Born: August 30, 1925; Died: July 3, 1984.
• Found support for and inaugurated the International School Psychology
Committee to expand communication among psychologists worldwide
• Distinguished internationally as an educational tour guide for
school psychologists
• President of the National Association of School Psychologists
• President of the California Association of School Psychologists
In 1984 ISPA lost its founder. It was his inspiration,
determination and leadership that brought about the successful global
communication among school psychologists that we enjoy today. His legacy
lives on through each member of ISPA!
Here is his story:
Calvin Dennis Catterall was the fifth child of the Rev.
and Mrs. Henry James Catterall. His birthplace was Mt. Shasta, California,
where his father was a Methodist minister. But little did Cal know that
he was destined to give of himself to a then obscure profession and, furthermore,
to add an international dimension to it. His two older brothers and two
older sisters were role models for him. Cal worked as a butcher in a meat
market for two years during high school to help ends meet at home and
after graduation attended the College of the Pacific in Stockton, California.
One year later he was drafted into the 460th Air Force Squadron and went
off to fight in World War II as a tail gunner in a B- 17. He began to
see the world and re-turned two years later after 35 missions over Germany
with a bullet hole in his leather flight jacket, an Air Metal, five Oak
Leaf Clusters for bravery in the line of duty, and with a whole lot more
maturity.
Cal, then, resumed his undergraduate studies at the College of the Pacific.
However, his father’s sudden death of a heart attack changed the
course of his life. Cal continued his college studies, but he also felt
a desire to take over his father’s ministerial duties until a permanent
minister could be appointed. He was granted certification as a lay preacher
in the Methodist Church, which allowed him to preach in his father’s
two small churches in northern California and attend college at the same
time. One year later, Cal graduated with a BA degree and enrolled in the
University of Southern California in Los Angeles from which he was granted
an MA degree in Psychology in 1949. He was 24 years old.
While enrolled in a Ph.D. program at Claremont Graduate School, Claremont,
California, he met Gretchen Bruner who, in 1950, became his wife. Gretchen
taught school while Cal continued graduate studies. The birth of their
first child made it necessary for Cal to curtail his Ph.D. program and
he signed his first teaching contract for $ 500 per month. Subsequently,
two more children were born and 14 years later he finished his doctorate.
During these years he was a school psychologist for several school districts
and eventually became Director of Special Services for the Santa Clara
School System. The now Dr. Catterall had been an active member of the
California Association of School Psychologists (CASP) and was elected
President in 19G0. In 1971 Dr. Catterall took a position at Ohio State
University in Columbus, Ohio as a Professor of Psychology working with
graduate students. He held this position for two years before starting
his own consulting firm. As a consultant, he traveled in Canada and most
of the eastern states of the USA giving inservice training to psychologists
and special education personnel. As a result of this successful career
move, his leadership talents were becoming nationally known, and in 1972
he became president of the National Association of School Psychologists
(NASP).
Dr. Catterall also planned and led educational group travels overseas
in the name of school psychology. Coincidentally, Dr. Frances Mullen,
President of the School Psychology Division 16 of the American Psychological
Association (APA), was doing exactly the same thing. From these experiences
they both saw the desperate need and a hunger for communication across
cultures in the professional area of school psychology. The two began
to work together to form the International School Psychology Commit-tee
(ISPC), sponsored by APA and NASP. They were m - chairs for several years
until Dr. Midlen’ s heavy professional duties necessitated her resignation.
Over the many years that followed, Dr. Catterall worked with people from
all over the world to build ISPC into a viable entity. He saw it grow
and evolve into the International School Psychology Association (ISPA)
and was to become its first Executive Secretary, but illness prevented
him from assuming that leadership position. In 1980 tragedy struck. Dr.
Catterall contracted bacterial meningitis, almost died, and throughout
his recovery period it was determined by family, friends, and professionals
that Dr. Catterall’s mind and memory had been effected seriously
by the illness. In the ensuing four years his mind seemed confused and
sometimes incoherent. One late night during ISPA’s 1984 Colloquium
in Orleans, France, he was killed by a speeding train. Was he lost, not
knowing how to get to his hotel? Was he confused with directions? No one
really knows. But what is known is that ISPA lost its shaker and its mover,
a man who was a visionary and dedicated his life to the promotion of professional
communication among school psychologists the world over.
Yes, his legacy lives on.