Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Frederick Terman. Frederick Emmons Terman (/ ˈtɜːrmən /; June 7, 1900 – December 19, 1982) was an American professor and academic administrator. He was the dean of the school of engineering from 1944 to 1958 and provost from 1955 to 1965 at Stanford University. [ 1 ] He is widely credited (together with William Shockley) as being the ...

  2. May 10, 2024 · Frederick Emmons Terman was born in English, Indiana, on 7 June 1900 to Lewis M. and Anna Terman. His father is best known as the co-author of the Stanford-Binet IQ Test. Frederick entered public school at the age of 9, as his father spent time educating his son at home. In 1910 the family moved to Stanford as a result of his father’s appoint ...

  3. Share this piece of history. In the early 1930s, the talents of four Stanford undergraduates — Bill Hewlett, Dave Packard, Barney Oliver and Noel “Ed” Porter — caught the eye of legendary engineering professor Fred Terman. Terman, a strong advocate of the collaboration between commercial R&D and university research, took the young men ...

  4. Nov 3, 2004 · In 1976, Terman was awarded a National Medal of Science. In 1977, he attended the dedication of the $9.2 million Frederick Emmons Terman Engineering Center. In 1978, he received Stanford's Uncommon Man Award. "Stanford has been good to me," Terman wrote at age 77 to his friend Cecil Green.

  5. The questioner usually was referring to our father, Frederick Emmons Terman, the man to whom this special issue is devoted -- but not always. His father was the psychologist, Lewis M. Terman, also a Stanford professor, who was world famous for his studies of intelligence, developing the IQ test, and his life-long study of gifted children.

  6. Frederick Emmons Terman (/ ˈ t ɜːr m ən /; June 7, 1900 – December 19, 1982) was an American professor and academic administrator. He was the dean of the school of engineering from 1944 to 1958 and provost from 1955 to 1965 at Stanford University . [1]

  7. Terman married in 1928 and fathered three children. Born in 1900, he passed away peacefully in his sleep in 1982. Frederick Terman had a profound influence on the lives of many others, as well as on his profession, his technical specialty, his university, and indeed his country, as his many awards and prizes make clear.

  8. People also ask

  1. People also search for