Chicago's Education Innovators: Making History INterviews with Paul Adams III and Walter Massey

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Abstract

<p> The in&fllig;uence of educators Paul Adams and Walter Massey extends far beyond Chicago. Both men share Southern roots: they grew up in racially-segregated urban communities and migrated to Chicago in search of employment opportunity. For more than forty-&filig;ve years, Adams has served as the director of guidance, principal, and president of Providence St. Mel&rsquo; School in Chicago&rsquo;s East Gar&filig;eld Park neighborhood. Adams&rsquo;s avid fund raising saved the school from closing in the 1970s and attracted the interest of and personal visits by President Ronald Reagan. In the ensuing decades, Adams was instrumental in transforming the school into what one study called the &ldquo;model for urban education&rdquo; in the United States.1 For more than half a century, Massey has been a national leader in the promotion of science, technological innovation, and making technology accessible to wider segments of the American population. The physicist and selftaught business executive has served as president, chairman, or director of Morehouse College, the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, the National Science Foundation, Argonne National Laboratory, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the National Society of Black Physicists, and Bank of America.</p>
Original languageAmerican English
JournalChemistry: Faculty Publications and Other Works
Volume41
Issue number2
StatePublished - Jul 1 2017

Keywords

  • Walter Massey
  • Paul Adams III
  • History Interviews
  • Education Innovators

Disciplines

  • Education
  • History

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