The history of educational psychology at UCL tells a story about the history of psychology as a separate discipline and the development of academic and professional educational psychology in Britain. It is a story about the value of academic and subsequently professional networks and connections in driving forward this new discipline, with UCL effectively providing a hub.
The origin of psychology at լƵ is almost as old as the founding of the College itself, when in 1892, James Sully became Professor of Philosophy of Mind and Language. He had a reputation for studying psychology, had published the first British psychology textbook and was seen as ‘one of the moving spirits behind the child study movement’. By 1898 he had set up the first major psychological lab in Britain. He encouraged teachers and others ‘to bring their more difficult pupils for examination’. He also stressed the importance of training psychologists as a “‘new kind of specialist’, who he claimed must have both the ‘gift of sympathetic insight’ and specific ‘psychological training’”.
This created firm foundations for what followed. By 1928, the psychology lab had grown into the Department of Psychology. When Sir Cyril Burt took over as Professor in 1931, he did so having already worked as the UK’s first professional educational psychologist and shown a commitment to training educational psychologists. This was formalised when an Academic Diploma in Psychology, which he had set up, became a recognised qualification in educational psychology. In 1947, one educational psychologist completed training at UCL and in 1948, a further five completed their professional qualification and graduated from the Diploma course.
By the 1970s, the diploma had become a one-year, full-time Master’s degree, which is how it remained until 2006 when initial educational psychologist training changed to a three-year doctoral programme. In addition to initial training, in 1999, the tradition of promoting educational psychologists’ professional development was considerably strengthened by the creation of a four-year part time doctoral programme for qualified educational psychologists.
The story of educational psychology at UCL, then, is a story about innovative psychology research and practice going back over 120 years, inspired by realising the transformative power of psychology for the lives of children and young people.
A detailed timeline can be accessed here.