Myrtle Byram McGraw, PHD
Developmental Psychologist*
Katharine S. Milar, Ph.D.
Earlham College
Myrtle McGraw was born August 1,
1899 to Riley McGraw, an Alabama farmer and his wife Mary Byram,
a seamstress. Young Myrtle was the fifth of seven children born to the McGraws. At the age
of 12, she accompanied a neighbor to town and began taking a business course in
typing and shorthand. After only a few months, she was hired by a local lawyer
at the princely sum of $3.00 per week. Two years later her boss, obviously much
impressed by McGraw,
announced that he had arranged for her to attend the Snead
Seminary, a boarding school in
After she graduated from
In the early 1930s, the psychology of infant development was dominated on the one hand by the views of behaviorist John Watson, who claimed that given a dozen healthy infants he could make of them anything he chose; and, on the other, by maturationist Arnold Gesell who insisted that no amount of training could influence the development of an infant until that infant’s nervous system had reached the appropriate growth stage. In this context, one in which the focus of infant and child research was the establishment of developmental norms through administration of standardized scales and tests, McGraw became the associate director of the Normal Child Development Study at Babies Hospital in New York City. Working with project director and neurologist Frederick Tilney and neuroembryologist, George Coghill, McGraw drew on a variety of disciplines to try to develop an understanding not of norms, but of the process of growth. As she said, it was these scientists “and John Dewey and the babies that got me thinking of process, not end result or achievement” (Bergenn, Dalton, & Lipsett, 1992, p.384).
McGraw’s work was notable for her emphasis on observation and the novelty of some of her methods. She looked for cues in the infant’s behavior to suggest environmental challenges that would promote optimal motor development. She was the first to demonstrate the swimming reflex in 2- and 4-month old infants. In her research with the Woods twins, to challenge the development of equilibrium and stepping movements she put 13-month old Johnny on roller skates. To the surprise of the research team and the delight of the media, Johnny became a very skillful skater. In 1935 she published the results of her twin study, Growth: A Study of Johnny and Jimmy.
Due in part to the approaching war,
the Normal Child Development Study ended in early 1940. McGraw remained at
In 1953,
Myrtle McGraw retired in 1972 and
died at her home in
References
Bergenn, V. W.,
Lipsett, L.P. (1990). Myrtle Byram McGraw. American Psychologist, 45, 977.
McGraw, M. B. (1990). Memories, deliberate recall, and speculations. American Psychologist, 45. 934-937.
This column was adapted from my entry on McGraw in J. A. Garraty
& M. C. Carnes (Eds). American
National Biography. Volume 15 (Pp. 71-72).
*Originally published in The Feminist Psychologist, Newsletter
of the Society for the Psychology of Women, Division 35 of the American Psychological
Association, Volume 27, Number 1, Winter, 2000. Appearing with permission of the author.