The Money Value of Education, Issues 21-34 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 9
... supervision , 3 : 150-57 , March 1917 . The problem of regulating the time element so that a unit in one subject will be the approximate equivalent for administrative purposes of a unit in another . 644. Lewis , Ervin Eugene . Standards ...
... supervision , 3 : 150-57 , March 1917 . The problem of regulating the time element so that a unit in one subject will be the approximate equivalent for administrative purposes of a unit in another . 644. Lewis , Ervin Eugene . Standards ...
Page 12
... supervision . School and home education , 36 : 212-15 , April 1917 . An address delivered at Kansas City , February 27 , 1917 , before the National council of educa- tion . 679. Doeden , Frederic . The legal status of the city ...
... supervision . School and home education , 36 : 212-15 , April 1917 . An address delivered at Kansas City , February 27 , 1917 , before the National council of educa- tion . 679. Doeden , Frederic . The legal status of the city ...
Page 13
... supervision of rural schools . American journal of school hygiene , 1 : 25-30 , 63-68 , February , March 1917 . The teacher's responsibility . PHYSICAL TRAINING . 692. National collegiate athletic association . Papers presented at the ...
... supervision of rural schools . American journal of school hygiene , 1 : 25-30 , 63-68 , February , March 1917 . The teacher's responsibility . PHYSICAL TRAINING . 692. National collegiate athletic association . Papers presented at the ...
Page 18
... supervision , 3 : 139–49 , March 1917 . Result of an investigation made for the purpose of ascertaining what our schools are doing to provide for children who are above average in native ability as well as in actual attainment ...
... supervision , 3 : 139–49 , March 1917 . Result of an investigation made for the purpose of ascertaining what our schools are doing to provide for children who are above average in native ability as well as in actual attainment ...
Page 23
... supervision were not typical ones , but that in them a value was placed upon education above that allowed in other factories . That this is not true is shown by the fact that the salaries reported for the trade - school graduates in the ...
... supervision were not typical ones , but that in them a value was placed upon education above that allowed in other factories . That this is not true is shown by the fact that the salaries reported for the trade - school graduates in the ...
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Academy agrégation Alaska algebra analytic geometry angle applications arithmetic assistant average boiling boys Bulletin Bureau of Education calculus of variations candidate cent certificate city superintendents College cooking course current educational publications curve descriptive geometry differential equations District elementary schools examination exercises functions garden girls given grade graduates higher hours a week Hydaburg Industrial institutions instruction integral calculus Kanakanak Kuskokwim River lesson mathematics mathématiques mechanics methods military training milk Monthly record natives normal schools normal training North Dakota organized pedagogy physics plane practice teaching preparation problems professor Prussia pupils Realschule record of current reindeer running stitch rural schools salary secondary schools semester spherical trigonometry student teacher Superin supervision synthetic geometry TABLE tablespoons teacher-training teaspoon tendent theory tion Total Township High School training schools triangle trigonometry University vegetables vocational Washington York
Popular passages
Page 237 - Prove that parallelograms on the same base and between the same parallels are equal in area.
Page 229 - Prove that the algebraic sum of the moments of two concurrent forces about any point in their plane is equal to the moment of their resultant about the same point.
Page 236 - If two triangles have one angle of the one equal to one angle of the other and the sides about these equal angles proportional, the triangles are similar.
Page 194 - A unit represents a year's study in any subject in a secondary school, constituting approximately a quarter of a full year's work.
Page 3 - This office can not supply the publications listed in this bulletin, other than those expressly designated as publications of the Bureau of Education. Books, pamphlets, and periodicals here mentioned may ordinarily be obtained from their respective publishers, either directly or through a dealer, or, in the case of an association publication, from the secretary of the issuing organization. Many of them are available for consultation in various public and institutional libraries. Publications intended...
Page 66 - If the work in the classe de math6matiques spe'ciales is so enormously difficult1 that only 2 to 5 per cent of its members can, at the end of one year, meet the standard of requirements of the examinations for which it prepares, why is not the instruction spread over two? Since nearly all the mathematical savants who now shed...
Page 287 - Special methods of instruction — Special subjects of curriculum— Kindergarten and primary school— Rural education — Secondary education— Teachers: Training and professional status— Higher education — School administration — School management — School architecture — School hygiene and sanitation...
Page 46 - PUBLICATION MAY BE PROCURED FROM THE SUPERINTENDENT OF DOCUMENTS GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE WASHINGTON, DC AT 25 CENTS PER COPY CONTENTS.
Page 196 - States of Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming, except under special permit.
Page 10 - In the community will feel and register the pulllng-down power of their backwardness as Inevitably as the thermometer records the temperature of the air. The merchant will have poorer trade, the doctor and lawyer smaller fees, the railroad diminished traffic, the banks smaller deposits, the preacher and teacher smaller salaries, and so on. Every man who through Ignorance, lack of training, or by reason of any other hindering cause, Is producing or earning only half as much as he ought, by his Inefficiency...