Английская Википедия:Idabelle Yeiser
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Idabelle Yeiser (born c. 1900, died 24 September 1954) was an American woman poet, writer, and educator, who was part of the New Negro Movement in Philadelphia.[1][2][3]
Early life and education
Yeiser was the daughter of John G. Yeiser, a pastor in the African Methodist Episcopal Church.[4] She graduated from Asbury Park High School in 1918,[5] and from the New Jersey State Normal School at Montclair in 1920.[6] She earned a bachelor's degree at the University of Pennsylvania, with further studies in Paris and Madrid.[7][8] In 1940, she earned a doctorate in education at Teachers College, Columbia University.[9]
Career
Yeiser taught school and private language classes[10] in Camden, New Jersey, and in Philadelphia.[11] She was known for teaching with puppets.[12] She was an education professor at Dillard University from 1943 to 1946,[9][13] was a professor of education at Cheyney College in 1950,[14] and was an assistant professor of education at Brooklyn College in the 1950s.[15]
In the 1930s, Yeiser was a prize-winning horsewoman in Philadelphia.[16] She was an interviewer with the Mississippi Health Project, working with Melva L. Price and Dorothy Boulding Ferebee, among others.[17] In 1945, she was a consultant to the Oklahoma City Negro Teachers' Institute.[18]
Yeiser was active in the peace movement. She was a member of the Philadelphia chapter of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, and in the early 1930s had a newspaper column in the Philadelphia Tribune, titled "Peace Corner."[19] In summer 1947, she was one of six American representatives at a UNESCO seminar in France.[20][21]
Works
- "Echoes of Toulouse, France" (1926, The Crisis)[11]
- Moods: A Book of Verse (1937)
- "The Why and How of Teaching French to Little Children" (1939, The Modern Language Journal)[10]
- The Curriculum as an Integrating Force for Ethnic Variations (1943)[22]
- "The Teacher Beyond the Textbook" (1944, The Southwestern Journal)
- Lyric and Legend (1947)
- "Notes on a UNESCO Conference" (1949)[23]
- "Two Student Teaching Programs" (1953, Journal of Teacher Education)[15]
- "An Essay on Creativity" (1953, Arts and Activities)[24]
Personal life
Yeiser died in 1954.
References
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- ↑ Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, The 1938 Mississippi Health Project (AKA Publications No. 5, December 1938).
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite news
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- Английская Википедия
- 1890s births
- Year of birth uncertain
- 1954 deaths
- Writers from Philadelphia
- African-American history in Philadelphia
- African-American poets
- African-American women writers
- American women poets
- Asbury Park High School alumni
- Harlem Renaissance
- Montclair State University alumni
- Teachers College, Columbia University alumni
- 20th-century African-American women
- 20th-century American people
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