Edwin Grant Dexter (1868- ? ) was an
American educator, born at
Calais,
Me. He graduated in 1891 from
Brown University, where he taught for a year and then (between 1892 and 1899) was science master of Coloradp Springs High School, director of the Coloradp Springs Summer School of Science, Philosophy, and Languages, and
professor of psychology in the Normal School at
Greeley, Colo. In 1899 he gained a
Ph.D. at
Columbia University and the higher diploma of
Teachers College. From then until 1907 he served at the
University of Illinois in various capacities — as professor of pedagogy and psychology, director of the summer term, director of the School of Education, and
dean. He became commissioner of education in
Porto Rico and chancellor of the
University of Porto Rico in 1907. He was president of the
National Society for the Scientific Study of Education in 1905-06 and president of the child-study section of the
National Education Association in 1905-07. Besides serving as associate editor of the
Internationales Archivar für Schulhygiene and of the
Jahrschrift für Körpeliche Erziehung and contributing some 50 articles to scientific and educational journals, he was author of:
- A History of Education in the United States (1904)
- Weather Influences (1904)