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・ Adolf Piltz
・ Adolf Pinner
・ Adolf Pittschellis
・ Adolf Piwarski
・ Adolf Pohl
・ Adolf Pokorny
・ Adolf Pollitzer
・ Adolf Portmann
・ Adolf Poskotin
・ Adolf Prokop
・ Adolf Rading
・ Adolf Raegener
・ Adolf Rambold
・ Adolf Rebner
・ Adolf Reeb
Adolf Reichwein
・ Adolf Reinach
・ Adolf Rettelbusch
・ Adolf Reubke
・ Adolf Riebe
・ Adolf Riedl
・ Adolf Rieger
・ Adolf Ritter von Tutschek
・ Adolf Robinson
・ Adolf Rosenberger
・ Adolf Rosenzweig
・ Adolf Rubi
・ Adolf Rudnicki
・ Adolf Rusch
・ Adolf Ruthardt


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Adolf Reichwein : ウィキペディア英語版
Adolf Reichwein

Adolf Reichwein (3 October 1898 – 20 October 1944) was a German educator, economist, and cultural policymaker for the SPD. He was also a resistance fighter in Nazi Germany.
==Biography==
Reichwein was born in Bad Ems. He took part in the First World War, in which he was seriously wounded in the lung. Reichwein studied at the universities of Frankfurt am Main und Marburg, under Hugo Sinzheimer and Franz Oppenheimer, among others. In the 1920s, he was active in education policy and adult education in Berlin and Thuringia. It was he who founded the ''Volkshochschule'' ("Folk high school") and the ''Arbeiterbildungsheim'' ("Workers' Training Home") in Jena and ran them until 1929. In his ''Hungermarsch nach Lappland'' ("Hunger March to Lappland") he described in diary form a punishing hike with some young jobless people in the far north. In 1929-1930, he worked as an adviser to the Prussian Culture Minister Carl Heinrich Becker.
From 1930 until 1933, he was a professor at the newly founded Pedagogical Academy in Halle. After the Nazis seized power, he was let go for political reasons and sent off to Tiefensee in Brandenburg to become an elementary schoolteacher. There, until 1939, he conducted many instructional experiments, which received a lot of attention, with educational progressivism and especially vocational education in mind. Reichwein described in his work ''Schaffendes Schulvolk'' ("Productive School People") his instructional concept, inspired by the Wandervogel movement and labour-school pedagogy, whose main focus was on trips, activity-oriented instruction with school gardens, and projects spanning age groups. For ''Sachunterricht'' (~field education, or practical learning) and its history, he included important historical documents. Reichwein split the instructional content into a summer cycle (natural sciences and social studies) and a winter cycle ("Man as former"/"in his territory"). From 1939, Reichwein was working at the Folklore Museum in Berlin as a museum educator.
As a member of the Kreisau Circle, Reichwein belonged to the resistance movement against Hitler. It is quite likely that he would have become culture minister in a democratic government. In early July 1944, Reichwein was arrested by the Gestapo, and, in a trial against Julius Leber, Hermann Maaß and Gustav Dahrendorf, sentenced to death by Roland Freisler's ''Volksgerichtshof''. He was killed next to Maaß at Plötzensee Prison in Berlin on 20 October 1944.

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