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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mary Sturt (8 September 1896 – 1993), also known as Molly, was a British educational psychologist and historian of education.[1]
Sturt studied classics at Somerville College, Oxford from 1916 and graduated in 1920.[1]
She later served as Vice-Principal of St Mary's College, Bangor, an Anglican teacher-training college for women.[2]
She collaborated with Ellen Oakden in several pieces of writing. Their Modern Psychology and Education (1926) was welcomed by its Observer reviewer as "one of the most informative, interesting, and humorous things that I have ever seen as an attempt to write for training-college students".[3] They also adapted works for children for 'The King's Treasuries of Literature', a series edited by Arthur Quiller-Couch: The Canterbury Pilgrims bowdlerised some of the bawdier elements of the Canterbury Tales.[4]
Sturt's biography of Francis Bacon defended Bacon against Macaulay, whom she characterised as "a man writing in semi-ignorance to please the most hypocritical audience that ever existed".[5] On retirement she taught for a year in Sarawak in Borneo.[6]
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