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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Rose_Stern
rdf:type
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rdfs:label
Rose Stern
rdfs:comment
Rose Stern (17 November 1869 – October 1953) was a teacher from Birmingham, England. She was science mistress at North London Collegiate School for Ladies. While a student at Mason College, she was the first woman student to become a member of the Institute of Chemistry of Great Britain & Ireland (later the Royal Institute of Chemistry). A proponent of grounding chemistry instruction in domestic science, she published A method of teaching chemistry in schools (with Alice Maude Hughes, 1906) and A short history of chemistry (1924).
foaf:name
Rose Stern
dbp:name
Rose Stern
dbo:birthPlace
dbr:Birmingham dbr:England
dbp:birthPlace
dbr:Birmingham dbr:England
dbo:birthDate
1869-11-17
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1058835279
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North London Collegiate School for Ladies
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dbr:Mason_College
dbp:birthDate
1869-11-17
dbp:deathDate
1953
dbp:field
Chemistry
dbo:abstract
Rose Stern (17 November 1869 – October 1953) was a teacher from Birmingham, England. She was science mistress at North London Collegiate School for Ladies. While a student at Mason College, she was the first woman student to become a member of the Institute of Chemistry of Great Britain & Ireland (later the Royal Institute of Chemistry). A proponent of grounding chemistry instruction in domestic science, she published A method of teaching chemistry in schools (with Alice Maude Hughes, 1906) and A short history of chemistry (1924).
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