R. Travis Osborne

For other people named Robert Osborne, see Robert Osborne (disambiguation).
R. Travis Osborne
Born Robert Travis Osborne
October 20, 1913
Cocoa, Florida, United States
Died May 28, 2013(2013-05-28) (aged 99)
Athens, Georgia, United States
Citizenship American
Fields Psychology
Institutions University of Georgia
Known for Director of the Pioneer Fund

Robert Travis Osborne (October 20, 1913 May 28, 2013) was a professor emeritus of psychology at University of Georgia.

Biography

Osborne began at University of Georgia in 1946 and was appointed Director of the University's Counseling and Testing Center in 1947. He was interested in psychometrics and counseling. When licensing laws for psychologists in Georgia were enacted, his license was number 15.

Osborne is a grantee of the Pioneer Fund to study intelligence and personality as well as physical characteristics in several hundred white and black twins in Georgia, Kentucky, and Indiana. Osborne’s large twin study showed that the weight of genes and culture are equally important among Blacks as among Whites. During the civil rights movement, he testified in court against school integration.

In 1994 he was one of 52 signatories of Mainstream Science on Intelligence, a public statement written by Linda Gottfredson and published in the Wall Street Journal as a response to what the authors viewed as the inaccurate and misleading reports made by the media regarding academic consensus on the results of intelligence research in the wake of the appearance of The Bell Curve earlier the same year.[1]

Osborne became a Director of the Pioneer Fund in 2000 and continued in that role until his death at the age of 99 in 2013.[2]

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