on his work in creativity and with gifted children, Dr. Gowan developed a model of mental development that derived from the workJean Piaget andErik Erikson , but also included adult development beyond the ordinary adult successes of career and family building, extending into the emergence and stabilization of extraordinary development and mystical states of consciousness. He described the entire spectrum of available states in his classic "Trance, Art, & Creativity" (1975), with its different modalities of spiritual and aesthetic expression. He also devised a test forself-actualization , (as defined byAbraham Maslow ), called the Northridge Developmental Scale.Dr. Gowan died on
December 2 ,1986 .Works
Dr. Gowan was the author or coauthor of over 100 articles and fourteen books including:
* Creativity and Its Education Implication - 1967.
* Education of the Ablest - 1971.
* The Guidance of Exceptional Children - 1972.
* The Development of the Creative Individual - 1972.
* Development of the Psychedelic Individual - 1974.
* Trance, Art & Creativity - 1975.
* Operations of Increasing Order - 1980.
* Creativity: Its Educational Implications 2nd Ed. - 1981.
* Enveloped in Glory - 1982.External links
* http://www.csun.edu/edpsy/Gowan/
* http://members.tripod.com/Zero-Point/GowanRetro.htmlReferences
#Gowan, J.C., "Development of the Psychedelic Individual", (info from back cover biography), 1974.
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