Harold J. Noah


Harold J. Noah was an American educator, whose research and writing have focused on comparative education and economics of education. He was born in London, England and moved to the United States in 1958. His higher education began at the London School of Economics and King’s College, University of London, and was followed by a Ph.D. at Teachers College, Columbia University. He served as Professor at Teachers College, Columbia, from 1964 to 1987. He was appointed to the Gardner Cowles chair in economics of education. He served as Dean of the College from 1976 to 1981. He is widely recognized as a distinguished authority in the field of comparative education.
In studies of Soviet education in the 1960s and 1970s Noah dealt primarily with the economic and public finance aspects of schools and higher education in that country. In his teaching he espoused the use of what were at the time increasingly accepted concepts of human capital and rates of return to examine the nature and extent of private and public investments in education and training, in both market and command economies.
From the mid-1960s onward, Noah advocated the use of empirical social science methods in comparative education. Much of this work was done in collaboration with his long-standing coauthor, Max A. Eckstein. This collaboration began with “Toward A Science of Comparative Education”, which described and critiqued the development over time of methods of comparing national systems of education. The book sounded a powerful call for the application of positivist methods in comparative education studies.
Among his most notable works are:
BOOKS
Financing Soviet Schools
The Economics of Education in the U.S.S.R.. Library of Congress Number 68-18925
Toward a Science of Comparative Education, and the companion book, Scientific Investigations in Comparative Education. Library of Congress Numbers, respectively, 69-11406 and 69-17349
Reviews of National Policies for Education:Germany
The National Case Study: An Empirical Comparative Study of Twenty-One Educational Systems. International Studies in Evaluation VII
Reviews of National Policies for Education: Canada
Educational Financing and Policy Goals for
Primary Schools: General Report
The following were co-authored with Max A. Eckstein:
International Study of Business/Industry Involvement in Education
Examinations: Comparative and International Studies
Secondary School Examinations: International Perspectives on Policies and Practice.
Doing Comparative Education: Three Decades of Collaboration.
Fraud and Education: The Worm in the Apple.
SELECTED OTHER PUBLICATIONS
"Use and abuse of comparative education", Comparative Education Review 28:4 1984
"Dependency theory in comparative education: the new simplicitude," UNESCO, Prospects XV:2 1985
"Education, employment, and development in communist societies," in E.B. Gumbert ed., Patriarchy, Party, Population, and Pedagogy
"General education in the modern university," in Hermann Röhrs ed., Tradition and Reform of the University in International Perspective
China's Vocational and Technical Training
"Dependency Theory in Comparative Education: Twelve Lessons from the Literature," in J. Schriewer ed., Theories and Methods in Comparative Education
"Tradeoffs in Examination Policies: An International Comparative Perspective," Oxford Review of Education 15:1 1989
"Forms and Functions of Secondary-School Leaving Examinations," Comparative Education Review 33:3 1989
"An International Perspective on National Standards," Teachers College Record 91:1 1989
"Bildungspolitik und Internationale Studien zum Bildungswesen," Bildung und Erziehung 44:1 1991.