
I believe Conant may have set the "bar" for reinvention or job changes. In 2008, we describe individuals "reinventing themselves" or marvel at how long we may live and how many job changes we can expect to have in our working lives.

He is one of the founders of the Education Commission of the States (Grady, 2008). Among the books he wrote were: The American High School Today (1959), Slums and Suburbs (1961), The Education of American Teachers (1963), and The Comprehensive High School (1967). The title is apropos in that Conant's career was as a professor of organic chemistry and physics, president of Harvard University from 1933 to 1953, chief civilian administrator of American nuclear research, participant in the Manhattan project, participant in the decision on the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombs, U.S Ambassador to Germany, and education reform advocate and author. In preparing an essay on James Bryant Conant, I was struck by the title of his autobiography, My Several Lives: Memoirs of a Social Inventor (1970).
