Article ID: CBB626912820

Ages and Ages: The Multiplication of Children’s ‘ages’ in Early Twentieth-century Child Psychology (2016)

unapi

This paper explores the trend, between 1905 and the late 1920s in UK and US child psychology, of ‘discovering’, labelling and calculating different ‘ages’ in children. Those new ‘ages’ – from mental to emotional, social, anatomical ages, and more – were understood as either replacing, or meaningfully related to, chronological age. The most famous, mental age, ‘invented’ by Alfred Binet in the first decade of the century, was instrumental in early intelligence testing. Anatomical age triggered great interest until the 1930s, with many psychologists suggesting that physical development provided a more reliable inkling of which grade children should be in than chronological age. Those ages were calculated with great precision, and educational recommendations began to be made on the basis of these. This article maps this psychological and educational trend, and suggests that it cultivated a vision of children as developmentally erratic, worthy of intense scientific attention, and enticingly puzzling for researchers.

...More
Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB626912820/

Similar Citations

Article Nicolas, Serge; Ferrand, Ludovic; (2002)
Alfred Binet and Higher Education (/isis/citation/CBB000202020/)

Essay Review Herman, Ellen; (2001)
How Children Turn Out and How Psychology Turns Them Out (/isis/citation/CBB000100117/)

Book Katie Day Good; (2020)
Bring the World to the Child: Technologies of Global Citizenship in American Education (/isis/citation/CBB674504373/)

Article Johnson, Ann; Johnston, Elizabeth; (2015)
Up the Years with the Bettersons: Gender and Parent Education in Interwar America (/isis/citation/CBB001552616/)

Article Harris, Ben; (2011)
Arnold Gesell's Progressive Vision: Child Hygiene, Socialism and Eugenics (/isis/citation/CBB001220670/)

Article Lafuente, Enrique; Loredo, José Carlos; Castro, Jorge; (2015)
Citizens at Work: Evolutionism, Functionalism, Progressivism and Industrial Psychology in the Writings of Arland D. Weeks (/isis/citation/CBB001551406/)

Book James Elwick; (2021)
Making a Grade: Victorian Examinations and the Rise of Standardized Testing (/isis/citation/CBB078612921/)

Article Elliott, Paul; Daniels, Stephen; (2010)
“No Study So Agreeable to the Youthful Mind”: Geographical Education in the Georgian Grammar School (/isis/citation/CBB001231199/)

Authors & Contributors
Medwed, Karen
Yang, Elisabeth M.
Fierro, Catriel
Grabowski, Tabby
Wall, John
Good, Katie Day
Journals
History of Psychology
History of the Human Sciences
History of Education
Osiris: A Research Journal Devoted to the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences
Journal of the Guilded Age and Progressive Era
Journal of American History
Publishers
Northeastern University
Dowling College
University of Toronto Press
Routledge
Palgrave Macmillan
MIT Press
Concepts
Education
Psychology
Primary and secondary education
Child development
Teaching; pedagogy
Children
People
Weeks, Arland Deyett
Piaget, Jean
Pearson, Karl
Gesell, Arnold Lucius
Galton, Francis
Binet, Alfred
Time Periods
20th century, early
19th century
20th century
18th century
21st century
20th century, late
Places
United States
Great Britain
Netherlands
Germany
France
New York (U.S.)
Institutions
Columbia University
Université de Paris
Collège de France, Paris
Comments

Be the first to comment!

{{ comment.created_by.username }} on {{ comment.created_on | date:'medium' }}

Log in or register to comment