Truman Lee Kelley

Truman Lee Kelley (1884 – 1961) was an American researcher who made seminal contributions to statistics and psychology.[1]

Life

He was born in Whitehall, Muskegon County, Michigan in 1884.[2] He died in 1961.[2]

Career

He received his A.M. degree in psychology from the University of Illinois in 1911,[2] where he became one of the four founding students of Kappa Delta Pi.[3] He completed his Ph.D. from Columbia University in 1914.[2] After doing so, he worked as an instructor at the University of Texas and at Teachers College, and then in 1920 became a professor at Stanford University. He moved to Harvard University in 1931, and retired in 1950.[1]

Bibliography

His books include:

  • Interpretation of Educational Measurements (1927)[4]
  • Crossroads in the Mind of Man (1928)[5]
  • Scientific Method; Its Function in Research and in Education (1929)[1]
  • Tests and Measurements in the Social Sciences (coauthor, 1934)[1]
  • Essential Traits of Mental Life (1935)[1]
  • The Kelley's Statistical Tables (1938; 2nd ed., 1948)[1]
  • Fundamentals of Statistics (1947)[1]

References

  1. Flanagan, John C. (December 1961), "Truman Lee Kelley", Psychometrika, 26 (4): 342–345, doi:10.1007/bf02289767
  2. "Kelley, Truman L.". International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences. Thompson Gale. 2008. Retrieved 12 March 2017.
  3. Founding of KDP, Kappa Delta Pi, retrieved 2017-06-29
  4. Flanagan (1961) calls Interpretation of Educational Measurements "a classic in the educational field".
  5. Flanagan (1961) calls Crossroads in the Mind of Man "an important landmark in aptitude testing".
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.