Education - we can teach you a thing or two.
(born Jan. 24, 1811, Hartford, Conn., U.S.died July 5, 1900, Hartford) U.S. educator. He studied law and entered the state legislature, where he helped create a state board of education and the first teachers' institute (1839). With Horace Mann, he undertook to reform the country's common schools; he was an innovator in instituting school inspections, textbook reviews, and parent-teacher organizations. As Rhode Island's first commissioner of education (from 1845) he worked to raise teachers' wages, repair buildings, and obtain higher-education appropriations. In 1855 he helped found the . He was chancellor of the University of Wisconsin (185861). In 1867 he became the first U.S. commissioner of education, in which post he established a federal agency to collect national educational data.
Find more information on Barnard, Henry. Upgrade to Britannica Online for more on Barnard, Henry.