The Scotsman

Margaret Salter

Scottish child developmen­t expert who became an artist in retirement

- ALISON SHAW

Margaret Caldwell Salter FRSE, Professor Emerita of Developmen­tal Psychology. Born: June 16 1926 in Paisley. Died: September 16 2020 in Edinburgh, aged 94

Margar et Salter was an influentia­l child developmen­t expert whose innate affinity with children and fascinatio­n with their thinking vastly improved the lives of countless youngsters around the world.

Her seminal work, Children’s Minds, first published in 1978, remains as informativ­e and perceptive today. Yet she came to the field via a somewhat circuitous route – starting out as a student French teacher amid the chaos of post-war continenta­l Europe before joining the army. Only later did she switch her focus fully to psychology, spending 35 years as an academic at her alma mater, the University of Edinburgh, where she was awarded a personal chair in developmen­tal psychology.

Professor Margaret Donaldson-salter was born in Paisley, the daughter of wholesale clothier James Donaldson and his wife Agnes, a primary school teacher. When the Great Depression hit the family business they moved to Perthshire where they ran Aberfoyle’s Post Office and shop and young Margaret was educated at the village primary and Callander’s Mclaren High School.

Along with her two younger brothers she enjoyed an idyllic childhood, which shaped her subsequent achievemen­ts, but the family endured two tragedies in quick succession when their parents died within four years of each other.

Margaret was just 17 when she lost her mother and 21 when her father died, a formative time that saw her embark on a French degree and spend a year in France teaching at a Lycee in Rouen. She had been ready for adventure when she arrived in Normandy shortly before victor y over Japan in August 1945.

Soon afterwards, while travelling through Europe to a student conference in Prague, she witnessed the turmoil six years of conflict had wreaked on the continent. Having made the out ward trip by train, the return journey was rather more unorthodox: she hitched a lift back on a Lancaster bomber, seated in the only available accommodat­ion – the empty bomb bay.

During her time in France she also visited a young British sailor suffering a broken back and stranded in a local hospital, unable to communicat­e in French. When she discovered there was no progress in his repatriati­on she took up his case, telling the British Consulate she would ask her MP to raise the patient’s plight in the House of Commons.

Miraculous­ly, ah eli copter was swiftly mobilised to transfer him to the UK – an early demonstrat­ion to the spirited young student of the positive power her influence could exert.

Graduating MA with First Class honours in 1947, she then joined the army, received a commission and worked in personnel selection for a time. A spell teaching French in a Kirkcaldy secondary school followed before she returned to Edinburgh University to take a B.ED degree in psychology – a subject she had studied briefly as a teenager – and education. Graduating again in 1953, she became an assistant in the institutio­n’s education department.

Four years later, as a researcher at lecturer level, her fluent French helped secure the opportunit­y to spend a year in Geneva with the renowned Swiss psychologi­st and child developmen­t pioneer Jean Pi a get, who would prove a huge influence on the direction of her work.

The following year she took up a lecturing post at Edinburgh and int he early 1960s was awarded a John Hay Whitney Fellowship, spending a year in the United States. There she was a visiting lecture rat Rhodes College, Tennessee and visited Harvard University where she met the distinguis­hed American psychologi­st and educator Jerome Bruner, with whom she became good friends.

She was a reader in psychology when she met her future husband Stephen S alter, an Edinburgh University engineer working in artificial intelligen­ce and planning to build a robot with the intellect of a five -year- old. He sought her knowledge of how children thought at that age and the pair hit it off, marrying in secret when she was 46 and mischievou­sly causing confusion by announcing that Dr Donaldson’s lectures would now be given by Dr Salter.

Promoted to a personal Chair in 1980 she made history at Edinburgh University as the first married woman professor.

Throughout her career she was dedicated to fostering children’ s confidence and understand­ing of themselves and their environmen­t, facilitate­d through adults’ greater appreciati­on of the world through the lens of a child.

She was also passionate about promoting reading and once advocated replacing sweets at supermarke­t checkouts with children’s books.her own insightful­ness and ability to immerse herself in a child’s realm produced several children’s fiction books including Mindar, the tale of a boy living in the Middle East 4,000 years ago, and Journey into War featuring the adventures of an English girl and two Polish boys in 1940 France.

Other profession­al publicatio­ns included R&D, Reading and Language Programme for the Primary Years, written in collaborat­ion with her closest friend Jessie Reid, and Human Minds: An Exploratio­n.

By the time the latter was published in 1992 she had retired and her pioneering work had been recognised with: the book Understand­ing Children: Essays in Honour of Margaret Donaldson; her portrait in the Scottish National Portrait Gallery; and honorary life membership of the United Kingdom Reading Associatio­n. She would also become an honorary fellow of the British Psychologi­cal Society, fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh and receive an honorary doctorate from the Open University.

Retirement saw her return to an earlier love of painting, creating a mix of abstracts and moody images reflecting people and their emotions. Later she discovered digital technology and embraced the infinite possibilit­ies computers offered to re-imagine photograph­s, focusing in on and re-working details to produce spectacula­r large scale prints.

As with her art, her influence is encapsulat­ed succinctly by one friend: “Margaret was one of these unique people who can change the way you view the world.”

She is survived by her husband of 47 years, Stephen Salter, emeritus professor of engineerin­g design at Edinburgh University.

 ??  ?? 0 Margaret Salter hitched a ride on a Lancaster bomber
0 Margaret Salter hitched a ride on a Lancaster bomber

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