- Edward A. Krug
Edward A. Krug (September 26, 1911-July 30, 1979) was the
University of Wisconsin-Madison 's first Virgil E. Herrick Professor of Educational Policy Studies.Krug attended
Northwestern University , receiving a B.A. in 1933 and M.A. in 1934. He then taught social studies at Evanston Township High School until 1938. In 1941, he received his Ph.D. fromStanford University thereafter accepting a temporary appointment as assistant professor. In 1943, he became a visiting assistant professor atMontana State University . In 1945, Krug became the Wisconsin State Curriculum Coordinator and held a concurrent position as Associate Professor of Education at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. In 1947, he returned to Stanford as an associate professor, but returned to Madison the next year.Krug's early works dealt with US social life. Beginning in 1950, Krug began a long publishing career on the history of US education. In 1950 he published "Curriculum Planning" and a decade later "Secondary School Curriculum". He also wrote "
Charles W. Eliot and Popular Education" (1961) and "Salient Dates in American Education" (1966). He collaborated on "Schools and Our Democratic Society" (1952), "Multzple-Period Organization in Wisconsin Secondary Schools" (1952), "Administering Curriculum Planning" (1957), and "The College-Preparatory Function in Wisconsin High Schools" (1959).His legacy, though, was established by a two-volume study of the American high school, "The Shaping of the American High School" (vol. 1, 1964; vol. 2 1971). This text is recognized as the standard history of this institution. ["Resolution," 523-524]
Notes
References
* "Resolution of the Faculty of the University of Wisconsin-Madison on the Death of Emeritus Professor Edward A. Krug," "History of Education Quarterly", 19, No. 4 (Winter, 1979): 523-524.
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