Edward Franklin Buchner
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Yale University
Edward Franklin Buchner | |
|---|---|
| Born | September 3, 1868 Paxton, Illinois, USA |
| Died | August 22, 1929 |
| Alma mater | Leander Clark College Yale University |
| Occupation | Academic |
| Spouse | Hannah Louise Cable |
| Children | 2 daughters, 2 sons |
Edward Franklin Buchner (1868–1929) was an American academic and scholar in education studies.
Edward Franklin Buchner was born on September 3, 1868, in Paxton, Illinois.[1] He attended Leander Clark College and graduated from Yale University, where he received a PhD in 1893.[1]
Career
Buchner was Professor of Education at the University of Alabama from 1903 to 1908.[1] He became Professor of Education at Johns Hopkins University in 1908.[1] He wrote research in education studies.[2] In 1925, he helped create the master of education and doctor of education degrees at Johns Hopkins.[1]
He wrote A Study of Kant's Psychology in 1893 and translated Immanuel Kant's 1803 Lecture-Notes on Pedagogy and published them in 1908.[3]
Buchner served as the fourth president of the Southern Society for Philosophy and Psychology in 1911.[4]