Title: Tracy Kendler
1Tracy Kendler
2Introduction
- Did it all
- Jewish Psychologist
- Researcher
- Professor
- Wife
- Mother of two sons
-
3Family
- Parents never went beyond an elementary education
- They had to work
- Worked all of time throughout Tracys childhood
- Financial hardship
- Tracy took care of herself
- Said this caused her to develop an independent
streak that later stood me in good stead - Her father died when she was 8 years old
- Mother remarried and had her half-sister
- Tracy helped take care of her sister
4Name Change
- Tracy born with the first name Sylvia
- She worked at a summer camp for preschoolers
- 4 out of the 5 counselors were named Sylvia
- Tracy had just seen The Philadelphia Story
- A romantic comedy movie
- The main characters name is Tracy
- Decided to change her name to Tracy
- Later it was changed legally
-
5Developmental Psychologist
- Researched development within a neobehavioristic
then cognitive orientation - Researched and wrote many articles with her
husband, Howard Kendler - Howard was supportive of Tracy and treated her as
an equal - The unfair treatment of her angered him
6Historical Antecedents
- To be born in interesting times is said to be a
curse. Looking back now, I find the interest
generated overshadowed the discord experienced. - Tracy Kendler in her autobiography A Womans
Struggle in Academic Psychology (1936-2001)
7Historical Antecedents cont.
- Anti-Semitism
- Parents emigrated to U.S. from Eastern Europe
(Hungary and Russia) to escape anti-Semitism - Especially prevalent throughout Kendlers early
years, adolescence, and college years - WWI
- Tracy born during the end of it in New York City
in 1918
8Historical Antecedents cont.
- The Great Depression
- She was 11 years old when stock market crashed
- Italian Fascism and German Nazism on the rise
- Communist ideology becoming prevalent in NY
intellectuals - Political and social interest in her
neighborhood, Coney Island (childhood), Brighton
Beach (adolescence) - Tracy became a student political activist in high
school - Everyone had financial problems including Tracys
family
9Historical Antecedents cont.
- WWII (1939)
- Tracy was
- 18 yrs. old when Hitler came to power in Germany
- 21 yrs. old when war started
-
10Historical Antecedents cont.
- Status of Women in psychology leading up to
Tracys time - Very few compared to number of men
- Difficult (sometimes impossible) to get into
graduate school for psychology - No jobs in psychology for women (could not be
professors) - Most psychologists considered women inferior to
men
11Historical Antecedents cont.
- Developmental Psychology
- Began from academic interest for the betterment
of children - The use of scientific methods for social purposes
- The Iowa Child Welfare Research Station
- In 1906 a woman who had lost some of her children
worked with the University of Iowa and
legislators to start it (began in 1917) - Devoted to research in child development (their
physical and educational well-being)
12Developmental Psychology cont.
- The Iowa Child Welfare Research Station cont.
- Bird Baldwin started the Preschool Laboratories
part of it in 1925 - Began doing research in naturalistic settings in
1930s (Stoddard, Skeels, Wellman, Updegraff) and
found unstimulating environments can cause a loss
of IQ in children (1938) - Experimental Child Psychology 1950s and 1960s
- Using children as subjects to test general
psychological theories for the purpose of
extending scientific knowledge - Charles Spiker established the first graduate
program
13Historical Antecedents cont.
- Gestalt Psychology
- Founder considered to be Max Wertheimer
(1880-1943) in Germany - Other important influences Koffka, Kohler
(Wertheimers students), Lewin, Perls (founded
Gestalt therapy) - Emphasis on the whole
- Our consciousness and behavior occurs within a
perceptual field - Phenomenology A technique used by Gestaltists
is the study of that which naturally appears in
consciousness
14Historical Antecedents cont.
- Solomon Asch
- Became a distinguished social psychologist
- Taught Tracys experimental psychology course
during her undergraduate studies - Taught Gestalt theory
- Convinced Tracy (and Howard Kendler, her future
husband) to go to graduate school in psychology
at the University of Iowa to study with
Gestaltist Kurt Lewin
15Historical Antecedents cont.
- Neobehaviorism
- Neobehaviorist that converted Tracy from Gestalt
psychology to neobehaviorism Kenneth Spence - Tested elaborate, associative theories about the
learning process - Mental processes can be inferred from behavior
but they are not publicly observable - Focus on S-R and everything besides the S that
impacted the R - Attempted to find lawful relationships to explain
behavior
16Zeitgeist
- Thomas Kuhn
- At the time, he was researching childrens
discrimination learning and how it differed from
animals. - The Kendlers started researching behavior in
rats, but when they saw other experimenters using
children, they then veered more toward studying
childrens behavior. - Science was moving toward a more concrete
pragmatic approach and concentrating less on
theory
17Zeitgeist cont.
- Role of women in science
- Most important social influence A Womans
Struggle in Academic Psychology (257). - Called herself an antediluvian feminista
feminist before the feminist movement - All of the male graduate students in psychology
had research or teaching assistantships. Tracy
never did. - First woman Kenneth Spence sponsored.
- Shortly after marrying Howard, Spence told her to
concentrate on being a good wife. - Several years later, he changed his mind about
women in science.
18Zeitgeist cont.
- Kurt Lewin
- Sought to extend Gestalt theory to the fields of
personality and social behavior - Member of the Child Welfare Research Station
- Along with Spence, applied their theories
(Gestalt and Neobehaviorism) in their research
with children and this started basic, as opposed
to applied, experimental child psychology.
19Zeitgeist cont.
- Kurt Lewin
- His life space model interacting forces operate
to determine the persons behavior, the
person-environment interaction is a life space
this model did not survive - Much of his research was done on children, but
the experiments were intended to test,
articulate, and extend a general theory of
behavior.
20Zeitgeist cont.
- Kenneth Spence
- Neobehavioristsought to convert Gestaltists
- Early in career, produced an influential theory
about discrimination learning in animals then
tested it on children and found similar learning
principles in children. - Opened the door to graduate school for Tracy,
converted her to neobehaviorism - A step in achieving the goal of neobehaviorism
was to make directly observable behavior the
subject matter instead of the intangible mind.
Mental processes can be inferred from behavior,
but not publicly observableA Womans Struggle in
Academic Psychology (256).
21Zeitgeist cont.
- Kenneth Spence cont.
- Tracy was so intrigued by Spence that she chose
to do her PhD thesis with him. This thesis
involved his theory mentioned earlier. - Doctoral research focused on discrimination-learni
ng with white rats. Thesis was designed to test
a set of predictions that would pit Spences
mathematical model of discrimination-learning
against Gestalt theory. - Howard and Tracy admired Spence so much, they
named their second child, Kenneth, after him.
22Zeitgeist cont.
- WWII
- Japan bombed Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941
when Tracy was in her second year of graduate
schoolthe US entered the war.
23Professional struggles/obstacles
- Great Depression
- Tracy did not have enough money to go to college
immediately after graduating high school because
her family had financial problems. - Family
- Mother opposed to her going to college. She
thought she should find a wealthy husband
insteadA Womans Struggle in Academic Psychology
(256).
24Professional struggles/obstacles cont.
- Anti-Semitism
- When going to register for classes, Tracy was
told that the courses she wanted to take were
closedpartly because she was a woman and partly
because she was a Jew. When Kurt Lewin (a Jew
himself) learned about the unfriendly welcome
Tracy and Howard received he was furious.
25Professional struggles/obstacles cont.
- Lack of respect for women in education
- When being interviewed by the head of the
psychology department at the University of Iowa,
John McGeoch, Tracy was told that there were no
jobs for women. - After obtaining her PhD, the only job Tracy could
find was as a clinical psychologist at the
Chicago State Hospitala hospital for the
seriously disturbed and insane. - Finally offered a graduate assistantship to teach
experimental psychology at Barnard College 11
years after obtaining her PhD.
26Professional struggles/obstacles cont.
- Lack of respect for women in education cont.
- Applied for a faculty position in Child and
Adolescent Development at Barnard College, but
the Chairman of the Psychology Department told
her that he had an application from a male
psychologist whomwould be hired, not because he
had a superior record but because he would not
have the divided responsibilities of a married
woman with children as she wouldA Womans
Struggle in Academic Psychology (260). - Tracy wanted to do graduate teaching at Columbia
University, but at the time there were no women
psychologists in the psychology department at
Columbia.
27Professional struggles/obstacles cont.
- Lack of respect of women in education cont.
- Finally obtained an assistant professor position
at Barnard College 12 years after receiving her
PhDthe man declined the position in Child and
Adolescent Development that she had also applied
for. - Always offered lower level job positions and less
salary than Howard despite the fact that both had
same qualifications and concentrated their
research on the same subject matter. - The University Faculty Club at Columbia
University (Barnard College is the partnering
womens college) even excluded women, unless they
were granted with the honor of being a guest of a
male to the restaurant on the top floor.
28Kendlers Work
- Discrimination learning
- Subject reinforced to respond to certain
characteristics of stimuli (size, shape, etc.) - Shifts
- Reversal shift
- Extradimensional shift
29Shift Behavior by Developmental Level
- An Ontogeny of Optional Shift Behavior in the
journal Child Development in 1970 - Studied differences in shift behavior among
kindergarteners, second graders, sixth graders,
and college students - Found that the ease of making a reversal shift
increases with age - But the ease of making an extradimensional shift
declines with age
30Cognition
- Mediation theory
- A way of defining what goes on internally between
stimulus and response - Early cognitive revolution
- Originally an abstract Gestalt concept
- Through her work, Kendler tried to make it
something observable (neobehaviorist)
31Strengths/Weaknesses
- Beginning of cognition
- Mediation theory relied too much on external
stimuli and didnt explain the consistency of
cognition - Was supplanted by a more cognitive,
interactionist approach (Piaget)
32Influence of Tracy Kendler
- Many accomplishments in psychology despite being
a minority and a woman and living through many
struggles - Published more than 60 articles and 1 book in
the areas of learning and developmental
psychology - Levels of Cognitive Development (1995) Pointed
to cognitive psychology and neuroscience as the
future for understanding developmental changes in
cognitive functioning - Basic Psychology Brief Edition Textbook for
general psychology classes she wrote with her
husband
33Influence of Tracy Kendler
- Recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship
- One of the 1st women members of the Society of
Experimental Psychologists - 1st woman member of the Governing Board of the
Psychonomic Society - President of the Western Psychological
Association in 1977 - Consulting editor for Child Development
- Long-term member of the Society for Research in
Child Development - Received several National Science Foundation
grants and a United States Public Health Service
grant to fund her research
34Influence of Tracy Kendler
- Helped change the minds of male psychologists to
be more favorable toward having women in the
field especially Kenneth Spence - PhD thesis judged to be excellent
- Received PhD in 1943
- Successful in research and became a professor
despite obstacles - Endured unfair treatment for being a Jew and
being a woman in psychology
35Influence of Tracy Kendler
- Worked against prejudice not only for those who
were Jewish but also for African Americans - Worked for the Commission for Community
Relations, a branch of the American Jewish
Congress (AJC), which did research on social
prejudice - Worked with AJC in combination with the NAACP to
collect and interpret evidence relevant to the
problem of whether segregated schools can provide
equally effective education
36Influence of Tracy Kendler
- Wrote Contributions of the Psychologist to
Constitutional Law (1950) - A report against the separate but equal
principle based on her research findings - May have contributed to the principle being
overturned in Brown v. Board of Education of
Topeka, Kansas (1954) - Made significant contributions to understanding
learning and development - Vertical and horizontal processes in problem
solving - Identified as a Citation Classic by Current
Contents - Was cited over 337 times between 1963 and 1976
37Influence of Tracy Kendler
- Applied a cognitive-behavioral approach to the
study of learning and problem solving - Research on cognitive development helped progress
developmental psychology - Mentor to graduate students
- Very important to her
- She called it a peak experience to have
graduate students help with her research
38Influence of Tracy Kendler
- Family and career
- Had a professional career
- Still put her husband and children first
- Son, Kenneth Kendler, recently awarded the
distinguished Lieber Prize for outstanding
research in human genetics, which he dedicated to
his loving parents
39Influence of Tracy Kendler
- Dedicated her book to her husband
- To...my husband Howard Kendler, I am indebted
for putting up with me all these years without
losing his sense of humor. He encouraged me to
begin this line of research and we collaborated
on all the early experiments as well as on the
early theorizing. Although the scientific
collaboration eventually ended, he remains my
best friend and dearest companion, as well as my
severest critic.
40Tracy Kendler died of pulmonary fibrosis on July
28, 2001 with Howard at her side
41Summary Who was listening???
- What type of psychology did Tracy Kendler focus
on? - Neobehaviorism
- Who were some of the well-known psychologists who
influenced Tracy? - Solomon Asch
- Abraham Maslow
- Kurt Lewin
- Kenneth Spence
- What were some of Tracys main areas of
experimentation and research? - Discrimination learning
- Mediation theory
42Summary cont.
- What were some of the obstacles that Tracy had to
overcome? - Being a female in a time that women were not
well-respected - Being a Jew during WWII and the aftermath of WWII
- Mother not wanting her to go to collegeinstead
look for a nice husband - Great Depression did not have enough money to
enter college upon graduation of high school - Besides being an advocate for her own minority
group, what other minority group did she fight
for the rights of? - African Americans
43References
- Basden, B. H. (2002). Tracy Seedman Kendler
(1918-2001). American Psychologist, 57, 364. - Kendler, H. H. (2002). A personal encounter with
psychology (1937-2002). History of - Psychology, 5, 52-84.
- Kendler, H. H., Kendler, T. S. (1962). Vertical
and horizontal processes in problem solving. - Psychological Review, 69, 1-16.
- Kendler, H. H., Kendler, T. S. (1971). Basic
psychology Brief edition. East Norwalk, CT - Appleton-Century-Crofts.
- Kendler, T. S. (1950). Contributions of the
psychologist to constitutional law. American - Psychologist, 5, 505-510.
- Kendler, T. S. (1991). The development of
developmental psychology. In Joan H. (Ed.). - Psychology at Iowa Centennial essays.
Hillsdale, NJ Lawrence Earlbaum Associates. - Kendler, T. S. (1995). Levels of cognitive
development. Hillsdale, NJ Lawrence Erlbaum - Associates.
- Kendler, T. S., Kendler, H. H. (2003). A
womans struggle in academic psychology (1936- - 2001). History of Psychology, 6, 251-266.
- Suppes, P. (1975). From behaviorism to
neobehaviorism. Theory and Decision, 6, 269-285. - Woldt, A. L., Toman, S. M. (Eds.). (2005).
Gestalt therapy History, theory, and practice. - Thousand Oaks, CA Sage.