Gwen Morgan, one of the true visionaries in our field, worked tirelessly for over four decades to provide better care for America's children. Gwen died at her home in Lincoln, Massachusetts on September 4.
My first encounter with Gwen was when she agreed to serve as my Master's Degree advisor at Lesley College in 1974. At a time when resources on child care administration were virtually nonexistent, Gwen and her husband Henry from the Harvard Business School, introduced me to the leadership and organizational theories of experts at Harvard, Yale, Stanford and MIT. She also recruited me to help her launch the Advanced Management Seminars for Day Care Directors, a three week summer institute at Wheelock College in Boston, Massachusetts. In these intensive seminars, Gwen pushed attendees to see themselves as leaders, not just administrators; provoked them with theories of staff motivation and team building; opened their eyes to the legal implications and requirements of their work; and had experts tutor them on becoming effective financial managers.
Gwen's was a pioneering driving force in the arena of employer child care. In 1968, she started a groundbreaking employer sponsored child care program at KLH in Cambridge. Her influence in the business sector grew, leading her to co-found Work Family Directions where she was instrumental in the launching of the American Business Collaborative for Quality Dependent Care.
Gwen's passion to uplift the quality of care for each of America's children resulted in her becoming a leading proponent for sound licensing practices. In 1976, she was among the founders of the National Association of Regulatory Administrators. For many years starting in 1985, she published an annual comparative report on states' licensing practices -- exposing states with low standards.
To provide greater support for parents in their search for quality child care services, Gwen was a leader in the movement to establish child care resource and referral agencies. Her 1972 evaluation of the nation's 4 C system was instrumental in guiding the course of the R&R movement. At Wheelock, she pushed the envelope by expanding her Advanced Management Seminars to include a week for child care resource and referral directors.
Most importantly Gwen was a leading advocate for improved child care funding and policies. Her advocacy for improved child care services in Massachusetts led to her being appointed the first director of the Massachusetts Office for Children in 1972. Her influence on the national scene was strengthened when she helped found the Day Care and Child Development Council of America, the leading national advocacy organization of the 1970's and early 1980's. Her publication in 1992 of "A Hitchhiker's Guide to the Child Care Universe," was a shrewd analysis of the early childhood policy environment. Her conceptualization of the "child care trilemma" of affordability, accessibility and quality, concisely captured the tradeoffs in advocating for effective child care policies.
With all her great achievements, Gwen was primarily a behind the scenes leader. Possibly her greatest contributions were the countless people she took under her wing and mentored into major roles in our field. When Bonnie and I decided to launch a management magazine for early childhood leaders, Gwen was our main source of inspiration and encouragement. For decades, she continued as a great idea generator ("Roger I think you need to do an article on...."), connector ("You guys really need to know...") and cheerleader. Even in her final years she remained a supporter. Bonnie remembers a call from her a few years ago when she said, "Now here is what I think I need to write for you next."
Over the years we have encountered hundreds of leaders in our field who love to share stories about how Gwen got them started, rekindled their enthusiasm, pointed them in new directions, or connected them with people who advanced their careers. She was always ready to help, never said an unkind word (except about politicians), and approached most challenges with a unique perspective. When you were discouraged she could either bring you back with some wise advice or by applying her great sense of humor.
She was in no way pretentious, very approachable, and comfortable with herself. For many she was known as the early childhood bag lady for all the bags of books, magazines and reports she was always carting about. It seemed that no matter what problem you brought to her, she would be able to pull out just the resource you needed from one of those bags.
Gwen was a unique builder of our profession -- she coupled a willingness to work extremely hard (usually with scant recognition or remuneration) with an uncanny ability to apply systems thinking to move a very diverse and disorganized field forward.
Gwen Morgan Memorial Service
Saturday, September 19 at 2:00 pm First Parish Church 14 Bedford Road Lincoln, Massachusetts Family asks donations be made to Gwen Morgan Fund at Wheelock College to provide scholarships to diverse early childhood practitioners. The contact for donations is: Jennifer Carr Rice Vice President of Development and Alumni Relations Wheelock College [email protected] P: 617-879-2233 |
Comments (23)
Displaying 5 of 23 Comments [ View all ]SCPITC
Charleston, SC, United States
Gwen was a presenter/instructor at the very first seminar I attended early in my career. Listening to her stories during the presentations was so inspiring. She influenced my views and realizations of the importance of the field of ec education.
SCPITC
Charleston, SC, United States
Gwen was one of the first instructors/presenters I came in contact with at a one week seminar, the first I attended, early in my career. She was so influential in my realization of how important this field was.
retired from CDI Denver
Cerrillos, New Mexico, United States
I attended the Advanced Day Care Administrators course at Wheelock College in the late 1980s and met Gwen. I was setting up a lab school at Santa Fe Community College and knew alot about Head Start but really, nothing about child care. The course was EXACTLY what I needed. Not only did we design and build a beatiful state of the art facility on campus that served as a lab school as well as campus child care (for students, staff, faculty and community), we also started a child care resource and referral program, a therapeutic nursery, toy lending library and recruited, trained, mentored and supported family child care providers as well as "emergency child care" for children in homeless families. Did Gwen inspire me to take on more than I thought I could chew?----you bet! The leadership aspects of what she taught helped me become a leader that inspired others to see the vision and jump on board and work toward the dream. Thank you Gwen. I think you probably never knew the outcome of your inspirations...it is living on! Gracias!
New Mexico Early Childhood
Farmington, New Mexico, United States
A life well lived! She certainly had a positive impact!
Peggy Soria
OMEP-USA
Washington, District of Columbia, United States
Thank you, Bonnie & Roger, for a grand obit for Gwen. I will never forget my first phone conversation with Gwen in the 1980s (this was before email). I was preparing to write a dissertation on the historical development of ECE licensing laws and regs in NJ and I had found many ERIC documents by GM. She offered her office and her filing cabinet for 3 days at Wheelock - we'd never met. She gave me the name of the hotel near the college and I never forgot her generosity of information and spirit - I wended my way through CCR&R and worked for NACCRRA in DC (I have a photo in my study of Gwen with Sen. James Jeffords, (I-Vermont) - now the black ribbon put on it for Sen. Jeffords who died last year will be for both of them. When I became a board member of NARA, I met up with her again. She was a permanent part of ECE for decades; we will never forget her.
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