Lyle M. Spencer

Lyle Manly Spencer (May 10, 1911 August 21, 1968) was an American philanthropist. In 1938, he was a 27-year-old graduate student in sociology at the University of Chicago when he founded Science Research Associates (SRA), the educational publishing firm which provided the basis of his wealth and ultimately made possible the creation of The Spencer Foundation.

Early life and education

Spencer was born in Atlanta[1] and spent much of his childhood in Appleton, Wisconsin, but went to college in the Pacific Northwest. He received his undergraduate and master's degrees in sociology from the University of Washington in Seattle,[1] where his father was president from 1927 to 1933; he then continued his graduate work in sociology at the University of Chicago.[1]

Career

The Spencer Foundation was established formally in 1962. That same year, Spencer, as President of SRA, testified before Congress and made explicit his belief in the reformative power of well-funded education research: "In my judgment, hard-minded, sensible investments in educational research can provide the most effective single method of strengthening our schools." Speaking to employees of his firm in 1961, Spencer noted that SRA was initially a nonprofit organization that "nearly went broke in the first year before we gave up that idea... We reorganized as a commercial firm in 1939 and have been going up ever since."

Spencer's colleagues at SRA and his friends in higher education referred to him as a businessman who was always an educator, a man who was a researcher all his life. Charles Dollard, Spencer's friend and one of the original directors of the Spencer Foundation, noted, "Lyle had a passionate belief in education as the modus vivendi of a democratic society. He was particularly concerned both professionally and personally with the education of the young. He liked to say that it was quite as important where one went to kindergarten as where one went to college." While at SRA's helm, Spencer served as a trustee of three universities, was a director of what is now the United Negro College Fund, and sat on the visiting committees for education at Harvard University and the University of Chicago.

Sale of SRA

In 1964, SRA was purchased by IBM, but Spencer continued as the firm's chief executive and guiding spirit until his death in 1968. After the sale of SRA to IBM in 1964, Spencer realized the potential impact his now much-increased fortune could have on the course of educational research throughout the world. His personal memoranda, sketchy yet impassioned notes outlining his vision for the Foundation, reveal a concern for individual people and the individual learning process, a desire to support educational projects that lacked other sources of funding, and an interest in a grassroots approach to improving generally educational opportunities both here and abroad: "Improve learning process, including diffusion into developing countries;" "Maybe non-cognitive;" "Prejudiced against bricks and mortar;" "All support periods finite;" "Projects where other money not readily available at this point;" "Tend to bet on people even more than the project itself."

Death

On August 21, 1968, Lyle Spencer died of pancreatic cancer at Passavant Hospital in Chicago, Illinois.[1] He was buried in Appleton, Wisconsin.[1]

gollark: As far as I know the networks mostly just get fed "tokens" and output "tokens".
gollark: I guess so. But this way is easier to get useful results out of without 917249817481724871471094819024 big neural networks and 912748129648912641641246182057180971207401892784901704 training.
gollark: Humans have dedicated language processing brain areas, however.
gollark: Why did Syl engage *now*?
gollark: Syl is experiencing "nostalgia".

See also

  • The Spencer Foundation

References

  1. "Lyle Spencer Dies; Director of IBM". The Post-Standard. August 26, 1968. p. 17. Retrieved January 7, 2016 via Newspapers.com.
  • New York Times; August 22, 1968, Thursday; Lyle M. Spencer, Tests Publisher; Head of Science Research Associates Dead at 57.
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