Tyler was born on April 22, 1902, in
Chicago to a professional family. His maternal grandfather was in the
Civil War and had been appointed as a judge in Washington by president
Ulysses S. Grant. His father, William Augustus Tyler, had been raised in a farm, and had become a doctor. Deeply religious, there came a time when both of Tyler's parents thought that the medical profession was too lucrative and that they should realign their priorities, at which point his father became a
Congregational minister. As the sixth of eight children, Tyler grew up in
Nebraska where he recalled having to trap animals for food and wear donated clothing. He worked at various jobs while growing up, including his first job at age twelve in a
creamery. Tyler went to college during the day and worked as a
telegraph operator for the railroad at night. He received his
bachelor's degree in 1921 at the age of 19 from Doane College in
Crete, Nebraska. There was a time when Tyler wanted to become a missionary in
Rhodesia, but he declined because he had no formal instruction in ministry, unlike his younger brother who had gone to
Yale Divinity School. However, later all the brothers pursued a career in the field of education. His first teaching job was as a
high school science teacher in
Pierre,
South Dakota. In 1923, Tyler wrote a science test for high school students which helped him "see the holes in testing only for memorization." He earned his
master's degree from the
University of Nebraska in 1923 and his
Ph.D. from the
University of Chicago in 1927. His
graduate work at the University of Chicago connected him with notable educators
Charles Judd and W. W. Charters, whose ideas influenced Tyler’s later work in
curriculum development and evaluation. Tyler’s first appointment was at the
University of North Carolina in 1927, where he worked with state teachers to improve curricula. Later in 1927, Tyler joined the faculty at
Ohio State University, where he refined his innovative approach to testing while working with Charters, who was the director of the university's Bureau of Educational Research. Tyler helped Ohio State University faculty to improve their teaching and increase student retention. He is credited with coining the term "evaluation" for aligning measurement and testing with educational objectives. Because his concept of evaluation consisted of gathering comprehensive evidence of learning rather than just paper and pencil tests, Tyler might even be viewed as an early proponent of portfolio assessment. ==
Eight-Year Study ==