Olive Wheeler

Dame Olive Annie Wheeler, DBE (4 May 1886 – 26 September 1963) was a Welsh educationist and psychologist, and Professor of Education at University College of South Wales and Monmouthshire, now Cardiff University.[1]

Early life

Born at the High Street in Brecon, Olive Wheeler was the younger daughter of Annie Wheeler, née Poole, and her husband, Henry Burford Wheeler.[1][2] Henry Wheeler was a master printer and publisher.[2] She attended Brecon County School for Girls. She received an Honours Central Welsh Board Certificate in 1904.[2] She attended University College of Wales, Aberystwyth and graduated with a BSc in Chemistry in 1907, and a MSc in 1911.[1] At Aberystwyth she was elected president of the Students' Representative Council.[3] In 1908 she was awarded a double first in a Secondary Teachers Certificate, University of Wales.[2]

Wheeler completed a DSc (Doctor of Science) in Psychology at Bedford College, London (now part of Royal Holloway, University of London) in 1916.[1][4] She enrolled for the DSc in the Michaelmas term of 1911 at the age of twenty five. Her mother, Annie Wheeler, was a signatury on the form (her father was already dead), along with A. H. Lewis, a Baptist Minister in Brecon, and Uma Wright, Secretary to Brecon Gas Company.[2]

Career

Her first teaching appointment was as lecturer in mental and moral science at Cheltenham Ladies College. She was later appointed to a lectureship in education at the University of Manchester, and served as Dean of the Faculty of Education. In 1921 she applied for the Chair in Education at Swansea University College.[5] Wheeler stood as the Labour candidate for the University of Wales parliamentary constituency in the 1922 general election against Thomas Arthur Lewis.[1]

Wheeler was appointed as Professor of Education (Women) at University College at Cardiff in 1925, as well as (temporarily) the Dean of the Faculty of Education.[3][6] She was the first female head of department in the University of Wales.[7] Her title was officially changed to Professor of Education in 1933.[6] In 1947 she became chairperson of the Welsh Advisory Council on Youth Employment and chairman of the South Wales District of the Workers Education Association.[1]

Wheeler was a fellow of the British Psychological Society.[7] Three years after her retirement in 1951 she went to Canada on a lecture tour.[4]

Damehood

She was created a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire in the 1950 New Year Honours for education and social work in Wales, particularly for her work with the University of Wales, the Workers’ Educational Association and the Welsh Joint Education Committee.[7][8]

Death

She died suddenly in the Kardomah Café at Cyncoed, Cardiff on 26 September 1963.[1][3] In her will she left £27,434.[9] She bequeathed her library of educational materials to Cardiff University, as well as funds to create an annual prize of £500 (equivalent to £11,000 in 2019) to be awarded to the university's top student in the department of education.[10] She left £250 to the South Wales District of the Workers' Educational Association and Park End Presbyterian Church, Cardiff.[9]

Affiliations

Bibliography

  • ; William Phillips; Joseph P. Spillane (1961). Mental Health and Education. London: University of London Press.
  • "The Service of Youth". British Journal of Educational Psychology. 13 (2): 69–73. June 1943.
  • Youth: The Psychology of Adolescence and its Bearing on the Reorganization of Adolescent Education (second ed.). London: London University Press. 1933; second edition, 1937.
  • Creative Education and the Future. London: University of London Press. 1936.
gollark: `I Won The Electoral College` though?
gollark: That dragon's mother has a strange name.
gollark: I suppose we'd have to ignore 1-letter symbols - there are too many.
gollark: It's easy, too, what with the 2-letter symbols.
gollark: _will now do this_

References

  1. Thomas, John B. "Wheeler, Dame Olive Annie (1886–1963), educationist and psychologist". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/52747. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  2. 'Bedford College for Women (University of London). Form of Entrance, 1911-12, Michaelmas Term [Olive Annie Wheeler]
  3. Biodata
  4. "WHEELER, Dame OLIVE ANNIE (1886 - 1963), Professor of Education". Dictionary of Welsh Biography. Retrieved 2019-06-06.
  5. Letter from Olive Wheeler to Miss Tuke, April 28, 1921, with a request for a reference. Royal Holloway University of London Archives.
  6. Dray, Judith (2016-06-22). "Inspirational People: 1. Dame Olive Wheeler". Cardiff University. Retrieved 2019-06-06.
  7. J. Davies; N. Jenkins; M. Baines; et al. (2008). "WHEELER, Olive [Annie] (1886-1963) Psychologist and academic". The Welsh academy encyclopedia of Wales. Cardiff, UK: Literature Wales.
  8. "No. 38797". The London Gazette (Supplement). 30 December 1949. p. 10.
  9. 'Deaths', The Times (London, England), Friday, November 15, 1963, Issue 55859, p.16.
  10. "Latest Wills". The Times. The Times Digital Archive. 15 November 1963. p. 16.
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