William Murray (educationist)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

William Murray (19 April 1912 21 September 1995) was a British educationist who created the Ladybird Peter and Jane books.[1][2]

He was born in County Londonderry.[3]

Career

He worked as a teacher. He became a headmaster at two schools in Cheltenham and a County Education Advisor for Devon.[4] He lectured throughout Britain on the teaching of reading.

Learning to read

He published a booklet called Key Words to Literacy with the education psychologist Joe McNally from the University of Manchester. The booklet described that they had found that in the English language that children spoke, twelve words accounted for one quarter of all words, one hundred accounted for half, and three hundred accounted for three-quarters.[4]

Ladybird

The Key Words Reading Scheme, taking his ideas, was first published in 1964, with Peter and Jane, and went on to sell over 80 million copies of the books in the series.[4]

Peter and Jane were based on the real-life children (Jill Ashurst and Christopher Edwards)[5] of a neighbour of the books' illustrator Harry Wingfield. Martin Aitchison and John Berry also illustrated the books.[citation needed]

He retired from teaching in 1970.

Personal life

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI