Albert Cullum
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Albert Cullum (1920-July 2003) was an American Elementary school teacher in the 1960s. Instead of the standard Dick and Jane style of teaching, he opted to introduce his children to classic literature such as Shakespeare and Greek Dramas. Unlike other teachers at the time, Cullum strongly believed that learning and play could be combined in the classroom. Cullum was the author of numerous books about education including the best-selling The Geranium On The Windowsill Just Died But Teacher You Went Right On, which sold over half a million copies.
He taught at St. Luke's School in Greenwich Village in the 1940s, and at Midland School in Rye, New York in the 1950s. He then went on to become a professor of education at Boston University and at Stonehill College.
Many of Cullum's pedagogical experiments and class performances were captured on film by irreverent filmmaker Robert Downey Sr..
A documentary called A Touch of Greatness was made about his life in 2004.[1]
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- A TOUCH OF GREATNESS site for Independent Lens on PBS
- Short Biography