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Clyde Raymond Miller was an Associate Professor of Education at Teachers College, Columbia University who co-founded the Institute for Propaganda Analysis with Edward A. Filene and Kirtley F. Mather in 1937. ==Career== As a young man, Miller was a reporter for the ''Cleveland Plain Dealer''. During World War I he wrote many column and articles related to patriotism and the activities of the Justice Department and participated in vigilante "spy hunts" with the American Protective League.〔 He testified as a government witness in the high profile prosecution of Eugene Victor Debs under the war-time Espionage Law, for speaking against the war effort. In the 1930s Miller was a director of educational services and later an Associate Professor in the Columbia University Teachers' College. In 1937 he co-founded the Institute for Propaganda Analysis, and wrote extensively about the subject of propaganda techniques and how to detect them. Miller's propaganda analysis techniques were significantly incorporated into the progressive curriculum policies of the Springfield Plan in the mid-1940s. The Springfield Plan was a widely lauded and emulated curriculum for intercultural education that was implemented in the public school system of Springfield, Massachusetts. The plan was the subject of several books, numerous academic journal articles, and it was the subject of a 1945 Warner Bros. short film, ''It'' ''Happened in Springfield'', starring Andrea King. Miller is the author of several books. His articles, speeches and essays were published in a number of journals, essay collections and magazines. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Clyde R. Miller」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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