- William Hughes Mearns
Infobox Person
name = William Hughes Mearns
caption =
birth_date = 1875
birth_place =
death_date = 1965
dead=dead
death_place =William Hughes Mearns (1875-1965), better known as Hughes Mearns, was an American
educator andpoet . A graduate of Harvard University and the University of Pennsylvania, Mearns was a Professor at thePhiladelphia School of Pedagogy from 1905 to 1920. Hearns is remembered now as the author of the poem "Antigonish" (or "The Little Man Who Wasn't There"), but his ideas, about encouraging the natural creativity of children, particularly those age 3 through 8, were novel at the time. It has been written about him that, "He typed notes of their conversations; he learned how to make them forget there was an adult around; never asked them questions and never showed surprise no matter what they did or said." [ Current Biography 1940, pp. 570-72 ]Mearns wrote two influential books: "Creative Youth" 1925, and "Creative Power" 1929. Essayist
Gabriel Gudding credits those books with " [lighting] a fuse" under the teaching ofcreative writing , influencing a generation of scholars. [http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2003/11/28/1069825996519.html A fatal deafness to the disenchanted - www.smh.com.au ] ]He also served for a time (starting in 1920) as head of the Lincoln School Teachers College at
Columbia University . [http://www.id.iit.edu/visiblelanguage/Feature_Articles/Baron_WritingIntheAgeofEmail/Baron_AgeofEmailPt2.html Writing in the age of email_ Composition in America ] ] He was also a proponent ofJohn Dewey 's work in progressive education.Antigonish
Mearns is credited with the relatively well-known rhyme, composed in 1899 as a song for a play he had written, called "The Psyco-ed" [ Current Biography 1940, p. 571 ] The play was performed in 1910 and the poem was first published as "Antigonish" in 1922.
:"As I was going up the stair":"I saw a man who wasn’t there":"He wasn’t there again today":"I wish, I "wish", he’d stay away."::"Antigonish" (1899)
Other works
* "I Ride in My Coach" (illustrated by
W.T. Schwarz ) 1923
* "Lions in the Way" 1927
* "Richard Richard" (illustrated byRalph L. Boyer ) 1916
* "Vinegar Saint" (illustrated by Ralph L. Boyer) 1919External links
References
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