Notable former faculty and staff •
Basil Bernstein (1924–2000), sociologist and linguist •
Max Black (1909–1988), philosopher •
Cyril Burt (1883–1971), educational psychologist •
Jon Davison (1949-), first professor of teacher education •
Rosemary Firth (1912–2001), social anthropologist •
Harvey Goldstein (1939–2020), statistician •
Chris Husbands (1959–), educationalist and former director of the institute •
Susan Sutherland Isaacs, (1885–1948), educational psychologist and psychoanalyst •
George Barker Jeffery (1891–1957), mathematician and educationalist •
Joseph Lauwerys (1902–1981) •
Leonard John Lewis, international educationalist •
Karl Mannheim (1893–1947), sociologist •
Richard Stanley Peters (1919– 2011), philosopher, professor of philosophy of education •
Marion Richardson (1892–1946), artist, educator and author who published workbooks on penmanship and handwriting •
Harold Rosen (1919–2008), educationalist, professor and head of English department •
Christian Schiller (1895–1976), HM Inspector and senior lecturer •
Philip E. Vernon, (1905–1987), psychologist
Notable alumni •
T. Q. Armar (1915–2000), Ghanaian publisher • Sir
Abubakar Tafawa Balewa (1912–1966), first Prime Minister of independent Nigeria •
Paul Bird (1923–1993), artist and teacher •
Quentin Blake (born 1932), cartoonist, illustrator and children's book author •
Nicole Brown (social scientist) (born 1976), Austrian and British writer and academic •
Waveney Bushell, (born 1928), Guyanese-born educational psychologist •
Jane E. Clerk (1904–1999), schoolteacher and pioneer woman education administrator on the Gold Coast, now Ghana •
Reginald Horace Blyth (1898–1964), author and devotee of Japanese culture •
Valerie Davey (born 1940), former Labour Member of Parliament for Bristol West •
Bryan Davies, Baron Davies of Oldham, PC (born 1939), Labour member of the House of Lords •
Modjaben Dowuona (1908–1991), first Registrar of the
University of Ghana;
Minister for Education (1966–1969) •
Michael Duane (1915–1997, controversial head teacher •
U. A. Fanthorpe (1929–2009), poet •
Beryl Gilroy (née Answick) (1924–2001), novelist •
Alice Jane Green (1863 – 1966) She co-founded
Moreton Bay College in Australia. •
Jonathan Gullis (born 1990), former
Minister of State for School Standards •
Sally Morgan, Baroness Morgan of Huyton (born 1959), British Labour Party politician •
William R. Newland (potter) (1919–1998), New Zealand born studio potter •
Harry Mwaanga Nkumbula (1917?–1983), Zambian nationalist leader who assisted in the struggle for the independence of Northern Rhodesia •
Aydin Önaç (born c. 1950), controversial headteacher •
Harry Rée (1914–1991), British educationalist and member of the Special Operations Executive •
Bill Renwick (1929–2013), New Zealand Director-General of Education 1975–1988 •
Harold Rosenthal (1917–1987), music critic •
Irene Sabatini, Zimbabwean novelist •
Brian Simon (1915–2002), educationalist and historian •
Dale Spender (1943-2023), feminist scholar •
Katherine Weare (born 1950), professor of Education
Principals and directors Principals of the London Day Training College • 1902–22:
John Adams (1857–1934) • 1922–32: Sir
Percy Nunn (1870–1944) ==References==