Zoe Burrell Bayliss
Zoe Burrell Bayliss was an American educator. She was Dean of Women at Kent State Normal College, and in the University of Wisconsin system.
Early life and education
Bayliss was raised in Sterling, Illinois, the daughter of Alfred Bayliss and Clara [Kern Bayliss|Clara Marie Kern Bayliss]. Her father was a college president and politician; her mother was an educator and writer. She graduated from Western Illinois State Teacher's College and the University of Chicago. She earned a master's degree at the University of Wisconsin in 1931.Career
Bayliss taught education courses and was Dean of Women at Kent State Normal College. She was Dean of Women at the University of Wisconsin–Whitewater from 1923 to 1928, and Assistant Dean of Women at the University of Wisconsin–Madison from 1928 until 1943. In 1931, during the last years of Prohibition in [the United States|Prohibition], she testified that she was unaware of any drinking "on the part of young ladies" at Wisconsin, which drew some mocking disbelief from faculty colleagues and the student newspaper.Bayliss was active in the education honor society Pi Lambda Theta, and was vice-president of the society's Madison chapter. She was also active in the local chapter of Altrusa. In 1934, she served a term as president of the Wisconsin Association of Deans of Women. "Dean Bayliss's widely known lively humor and sense of fair play endeared her to students and colleagues alike," recalled a Wisconsin newspaper in 1955.
Publications
- "How to Grow Bulbs in the Schoolroom"
- "The Princess Beautiful, or, The Wait-a-Bit Bush"
- "How to Teach India"
- "A Study of the Factors Contributing to the Unsatisfactory Scholastic Attainment of First Year Women Students"