10/13/2020
Titchener is credited with introducing Wundt's scientific ideas to the United States. However, it is important to note that historians recognize that Titchener's theories differed from those of his mentor and many critics suggest that Titchener actually misrepresented many of Wundt's ideas. While the school of thought did not survive his death, he played a significant role in establishing psychology as an experimental science.
Titchener was an original member of the American Psychological Association. However, he never attended a single meeting.3 In 1904, he founded his own group known as the Experimentalists. Titchener believed the APA was flawed and too accepting of applied psychology topics.
Titchener's group was also known for its ban on women, which continued until after his death.4 Despite Titchener's refusal to admit women in his group, his first doctoral student was Margaret Floy Washburn. In 1894, she became the first woman to earn a Ph.D. in psychology.2
During a time when many women were forbidden from studying at major universities including Harvard and Columbia, Titchener oversaw the doctoral studies of more women than any other male psychologist of that time period.
In addition to his career as a distinguished and much-loved professor, Titchener served as the editor of several prominent journals including Mind, Studies from the Department of Psychology of Cornell University, and the American Journal of Psychology. He also published several critical psychology texts including Outline of Psychology (1897), A Primer of Psychology (1898), and his four-volume Experimental Psychology (1901-1905).
Titchener died on August 3, 1927, and with his death, the structuralist school of thought mostly disappeared as well.