Established in 1975, The DeGarmo Lecture is an annual statement on a problem or issue of special current concern to the education professoriate, offered by a prominent and distinguished figure in American Education. The DeGarmo Lecture is published by the Society and distributed to its members. The series is named for Charles DeGarmo, a Professor of the Science and Art of Education, and the first president of the National Society of College Teachers of Education in 1902.
DeGarmo Lecture Award Recipients
William H. Schubert, University of Illinois at Chicago, 2011
Larry Cuban , Stanford University, Tinkering Toward Utopia: The 2010 Version, 2010
Gerald Bracey, High/Scope Educational Research Foundation, Getting the word out: Countering fear mongers about American public schools, 2009
Jim Garrison, Virginia Tech University, Rethinking care, motivation, and encounters across difference, 2008
Philip W. Jackson, University of Chicago, Rethinking Education, 2007
Linda Darling-Hammond, Stanford University, Powerful preparation: The university's new role in transforming public education, 2006
Michael Fullen, University of Toronto, System thinkers in action: The road to sustainability, 2005
Jeannie Oakes, UCLA, Education for all on equal terms: Voices from the struggle 50 years after Brown, 2004
Lee Shulman, Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, Educational research and the scholarship of education, 2003
Sonia M. Nieto, University of Massachusetts, Language, culture and teaching: Critical perspectives for teacher education, 2002
Frederick D. Erikson, UCLA, Learning to collaborate with teachers in the representation of their work: Reflections of the continuing education of a professor of education, 2001
David Berliner, Arizona State University, 2000
Yvonna S. Lincoln, Texas A & M University, Seeking a new discourse for the professoriate: Is change possible? 1999
Nel Noddings, Stanford University, Taking place seriously, 1998
Michael Apple, University of Wisconsin, Madison, 1997
Thomas F. Green, Syracuse University, Public speech, 1993
Arthur G. Wirth and Arthur Brown, Beyond the vocational and the technical (Tribute to Robert H. Beck), 1992
Deborah Meier, Central Park East, Secondary School, NYC, To be a good teacher, 1991
Maxine Greene, Columbia University, Retrieving the language of compassion - the education professor in search of community, 1990
Gerald Grant, Two dilemmas of equal educational oportunity, 1989
Andrew G. Wirth, Washington University, The violation of people at work in schools, 1988
K. Patricia Cross, Using assessment to improve instruction, 1987
Robert H. Anderson, The education professoriate: A leap toward prosperity, 1986
Lawrence E. Metcalf, Peace education within a war system, 1985
Theodore R. Sizer, High school reform and the reform of teacher education, 1984
Phillip G. Smith, Indiana University, Moral theory for public education, 1983
R. Freeman Butts, Teachers College, Columbia University, Teacher education and the revival of civic learning, 1982
Kenneth D. Benne, From pedagogy to anthropology: A challence for the education professoriate, 1981
B. Othanel Smith, University of Illinois, Now is the time to advance pedagogical education, 1980
Harry S. Broudy, University of Illinois, What do professors of education profess? 1979
John I. Goodlad, UCLA, Accountability: an alternative perspective, 1978
[The De Garmo Lecture was not given in 1977.]
Marian L. Martinello, University of Texas San Antonio, Asking impertinent questions: A purpose of the professorate, 1976
Carl H. Gross, Michigan State University, Where are you - Now that we need you? 1975 |