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Harry Kay (psychologist)

Harry Kay (1919–2005) was a British psychologist and academic administrator.

Career

Kay attended Rotherham Grammar School and then in 1938 went to the University of Cambridge to read for a degree English. However, World War II intervened and he enlisted in the Royal Artillery, rising to the rank of lieutenant colonel. In 1946 he returned to Cambridge to complete a degree in Moral Sciences. He remained at Cambridge in the Nuffield Unit for Research into Problems of Ageing.

Kay moved to the University of Oxford in 1951 as a lecturer in experimental psychology. He continued his research and was awarded a PhD. In 1960, he was appointed Chair of Psychology at the University of Sheffield. It was here that he established the Social and Applied Psychology Research Unit.

In 1973, he was appointed Vice-Chancellor of the University of Exeter. He remained there until his retirement in 1984.

He was active in the British Psychological Society becoming its president in 1971. In his presidential address, he promoted 'giving psychology away'.

Research

Kay's early research interest was experimental work on motor skills and then moved into the more general area of occupational psychology.

During his time at Cambridge, Kay was influenced by the works of Frederic Bartlett, who inspired his interest in the practical application of psychology to address real world problems.

At Sheffield, Kay supervised Peter B. Warr's doctoral work, and the two later became close colleagues, co-founding the Social and Applied Psychology Research Unit.

Honours

References