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The Canonization of Ovide Decroly as a “Saint” of the New Education

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 February 2017

Marc Depaepe
Affiliation:
Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, where he chairs the Department of Educational Sciences
Frank Simon
Affiliation:
Universiteit Gent and at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Angelo Van Gorp
Affiliation:
Two joint research projects of the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven and the Universiteit Gent

Extract

If any Belgian educator belongs to the canon of the New Education, it is certainly Ovide Decroly (1871–1932). Particularly in southern Europe and in many Latin American countries, the ideas and the work of this French-speaking Brussels doctor have been inspirational for a movement that projected itself worldwide—albeit in different modes—as the “child-oriented,” “progressive” alternative to the rigid, traditional school. As recent research has shown, this movement manifested itself primarily by means of the development of its own language and discourse in which the “new school” was projected into a “new” society. However, ultimately, it turned out that the “new” did not involve a radical break with the modernizing trends from which it emerged and that it wanted to combat. Without going further into the discussion of its success or failure, about continuity and discontinuity of discourse and movement, we want to show that the construction of the self-discourse of the New Education was largely determined by the extolling of its own merits. We will do this via the example of Ovide Decroly. This extolling was generally done by epigones who, from the immediate circle of often charismatic school reformers, gazed in wonder on the work of the Master (or Mistress) and ascribed to his or her “method” an authenticity that it did not actually have.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2003 by the History of Education Society 

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References

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22 Respectively to Jozef E. Verheyen, “Allocution—Toespraak,” in Hommage au Dr. Decroly. Huldebetoon aan Dr. Decroly, 23-24-25 Novembre—November 1952. Discours Prononcés lors de la Séance Solennelle qui a eu lieu dans la Grande Salle du Palais des Beaux-Arts à Bruxelles le Dimanche 23 Novembre 1952. Toespraken gehouden tijdens de Plechtige Zitting die gehouden werd in de Grote Zaal van het Paleis voor Schone Kunsten te Brussel op Zondag 23 November 1952 (1952), 24–25; Valère Van Coppenolle, De activiteit op school. Bondig historisch overzicht (Torhout: Pyck, 1939), 96–97 [= Opvoedkundige brochurenreeks van de Studiekringen van het Christen Onderwijz-ersverbond 12]; Georges Meuris, “Une belle page de l'histoire de la pédagogie: la figure et l'œuvre d'Ovide Decroly (1871–1932),” La Revue des Ecoles 87 (1981–1982): 198–208; Fernand Dubois, “Il est entré dans la légende,” Vers l'Ecole active (October 1932): 1.Google Scholar

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25 Whether she succeeded in this is another question. The opposite appears more likely to us, that life adapted to the school. See Marc Depaepe et al., Order in Progress. Everyday Educational Practice in Primary Schools: Belgium, 1880–1970 (Louvain: Leuven University Press, 2000), 265. [= Studia Paedagogica New Series 29.]Google Scholar

26 Amélie Hamaïde (1888–1970): as a teacher who graduated in 1909, she received the diploma of pedagogue from the Université Libre de Bruxelles in 1921. After a time as directress of the Ecole de l'Ermitage, she founded her own Ecole nouvelle Amélie Hamaïde in Ixelles (Brussels) in 1934.Google Scholar

27 Leenders, Montessori im faschistischen Italien. Google Scholar

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29 Introduction by Edouard Claparède in Ibid., X. Carlo Trombetta, Edouard Claparède. La famiglia, L'infanzia, Gli studi, Bibliografia (Roma: Bulzoni Editore, 1976) cites several times the bond of friendship that presumably existed between Decroly and Claparède but also points to the few book reviews that the latter devoted to his Brussels friend. Did Claparède thus want to spare his friend? Or did he leave critical observations on Decroly's work to others? There is no definite answer to this but it is certain that little correspondence with Decroly is preserved in the Claparede's impressive body of correspondence at the University Library of Geneva.Google Scholar

30 Hamaïde, La méthode Decroly, 3.Google Scholar

31 Cornelia Philippi-Siewertsz van Reesema, Uit en over de werken van Prof. Dr. Ovide Decroly (Groningen/ Den Haag/ Batavia: Wolters, 1931), 3.Google Scholar

32 Ibid., 5.Google Scholar

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36 Idem, L'enfance de Decroly et la Pensée du Maître,“ Bulletin de la Société française de pédagogie VI/6 (1933): 12. Also La Vie Pédagogique, the supplement of l'Etincelle, published this article in this same year.Google Scholar

37 The committee consisted of G. Boon, L. Dahlem, F. Dubois, A. Hamaïde, J.E. Verheyen, N. Smelten and L. Poirinot. See “Aux lecteurs,” in Hommage au Dr. Decroly (Saint-Nicolas-W.: Scheerders-Van Kerckhove, [1933]), 5.Google Scholar

38 Depaepe, Marc Dams, Kristof, and Simon, Frank, “'La vie et l'école'. Analyse du discours rénovateur de Joseph Emile Verheyen,” Bildungsforschung und Bildungspraxis/Education et Recherche/ Educazione e ricerca. Schweizerische Zeitschrift für Erziehungswissenschaft/ Revue suisse des sciences de l'éducation/ Rivista svizerra di scienze dell'educazione, XXI/1 (1999): 932; Marc Depaepe, “Experimentelle Pädagogik, Reformpädagogik und pädagogische Praxis. Überlegungen über ihre wechselseitigen Beziehungen, dargestellt am Beispiel der Versuchsschulen von Jozef Emiel Verheyen in Zaventem und Gent (1923–1940),” in Die neue Erziehung eds. Oelkers and Osterwalder, 183–205; Marc Depaepe and Angelo Van Gorp, “From paedology to experimental pedagogy. Evolution of the criteria for a ‘scientific’ educational research in Belgium before World War II on the basis of the works of Medard Schuyten (Antwerp), Ovide Decroly (Brussels), Jozef Verheyen (Ghent) and Raymond Buyse (Louvain),” in Philosophy and history of the discipline of education. Evaluation and evolution of the criteria for educational research (Research Community Fund of Scientific Research—Vlaanderen, Leuven 18–20 October 2000) eds. Paul Smeyers and Marc Depaepe (Louvain: Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, 2000), 17–30.Google Scholar

39 Verheyen, Jozef E.La noble figure du Dr. Decroly, psychologue de l'enfant, pédagogue de la vie,“ in Hommage au Dr. Decroly, 9.Google Scholar

40 Hamaïde, AmélieOvide Decroly,“ in ibid., 1724.Google Scholar

41 With this, the young Decroly is placed in a tradition of ‘Robinsonades', for which Daniel Defoe's famous book served as metaphor. See Reinhard Stach, Robinson und Robinsonaden (Magdeburg: Literaturhaus, 2001), 82.Google Scholar

42 Oelkers, Reformpädagogik. Eine kritische Dogmengeschichte. See also Caruso, “¿Una Nave sin Puerto Definitivo?”.Google Scholar

43 Halens, PaulA l'est de l'Ermitage. La libre pensée dans la pédagogie decrolyenne,“ Paedagogica Historica XXXII/1 (1996): 5183.Google Scholar

44 Keppens, GustaafOvide Decroly, psycholoog van het gehandicapte en van het normale kind,“ Christene School. Pedagogische Periodiek 79/15 (May 1972): 235; in which there is mention of a letter from his father. This is, indeed, the case! Decroly received a letter from him on 21 January 1886. Shortly before, however, his mother also wrote a letter (10 November 1885), in which one can already read that her son urgently had to change his attitude if he did not want to endanger his plans for the future—medical studies at the university.Google Scholar

45 Hamaïde, Ovide Decroly,“ 1819.Google Scholar

46 Ibid., 20.Google Scholar

47 In 1894, that is, almost immediately after his appointment at the Louvain university, Armand Thiéry received the opportunity to start a Laboratory for Experimental Psychology. This was the first of its kind in Belgium, and it was developed on the model of the institute that Wundt had set up in Leipzig and where Thiéry had studied. Already under J.F. Heymans, the Ghent professor who, while waiting for Thiéry to complete his training, was assigned to teach, a laboratory for experimental psychology would have started but without any room assigned to it. See Maurits Smeyers, Armand Thiéry (Gentbrugge, 1868-Leuven, 1955). Apologie voor een geniaal zonderling (Louvain: De vrienden van de Leuvense Stedelijke Musea, 1992), 19 [= Arca Lovaniensis. Artes Atque Historiae. Reserans Documenta 19–20 (1990–1991)]. Decroly himself apparently distinguished between the Institut and the laboratory, as appears from Ovide Decroly, La Psychologie de l'Enfant en Belgique. Extrait de la Revue de l'Université de Bruxelles Avril-Mai 1908 (Liège: La Meuse, 1908), 690. The private laboratory was, as he stated, only attached to the Institut in 1902 to serve the abnormal children of the Policlinic. The Institut was intended for the hardly representative group of abnormal and normal children from the well-off class (particularly, and this certainly at the beginning, children of acquaintances and colleagues), while Decroly needed for his research a large group of subjects from the working class, which he thus found in the Policlinic as well as in the working-class educational system of the city of Brussels, where, also in 1902, he was appointed médecin-inspecteur. Google Scholar

48 Hamaïde, Ovide Decroly,“ 21.Google Scholar

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51 The issue of Vers l'école active X/2 (November 1932) was devoted to Decroly and contained an article written in superlatives by Dubois (pp. 20–27). In it, he stated that “One has said, for example, that Decroly did not write much. Very wrong! Decroly's written work is enormous, dispersed in many articles, brochures, books, printed lectures.” (p. 20). With this, he seems to be acting against opinions like those of Ferrière, who argued that Decroly was better known by the books written about him than by his own publications: “The pen was only a tool for him, and he rarely had time to take it in hand to write a work or even an article.” (p. 234).Google Scholar

52 Biographical information: Maurits De Vroede et al., Bijdragen tot de geschiedenis van het pedagogisch leven in België in de 19de en 20ste eeuw. Deel IV: De Periodieken 1914–1918 Eerste Stuk (Louvain: Universitaire Pers, 1987), 817; Fernand Dubois, “Mon grand ami,” in Hommage au Dr. Decroly, 37–38.Google Scholar

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54 Idem, Il est entré dans la légende“.Google Scholar

55 These words originated in the already mentioned biography by Mrs. Decroly and were cited by, among others, Fernand Dubois, “La vraie figure du maître,” Vers l'Ecole active 14 (November 1932): 25; Angela Medici, L'Education nouvelle. Ses fondateurs. Son évolution (Paris: Alcan/ PUF, 1940), 244; Renaat Merecy, Historische Pedagogiek. Schets van ideeën en werkelijkheden. Hellas tot heden (Antwerp: De Sikkel, 1966), 151; Jean-Marie Besse, Ovide Decroly, psychologue et éducateur (Toulouse: Privat, 1982), 60 [= Grands éducateurs 1].Google Scholar

56 With this he referred to “Les changements de la vie sociale. L'école unique et la préparation de l'élite. Résumé de la communication de Mr. le Docteur Decroly,” Vers l'Ecole active 12 (September 1932): 179–181. This summary was also included as an abstract in the Compte-rendu complet of the 6th Congrès Mondial de la Ligue Internationale pour l'Education Nouvelle (1932).Google Scholar

57 Agustin Nieto Caballero to Madame Decroly, September 1932, Lettres Adressées à Madame Decroly, Uccle: C.E.D. Nieto Caballero wrote seven letters to Mrs. Decroly between 1932 and 1937.Google Scholar

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60 “El Doctor Decroly,” El Cantabrico (25 September 1932): 1. The special attention of the death was perhaps related to the presence of Julia Degand, who at that very time was giving a course on the “escuela activa” in the local normal school. The “own tempel” mentioned stood as a symbol for the garden in which Decroly died.Google Scholar

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62 Ibid., 1.Google Scholar

63 Idem, Hommage de la Science française à la mémoire du Dr. Decroly,“ Nos Ecoles à l'oeuvre. Bulletin mensuel des oeuvres scolaires d'Angleur VI/6 (1933): 12. The date of the session was mentioned in the lecture of Henri Wallon, published in the Bulletin de la Société française de pédagogie 47 (March 1933): 2–5. The celebration was organised by the following associations: the Association française pour l'avancement des sciences, the Association générale des Institutrices des Ecoles maternelles, the Cercle Universitaire International, the Groupe français d'Education nouvelle, the Groupe des Inspectrices des Ecoles maternelles, the Société française de pédagogie and the Syndicat national des Instituteurs. Google Scholar

64 Degand, JuliaLes débuts,“ Vers l'école active X/12 (September 1933): 183185. The article was written on 26 February 1933.Google Scholar

65 There is a folder about this commemeration that has been preserved in the ‘scrap-book’ Hommage au Dr. Decroly après 1932 (Uccle: C.E.D.).Google Scholar

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67 See Congrès Decroly. Université Libre de Bruxelles, 2-3-4 septembre 1945 (Liège: Thone, n.d.), 169. See also Olaf Moens, Frank Simon, and Jeffrey Tyssens, “ ‘De dag van de opvoeders is nu op komst': onderwijshervormingsvoorstellen rond de Tweede Wereldoorlog,” in De Tweede Wereldoorlog als factor in de onderwijsgeschiedenis/ La Seconde Guerre mondiale, une étappe dans l'histoire de l'enseignement eds. Marc Depaepe and Dirk Martin (Brussels: Navorsings- en Studiecentrum voor de Geschiedenis van de Tweede Wereldoorlog/ Centre de Recherches et d'Etudes historiques de la Seconde Guerre mondiale, 1997), 41.Google Scholar

68 “Een woord vooraf,” in Hommage au Dr. Decroly. Huldebetoon aan Dr. Decroly, 7. The event of 23 November was followed by “des journées pédagogiques” on the two following days. In the student paper of the Ermitage there also appeared a report of this event by a student at which also a production “par la vie, pour la vie” was given by the students. See Le courrier de l'école XXIX/2 (December 1952): 2–3.Google Scholar

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70 Hamaïde, AmélieL'influence du Dr. Decroly se fait sentir dans le monde entier,“ in Hommage au Dr. Decroly. Huldebetoon aan Dr. Decroly, 44.Google Scholar

71 Degand, JuliaLes débuts de l'Institut d'Enseignement Spécial,“ in Hommage au Dr. Decroly. Huldebetoon aan Dr. Decroly, 39. See also James W. Trent, Inventing the Feeble Mind. A History of Mental Retardation in the United States (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1995), 157.Google Scholar

72 With some good will, we can indeed ascribe to Decroly a role, albeit minor, in the triumphal march of the test across the United States, but this contribution may certainly not be exaggerated nor, for that matter, can that of Goddard himself. According to the literature (for example Diane Ravitch, Left Back: A Century of Failed School Reforms [New York: Simon & Schuster, 2000], 134), which, perhaps, has placed too much emphasis on the self-discourse of the Stanford revision, this was in no way comparable to the contribution of Terman. In 1922 Decroly, together with his assistant Raymond Buyse, made a trip to the United States in order to meet the most important American actors in the testing movement. On their journey they met e.g. Goddard and Terman. That they themselves looked up to the “famous” Goddard appears from the notes that Buyse maintained on this journey: Raymond Buyse, 1922, Archives of the professors, K.U.Leuven Central Library.Google Scholar

73 Organisation Mondiale pour l'Education Préscolaire. Comité national belge, Journée internationale “Decroly” (1871–1932), 15 mars 1953 (Brussels: O.M.E.P., [1953]), 24.Google Scholar

74 Ibid., 2. This speech was given on the eve of the festivities at a visit to the school.Google Scholar

75 Ley, too, did not fail to participate in the commemorations of Decroly shortly after his death: Auguste Ley, “Le Docteur Decroly,” Journal de Neurologie et de Psychiatrie XXXII/9 (September 1932): 711712.Google Scholar

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79 Le Docteur Decroly et l'éducation (Brussels: Ecole Decroly, 1971), 68.Google Scholar

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82 The “Journées Portes ouvertes” took place on 30 and 31 March 1983. The work of the students was reflected in a special brochure: 1907–1982. L'école de l'Ermitage “Pour la vie, par la vie” a 75 ans (April 1983).Google Scholar

83 Dr. Ovide Decroly (1871–1932). Toespraak gehouden te Ronse in 1904. Tekst van de onuitgegeven redevoering. Uitgegeven door het Departement Onderwijs van de Stad Gent n.a.v. de tentoonstelling Dr. O. Decroly in het Onthaalcentrum “De Coorenblomme”, van 24 februari tot 11 maart 1984 (Gent: Departement Onderwijs van de Stad Gent, 1984), 64; Walter Kerckhove, Om en bij Dr. Ovide Decroly. À propos du Dr. Ovide Decroly et de son œuvre (Ronse: AZ, 1984), 256.Google Scholar

84 For example Documents pédagogiques Ecole Decroly 22, with contributions from G. Delandsheere, F. Dubreucq-Choppix and G. Mialaret.Google Scholar

85 The pupil newspaper Le courrier de l'école, for example, devoted a special issue to Decroly in December 1947 on the occasion of the 40th anniversary of the founding of the Ermitage. From a survey included in it, it appeared that the pupils knew little about the founder of their school. The cover shows Decroly standing in the midst of children with his arms slightly open: a true Christ figure, under the motto “let the children come unto me”.Google Scholar

86 For example Besse, Ovide Decroly. See also Valdi José Bassan, Comment intéresser l'enfant à l'école. La notion des centres d'intérět chez Decroly (Paris: PUF, 1976).Google Scholar

87 Van Buggenhout, Jean Enkele aspecten van de pedagogiek in verband met de Vlaamse open-bare lagere school periode 1919–1940 (Gent: R.U.G., 1961), 169 [= Bijdragen tot de Pedagogiek 5].Google Scholar

88 Verheyen, La noble figure du Dr. Decroly,“ 914; Idem, “Ovide Decroly,” in Paedagogische Encyclopaedie eds. Verheyen and Casimir, 329–334.Google Scholar

89 Plancke, Robert L.Ovide Decroly (1871–1932),“ in Les grands pédagogues ed. Château, Jean (Paris: PUF, 1961), 261273.Google Scholar

90 Keppens, Ovide Decroli“.Google Scholar

91 Block, Alfred DeDecroly, Ovide,“ in Nationaal Biografisch Woordenboek eds. Duverger, Jozef et al. (Brussels: Paleis der Academiën, 1964), 1: 394–398; Alfred De Block and Luk Martens, Moderne schoolsystemen (Antwerp: Standaard Educatieve Uitgeverij, 1983), 57–71. The biographical sketch contains many inaccuracies. The Institut de l'Enseignement Spécial, for example, is situated on the Vossegatstraat when it was founded (while it was originally on the rue de la Vanne) and Decroly is given as chairman of the International Congress for Pedagogy in 1911, while it should have been Pedology. In short, classic errors.Google Scholar

92 Wens, Maria the secretary of the Flemish section of the Ligue internationale pour l'éducation nouvelle in the 1950s, who was also associated with the State University of Ghent, gave, in the latter capacity, a lecture on “The role of Decroly in the research into and the treatment of the emotionally disturbed child” on the occasion of a Decroly exhibition at the University of Ghent (Library of the Seminars for Historical and Comparative Pedagogy, 26 November—3 December 1972).Google Scholar

93 Clerck, Karel DeOvide Decroly en de Gentse Universiteit,“ Een groot opvoeder. De psycho-pedagoog Ovide Decroly. Un grand éducateur. Le psycho-pedagogue Ovide Decroly (Ronse: Vriendenkring Rijksbasisonderwijs avec section française, 1981), 4951.Google Scholar

94 Herreweghe, VanDecroly aujourd'hui: éducation et psychologie“.Google Scholar

95 See, for example, Victor D'Espallier, “Decroly, Ovide,” in De Katholieke Encyclopaedie van Opvoeding en Onderwijs eds. Victor D'Espallier et al. ('s Gravenhage/Antwerp: Pax/'t Groeit, 1951), 1: 436–441; Sigebertus Rombouts, Historiese Paedagogiek. Grote lijnen der geschiedenis van het opvoedkundig denken en doen in doorlopend verband met de kultuurontwikkeling (Tilburg/Amsterdam/Antwerp: R.K. Jongensweeshuis/R.K. Boekcentrale/N.V.Veritas, 1928), 3: 262–278; Cyriel De Keyser, Inleiding in de geschiedenis van het Westerse vormingswezen, 5th ed. (Antwerp: Plantyn, 1969), 377–379; R. Windey, K. De Preter, and M. Pelgrims, Geschiedenis van opvoeding en vorming met bloemlezing, 4th ed. (Antwerp: Plantyn, 1965), 185–186.Google Scholar

96 Depaepe, Marc De Vroede, Maurits, and Simon, Frank, “Tussen wens en werkelijkheid: het verhaal van de onderwijsvernieuwing uit 1936,” Christene School. Pedagogische Periodiek 100 (November 1993): 329.Google Scholar

97 Dévaud, Eugène Le système Decroly et la pédagogie chrétienne (Fribourg: Librairie de l'Université, 1936), 84; Julien Melon and Eugène Dévaud, Une nouvelle visite à l'école active de… mon rěve: une centre d'intérět à base grammaticale (Tamines: Duculot-Roulin, 1932), 145; Marie-Thérèze Weber, La pédagogie Fribourgeoise, du Concile de Trente à Vatican II. Continuité ou discontinuité? (Bern: Peter Lang, 1997), 156–162.Google Scholar

98 Dévaud, EugèneFeuilles détachées de mon carnet de route,“ in Hommage au Dr. Decroly, 6977.Google Scholar

99 Depaepe, Order in Progress. Google Scholar

100 Roels, Leo Twintig Jaar Boeman (Lier: Van In, 1967), 3237; Valère Van Coppenolle, De activiteit op school. Google Scholar

101 See the series Hors des Sentiers Battus, for example: Frère Léon, Hors des Sentiers Battus. Essai de Méthodologie Nouvelle IV. Méthodologie spéciale, vol. 3, Contenant la méthodologie de l'enseignement de l'histoire, de l'écriture, de la seconde langue, du dessin, du chant et de la gymnastique (Mont-Saint-Guibert: Frères Maristes, 1937), 111; in Dutch translation: Broeder Leon, Nieuwe wegen op. Proeve van een nieuwe pedagogiek IV. Bijzondere methodiek, vol. 3, Bevattende het onderwijs in de vaderlandsche geschiedenis, het leeren schrijven, het onderwijs in de tweede taal, het teekenonderwijs, het zangonderwijs en de turnoefeningen (Pittem: Broeders Maristen, 1937), 111. There also appeared other series on the so-called “new roads”; see, for example, Victor d'Espallier et al., Nieuwe banen in het onderwijs, 2d ed. (Antwerp/ Brussels/ Ghent/ Louvain: Standaard Boekhandel, 1937), 1: 382; Sigebertus Rombouts, Nieuwe banen in de psychologie Een wegwijzer voor studerenden vooral voor hoofdakte-candidaten (Tilburg: Drukkerij van het R.K. Jongensweeshuis, 1946), VIII, 237.Google Scholar

102 See the already cited manuscript that Buyse prepared on this journey. With this travel report is a map of the USA with the journey marked on it and a typed table with the dates, the duration of the visit in each city, the names of the institutes visited, the people met, the subjects discussed, and the list of the visits, courses, and experiments. According to this document, Buyse and Decroly were in the United States from 27 March through 2 July 1922.Google Scholar

103 Sylvain De Coster, “Decroly (Ovide-Jean),” in Biographie Nationale, vol. 18/10 (Brussels: L'Académie royale des Sciences, des Lettres et des Beaux-Arts de Belgique, 1973), 134–144: “Although other researchers participated in the birth and the development of this discipline [quantitative pedagogy] included in the totality of the pedagogical sciences, one can consider Raymond Buyse, who then became professor at the l'Université catholique de Louvain, to be its true creator. But he had benefited from Decroly's vast knowledge and experience.” (col. 141).Google Scholar

104 Depaepe, Marc Zum Wohl des Kindes? Pädologie, pädagogische Psychologie und experimentelle Pädagogik in Europa und den USA, 1890–1940 (Weinheim/ Leuven: Deutscher Studien Verlag/ Leuven University Press, 1993), 472 [= Beiträge zur Theorie und Geschichte der Erziehungswissenschaft 14].Google Scholar

105 Gille, ArthurRaymond Buyse, promoteur de la pédagogie expérimentale,“ in L'œuvre pédagogique de Raymond Buyse ed. Bonboir, Anna (Louvain/ Brussels: Vander, 1969), 22: “The Université Libre de Bruxelles offered to engage Buyse as professor. But he declined this flattering invitation out of fidelity to the principles of his Christian faith.”Google Scholar

106 There was a teacher active in the new school movement in France with the same name, who followed in the footsteps of Roger Cousinet. See Louis Raillon, Roger Cousinet. Une pédagogie de la liberté (Paris: Armand Colin, 1990), 85–86, 91, 94, 96. But it appears out of the question that it would be the same person because the French M.L. Wauthier ran a school from 1919, and the Belgian one at that time was still only 15 years old. In addition, there is no mention anywhere in her biographical story of this French experience. Moreover, Wauthier's academic file at the ULB, where she was an assistant from 1938 to 1945, confirms that she was born in Sint-Gillis (Brussels).Google Scholar

107 Wauthier, Marie-Louise Correspondance d'Ovide Decroly (Genappe: Imprimerie Detienne, n.d.).Google Scholar

108 Ibid., 15–16.Google Scholar

109 Ibid., 18.Google Scholar

110 In Decroly's foreword to his translation of Dewey's How We Think [John Dewey, Comment nous pensons (Paris: Ernest Flammarion, 1925)], his thanks are expressed to Valérie Decordes and a certain Miss Olivier, secretary of the Foyer des Orphelins, “who have aided him in his entreprise” (p. 11). One of the letters Mrs. Decroly wrote to Mrs. Libois, the director of the Ermitage at that time [1953], contains this sentence: “J'avais traduit apres [sic] 1914 une partie du livre de Dewey….” (cf. Documents bio-bibliographiques, Uccle: C.E.D.). We know that Decroly always received much help from his colleagues as well as from Mrs. Decroly in the translation and summarizing of many books. This seems to have also been the case here in our opinion.Google Scholar

111 For example Wauthier, Correspondance d'Ovide Decroly, 64. See also our earlier analysis: Marc Depaepe and Frank Simon, “ ‘Mon ami, monsieur Decroly.’ De rol van de biografie in de pedagogische wetenschapsgeschiedenis,” in Gezin, morele opvoeding en antisociaal gedrag. Thema's uit de empirische, wijsgerige en historische pedagogiek. Bijdragen aan de 9e Landelijke Pedagogendag eds. Hans De Frankrijker, Hans-Jan Kuipers, Joke Scholtens, and René van der Veer (Amsterdam: Uitgeverij SWP, 2000), 221–227.Google Scholar

112 Ibid., 79.Google Scholar

113 Depaepe, MarcMontessori privée du piédestal? Compte rendu de deux études récentes aux Pays-Bas,“ Paedagogica Historica XXXV/2 (1999): 425431.Google Scholar

114 See, for example, Dubreucq, FrancineJean-Ovide Decroly (1871–1932),“ Bulletin de Psychologie 53 (2000): 643652.Google Scholar

115 Simon, Brian A Life in Education (London: Lawrence & Wishart, 1998), 2627.Google Scholar

116 See Frijhoff, WillemEducation's memory,“ in Education and Cultural Transmission: Historical Studies of Continuity and Change in Families, Schooling and Youth Cultures eds. Sturm, Johan, Dekker, Jeroen, Aldrich, Richard, and Simon, Frank (Ghent: CSHP, 1996), 343 [= Paedagogica Historica Supplementary Series 2]. See also Karl Catteeuw, Marc Depaepe, and Frank Simon, “Forschungsprojekt Pädagogisches Gedächtnis Flanderns,” Internationale Schulbuchforschung/International Textbook Research III/20 (1998): 313–325.Google Scholar

117 Dominique Grootaers et al., Histoire de l'enseignement en Belgique (Brussels: CRISP, 1998).Google Scholar

118 For example Besse, Ovide Decroly; Bassan, Comment intéresser l'enfant à l'école. Google Scholar

119 Brehony, From the particular to the general,“ 428.Google Scholar

120 Depaepe, Marc and Simon, Frank, “Feminización dela enseñanza en Bélgica, siglos xix y xx,” in Primer Congreso Internacional sobre los Procesos de Feminización del Magisterio. Currículum vitae. Resumen de ponencias. 21, 22 y 23 febrero de 2001 eds. Luz Elena Galván, Oresta López, and Sonsoles San Román Gago (San Luis de Potosí: S.L.P. México El Colegio de San Luis, 2001), 13.Google Scholar