Showing posts with label doctor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label doctor. Show all posts

January 21 - Happy Birthday, Sophia Jex-Blake

    Posted on January 21, 2022


This is an update of my post published on January 21, 2011:




Would you care enough about education to rebel against your parents, struggle against society, and even face riots? Read about someone who did:

Born on this day in 1840, Sophia Jex-Blake was an English doctor and feminist. She was one of the first female doctors in the United Kingdom, and she led a campaign to allow women into med school. She even started two medical schools for women, one in London, England, and the other in Edinburgh, Scotland, where she started a women's hospital.


Jex-Blake had to be a revolutionary her whole life. When she wanted to go to college, her parents objected. She went, anyway, to Queen's College in London. While still a student, she was offered a job as a math tutor. She took the job, but her father refused her permission to accept a salary, so she did the tutoring as a volunteer. Later, Jex-Blake learned how difficult it was for women to attend medical school in the U.K. She went to the United States to learn about women's education there, and she was very influenced by the opportunities women had in the U.S. She decided to attend med school in the U.S., but her father died, and she went back to England to be with her mother.

Jex-Blake couldn't get any universities in England to accept her, but she persuaded Edinburgh University to admit her in 1869. Six other women joined her in the medical studies at Edinburgh. Get this—they cared so much about getting an education, they had to pay for their own separate lectures! Many people supported their efforts, but many opposed them—including lecturers, students, and townspeople. There was even a riot about the women med students in 1870!

 
There were so many administrative roadblocks to graduation, by 1873 the women had to accept that they couldn't get their medical degrees from Edinburgh. But Jex-Blake persevered. She helped establish the London School of Medicine for Women in 1874, and she urged Parliament to pass a bill that would enable medical schools to treat women and men equally. She passed the medical exams at the University of Berne (Switzerland) and was awarded an MD in 1877—and then went on to, not just practice medicine, but to work for women's rights to education, women's rights to practice medicine, and women's hospitals.


So, I ask again: Would you care enough about education to rebel against your parents, struggle against society, and even face riots? From our standpoint, Jex-Blake's story is crazy—but we are so lucky that people like her worked so hard to change the world.





January 6 - Maria Montessori Opens a School

   Posted on January 6, 2022


This is an update of my post published on January 6, 2011:




Maria Montessori, who was the first female doctor in Italy, was learned in psychiatry, anthropology, and education. She worked with “special needs” children in Rome, kids who were considered “defective” and even “uneducable.” After working with the children for a while, she had several 8-year-old students take the state tests in reading and writing—and people were amazed when they not only passed, but scored above average!

After this success, Montessori was asked to establish a school for kids in a Roman housing project. This Casa dei Bambini (Children's House) began on this day more than 100 years ago, in 1907. It was the first of thousands of Montessori schools worldwide—there are estimates that there are at least 7,000 in existence today.



Of course, Maria Montessori didn't establish all of these schools herself. Instead, people have studied her philosophy and methods, which are based on the concept that children learn at their own individual pace and through all five senses—not just by watching and listening, but by doing things themselves.

By the way, most of today's Montessori Schools are not in Italy, as you might guess, but in the United States. Interest in Montessori's methods began early in the U.S. In 1914 a booklet about the method was published, and intense interest had been aroused among Americans by 1917, when a woman named Margaret Stephenson came to the US and began to train Montessori teachers.


Modern Montessori schools emphasize lots of
hands-on learning with manipulatives.



Montessori was successful in her own time, but she was exiled from her own country! The fascist leader Benito Mussolini wanted to make Italy's children into soldiers, and Montessori would not compromise her principles—so she was banished. She lived in Spain until 1936, when the Spanish Civil War broke out (the war that ended with Franco as the fascist leader of the country). She moved to the Netherlands until 1939. Luckily, she left just before Hitler took over that nation in 1940. (Fascism seemed to be following her around. It was a tough time to be a European.)

Montessori went for a visit to India in 1939, and because of World War II she lived there for many years. She lived the last three years of her life in the Netherlands.

Check out some of Montessori's wisdom:






June 29 - Happy Birthday, William Mayo

 Posted on June 29, 2021

This is an update of my post published on June 29, 2010:




Along with his father and brother, Dr. Mayo started and ran the famous Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. 

All three doctors were surgeons, and they invented new operations, pushed forward medical science, and attracted many other specialists to their clinic. 

The Mayo Clinic grew up out of a private practice, but it is now a nonprofit organization rated #1 for all hospitals in the United States. It is also ranked as a great company to work for - which is a good thing, because it employs more than 4,500 doctors and scientists plus a support staff of 58,400 administrative and allied health staff. It has grown to three different locations (the two newer locations are in Florida and Arizona).

A whole lot of research is carried on at the Mayo Clinic. Patients from all around the globe come to take advantage of cutting-edge technologies and techniques. The Clinic performs the highest number of transplants in the U.S.!

Amazing stuff!


I like this attitude!