Counts graduated from Baker University in 1911 with a Bachelor of Arts degree. He then became a high school principal, a science and math teacher, and an athletic coach before heading off to graduate school. While attending graduate school at the University of Chicago in 1913, Counts was influenced by John Dewey and Francis W. Parker. He planned on majoring in sociology until his brother-in-law encouraged him to go into education. Counts then decided he would major in education but minor in sociology and social science. During this time he was a student of Charles Hubbard Judd, a leading proponent of the science of education. It was uncommon during this time to combine a career in education with anything other than psychology. Counts took great pride in knowing he was Judd's first student to not minor in psychology. Counts earned a doctorate in education at the University of Chicago in 1916. His experience studying sociology under Albion W. Small during this period is attributed for encouraging Counts to concentrate on the sociological dimension of educational research.[1][2]
Profession
Early career
Counts' first position was head of the Department of Education at Delaware College from 1916–1918, then as a professor at Harris Teachers College in 1918. Counts taught at the University of Washington in 1919, then Yale in 1920. Then, in 1926, he taught at the University of Chicago. In 1924 he published The Principles of Education, (1924) with J. Crosby Chapman. During this period Counts favored Dewey's progressive education model of child-centered learning, and this book provided a broad overview of education from that perspective.[3]
In 1926 Counts returned to the University of Chicago. The next year he began a remarkable tenure at Columbia UniversityTeachers College. He remained here until he was forced to retire in 1955. In 1930 Counts wrote American Road to Culture[4] a global perspective on education. In this book he identifies ten "controlling ideas" in U.S. education. He also talks about individual success, national solidarity, and philosophic uncertainty. Regarding this book's case about American schools, H. G. Wells said, "the complete ideological sterilization of the common schools of the Republic is demonstrated beyond question. The sterilization was deliberate."[5]
After publishing two comparative studies of the Soviet education system, The New Russian Primer. (1931) and The Soviet Challenge to America. (1931), Counts was invited to address to the Progressive Education Association. His papers, delivered over three separate speeches, formed the core of the book, Dare the School Build a New Social Order?, published in 1932.[6] Counts provides a clear examination of the cultural, social and political purposes of education, and proponents the deliberate examination and navigation of teaching for political purposes.[7]
In his address Counts proposed that teachers "dare build a new social order" through a complex, but definitely possible, process.[8] He explained that only through schooling could students be educated for a life in a world transformed by massive changes in science, industry, and technology. Counts insisted that responsible educators "cannot evade the responsibility of participating actively in the task of reconstituting the democratic tradition and of thus working positively toward a new society."[9] Counts' address to the PEA and the subsequent publication put him in the forefront of the social reconstructionism movement in education.[10]
Conservative educators attacked the premise of Counts' assertion, and progressive educators recoiled at his criticism of their practices. W. E. B. Du Bois issued a rebuttal to Counts' assertions that teachers were capable of building a "new social order". In 1935 he spoke to a Georgia African American teacher's convention, curtly discounting the nature of the education system today.[11]
Later career
Counts continued teaching at Columbia. Several of his students, including William Marvin Alexander, went on to notability in the field of education themselves.[12] Counts retired in 1956.
Counts traveled to the Soviet Union several times in the course of his life, writing several books about Soviet education and comparing Soviet and American education systems. In the 1930s William Randolph Hearst used select statements from interviews with Counts to portray American university faculty as Communist Party sympathizers.[14][15]
Counts' theories continue to draw support[16] from modern educators.
Bibliography
The New Russian Primer (1931) and The Soviet Challenge to America (1931) were Counts' first works, and Dare the School Build a New Social Order? (1932) is regarded as his seminal work. His other books include The Social Foundations of Education (1934); The Prospects of American Democracy (1938); The Country of the Blind (1949), and; Education and American Civilization (1952). He taught at Columbia University Teachers College for almost thirty years. His final publications included Education and the Foundations of Human Freedom (1952) and School and Society in Chicago (1971).[17]
Bibliography of writings on Counts
Austin, J. George Counts at Teachers College, 1927-1941;: A study in unfulfilled expectations.
Braun, R. (2002) Teachers and Power. Touchstone Publishers.
Berube, M. (1988) Teacher Politics. Greenwood Press.
Cremin, L.A. (1964) The transformation of the American school: Progressivism in American education 1876–1957. New York: Vintage.
Dennis, L. (1990) George S. Counts and Charles A. Beard: Collaborators for Change. (SUNY Series in the Philosophy of Education). State Univ of New York Press.
Gutek, G. (1970) The Educational Theory George S. Counts. Ohio: Ohio State University Press.
JAY, CHARLES DUANE. "THE DOCTORAL PROGRAM OF GEORGE S. COUNTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO (1913-1916): AN INTELLECTUAL HISTORY" (PhD dissertation, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale; ProQuest Dissertations Publishing, 1982. 8229283).
Ornstein, A, & Levine, D. (1993) Foundations of Education. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company.
Sheerin, W. (1976) "Educational Scholarship and the Legacy of George S. Counts," Educational Theory 26(1), 107–112.