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While Bruner was at Harvard he published a series of works about his assessment of current educational systems and ways that education could be improved.
In 1961, he published the book Process of Education.
Bruner also served as a member of the Educational Panel of the President's Science Advisory Committee during the presidencies of John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson.
Referencing his overall view that education should not focus merely on the memorization of facts, Bruner wrote in Process of Education that ' knowing how something is put together is worth a thousand facts about it.
' From 1964-1996, Bruner sought to develop a complete curriculum for the educational system that would meet the needs of students in three main areas which he called Man: A Course of Study.
Bruner wanted to create an educational environment that would focus on ( 1 ) what was uniquely human about human beings, ( 2 ) how humans got that way and ( 3 ) how humans could become more so.
In 1966, Bruner published another book relevant to education, Towards a Theory of Instruction, and then in 1973, another book, The Relevance of Education was published.
Finally, in 1996, Bruner wrote another book, The Culture of Education, reassessing the state of educational practices three decades after he had begun his educational research.
Bruner was also credited with helping found the early childcare program Head Start.

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