Lewis Elton
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Lewis R. B. Elton (born circa 1923) is a German-born British researcher into education, specialising in higher education.
Born Ludwig Ehrenberg in Tübingen to the scholars Victor Ehrenberg and Eva Dorothea Sommer, his (Jewish) family moved to Prague in 1929, and from there to England in February 1939, to escape the threat of Nazism. He changed his name to Lewis Elton during the Second World War, after which he obtained British citizenship.
He was Professor of Physics at Battersea College of Technology from 1964 until 1970. As the College completed its transformation into the University of Surrey (and its relocation from Battersea to Guildford) in 1970 he became Professor of Higher Education, a post he held until 1988. In 1994 he was appointed Professor of Higher Education at University College London, where he founded the Higher Education Research and Development Unit (now the Centre for the Advancement of Learning and Teaching). He became an honorary professor there in 2003. He was appointed Visiting Professor of Higher Education at Manchester University in August 2005.
He is a Fellow of the American Institute of Physics and a Fellow of the Society for Research into Higher Education. He was awarded a Lifetime Achievement award at the 2005 Times Higher Awards [1], at which Baroness Kennedy said "there is a polymath quality to this man that points to someone interested in educating the whole person"[2].
His brother was the noted historian Geoffrey Elton; he is father to Ben Elton, the comedian and author.
- See also: Ehrenberg