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  2. G. Stanley Hall was a psychologist who gave early impetus and direction to the development of psychology in the United States. Frequently regarded as the founder of child psychology and educational psychology, he also did much to direct into the psychological currents of his time the ideas of.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
    • Best Known For
    • His Early Life
    • Career and Accomplishments
    • Contributions to Psychology
    • Select Publications
    First president of the American Psychological Association(APA) in 1892
    Founder the first American psychology laboratory at John Hopkins University
    First American to earn a Ph.D. in psychology

    Granville Stanley Hall was born on February 1, 1844. He grew up on a farm in Ashfield, Massachusetts. His father was a politician and his mother a teacher, an upbringing that had an early influence on his love of learning. He enrolled at Williston Academy in 1861, but later transferred to Williams College. After his graduation in 1867, he attended ...

    When he returned to the U.S. following his time working with Wundt, Hall presented a series of lectures focused on education and then published his first written work, an analysis of German culture. While G. Stanley Hall initially began his career teaching English and philosophy, he eventually took a position as Professor of Psychology and Pedagogi...

    G. Stanley Hall's primary interests were in evolutionary psychology and child development. He was heavily influenced by Ernst Haeckel's recapitulation theory, which suggested that embryonic stages of an organism resemble the stages of development of the organism's evolutionary ancestors, a theory that is today rejected by most evolutionary scientis...

    Hall, G.S. (1904). Adolescence: Its Psychology and Its Relations to Physiology, Anthropology, Sociology, Sex, Crime, Religion, and Education.2 vols. New York, Appleton.
    Hall, G.S. (1906). Youth: Its Education, Regiment, and Hygiene.New York, Appleton.
    Hall, G.S. (1911). Educational Problems.2 vols. New York, Appleton.
  3. G. Stanley Hall is credited for many “firsts," including establishing the first lab devoted to psychological research and founding the first journal on experimental psychology in the nation. Hall’s emphasis on empirical research helped to establish psychology as a respected science.

  4. Hall was the first president of the American Psychological Association and the first president of Clark University. A Review of General Psychology survey, published in 2002, ranked Hall as the 72nd most cited psychologist of the 20th century, in a tie with Lewis Terman.

  5. G. STANLEY HALL WAS instrumental in founding psychology as a science and in its development as a profession. He is best known for his work on child development, especially adolescence, yet he also wrote a powerful treatise on the economic, social, and intellectual isolation of the elderly.

    • Manon Parry
    • 2006
  6. When G. Stanley Hall was appointed professor of psychology and pedagogics at Johns Hopkins University in 1884, he began the process of translating an older psychology embedded in moral philosophy into a "new psychology" resting on science.

  7. G. STANLEY HALL AND THE TESTING MOVEMENT. G. Stanley Hall (1844-1924) was born in Ashfield, Massachusetts, in 1844. He was an American psychologist in the field of adolescence and an educator. He focused his attention on the educational needs of adolescents.

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