Alberta Banner Turner
Alberta Banner Turner was an African American professor and psychologist, and a noted civil rights and women's rights activist in the field of psychology.
Professional life
Education
Turner attended Ohio State University, in Columbus, Ohio, for all 3 of her college degrees. Turner was a dedicated OSU student and Alpha Kappa Alpha alumni; she earned her bachelor's degree in 1929 and a master's degree in education in 1931 from the university. Turner then received her Ph.D. in 1935 for her dissertation entitled: "The Effect of Practice on the Perception and Memorization of Digits Presented in Single Exposures." Turner is credited as being the third black women to each a doctorate in psychology in the United States, after Inez Prosser, and Ruth Howard.Career
Turner became the head of the home economics department at what was then known as Winston-Salem College in North Carolina from 1935 through 1936 before moving on to become the chair of the Home Economics Division at Lincoln University in Missouri from 1936 through 1937; from 1938 to 1939 head of the Department of Home Economics at Southern University in Louisiana; 1939 head of the home economics department at Bennett College for Women in North Carolina. During this period she lectured on consumer issues at the college and in the summer of 1941 was awarded a fellowship to Stephens College in Columbia, Missouri, for study at the school's Institute of Consumer Education. She was the first black woman to do so. In 1944 Turner returned to Ohio as a clinician at the Ohio Bureau of Juvenile Research.Upon her return to Ohio, Turner grew very active in her research and during the 1950s she lectured at the Ohio State University in the areas of psychopathology and juvenile delinquency while continuing as a psychologist at what is now known as Ohio Department of Youth Services. She earned the position of Supervising Psychologist at the Juvenile Diagnostic Center in 1953 and was promoted to Chief Psychologist in 1959. This period of her life is also marked her diligent work as a clinical psychologist working with juveniles at Marysville Reformatory for Women. In 1963 Turner was promoted to the Central Administrative Office of the Ohio Youth Commission and became the director of research for the Ohio Youth Commission, while continuing her work at the Ohio State University and the Ohio Reformatory for Women. Turner's rigorous activities included her role with the Criminal Justice Supervisory Commission from 1972 to 1976. During this time, she also served as a consultant to the National Advisory Council on Vocational Rehabilitation.
Community involvement
Turner was a fierce advocate for civil rights for African Americans. During high school, she attended a "whites-only" prom to challenge the discrimination against Black students. Shortly after graduating, Turner and other students tried to go into a "whites-only" movie theatre, from which they were denied access and took legal action against the manager.Turner was also active in African American social organizations. She served as the fourth president of the National Jack and Jill of America Foundation in 1953. Turner then became the founding president of the Columbus chapter and the first national program director of The Links Inc., which has 10,000 members nationwide. She has been instrumental in establishing the Prelude Scholarship and Recognition Program, a partnership of Links, Ohio State, and the Columbus Public Schools to honor minority students. Links also has funded an endowed scholarship at Ohio State to support minority students.