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Chapman, Katherine Elise, Around Paris with the Innocents

The New Voyage of the Innocents

Clark, Lotta A., Group-Work in the High School

Clements, Katherine, Applied Design (Francis W. Parker School)....
Compayré, J. Gabriel, Public Instruction in France in 1906

DeBey, Cornelia D. (Chairman), Plan for Official Advisory Organiza-

tion of the Teaching Force of Chicago

......

Dewey, Grace K., Metal-Work (Francis W. Parker School)
Diment, Mabel M., A Series of Lessons on Water

PAGE

269

591

335

76

369

305

78

474

Dormeyer, Recca, Education of Women in Germany

49

Eberhardt, John C., The Examination of the Eyes of School Children
Gore, W. C., Review of G. H. Betts's The Mind and Its Education...
Gray, Mary Richards, A Visit to a Chinese Kindergarten..
Gulliver, F. P., Training in Geography

263

239

214

84

Hall, Jennie, A Series of Primary Reading-Lessons, I, II
Hamilton, Cora, The Relation of the Home to the School
Harvey, L. D., Manual Training in the Grades

1, 150

131

390

Hegner, Robert W., Nature-Studies with Birds for the Elementary
School

Higgins, Annas, Review of Jennie Hall's Men of Old Greece

Hotson, J. W., The Macdonald Consolidated School at Guelph, Ontario..
Hyre, Mrs. A. E., Woman's Part in Public-School Education
Jackman, Wilbur S., Editorial Notes

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Review of C. W. Bunkett's Agriculture for Beginners
Review of W. M. Giffin's School Days of the Fifties
Joor, Harriet, Clay-Modeling in the University Elementary School
Kenyon, Walter J., A Revision of the Rudiments as concerning Nature-
Study

III

48

548

316

Kern, O. J., What Form of Industrial Training Is Most Practical and

Best Suited to the Country Child

323

Kern, M. R., Review of F. H. Ripley's Melodic Music Series

239

Keyes, Charles H., Forms of Industrial Education Best Adapted to City
Children

247

Kroh, Carl J., Physical Training a Department of Education

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Mitchell, Clara Isabel, Textile Arts as Social Occupations

141

Monroe, Will S., An International Summer School in France

447

Mott, Sarah M., Music-Stories from the First Grade, Ethical Culture
School

335

Nabours, Robert K., The Co-operation of the Park Commission and the
Elementary-School Pupils in Placing Bird-Houses in the Park

Trees

551

Volunteer Field and Camera Groups in the School of Education...
Owen, Grace, A Study of the Original Kindergartens...

226

202

Patton, Beatrice Chandler, An Indian Village in the First Grade

Payne, Bertha, Editorial Notes

Pierce, Caroline May, Mathematics and Its Relation to the Study of

PAGE

345

491, 554

Home-Economics in the University Elementary School

220

Putnam, Helen, Clay-Modeling (Francis W. Parker School)
Purcell, Helen Elizabeth, Children's Dramatic Interest and How This
May Be Utilized in Education......

82

510

Rankin, Jean Sherwood, Weaknesses in the Teaching of English in
Our Common Schools

254

Rich, Jessie P., Domestic Science in Elementary Department of the
Ethical Culture School

146

Russell, V. M., Seventh-Grade Manual Training

408

Scherz, Anna T., German Songs and Rhymes for Children

420

Shaw, C. B., Some Experiments in Group-Work

329

Snow, Jennie H., Mathematics and Its Relation to the Study of Home-

Economics in the University Elementary School..

Thorne-Thomsen, Georg, Norway: A Reading-Lesson, I, II

Tufts, James H., The Significance of Mr. Jackman's Work

Walker, P. A., Self-Government in the High School

Welch, John S., Social Science

Wood, Casey A., The Sanitary Regulations of the Schoolroom with

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220

113, 190

443

451

182

62

275

INDEX TO BOOK REVIEWS

Agriculture for Beginners, Charles William Bunkett, Wilbur S. Jackman
Educational Manual Training, William C. A. Hammel, A. B.....
Elementary Education-Its Problems and Processes, John Alexander

Hull Keith, H. E. P.

111

431

Melodic Music Series, Frederick H. Ripley, M. R. Kern
Men of Old Greece, Jennie Hall, Annas Higgins.........

303

239

School Days of the Fifties: A True Story with Some Untrue Names of
Persons and Places, William M. Giffin, Wilbur S. Jackman
The Mind and Its Education, George Herbert Betts, W. C. Gore
The School and Its Life, Charles B. Gilbert, J. Stanley Brown

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THE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL TEACHER

September, 1906

A SERIES OF PRIMARY READING-LESSONS. I

JENNIE HALL

Francis W. Parker School

Weaving, as an industry for primary children, has widely proven itself of value, and interesting work in textiles is being done in many schools. The time has come, moreover, when teachers demand of manual work, not only that it shall keep the children busy, but that it shall pay for this expenditure of time and energy in physical development, intellectual training, and moral habits. We insist that our industry shall be educational, not manufactural. We recognize, too, that a mind under the stimulus of a new and interesting manual activity is eager and plastic toward associated intellectual influences. Therefore we try to link this little school activity with the great world-industries. We try to show our child-weaver his place in a long, world-wide, and time-diversified procession of textile workers. We try to translate his loom, his weaving, into terms of history, art, and poetry. In these efforts we bring materials into the schoolroom-an Indian blanket, an oriental rug, a Cashmere shawl, spinning-wheels, spindles, pictures. We make excursions to textile museums and factories. We tell stories of shepherdsAbraham, David, Endymion, James Hogg. We study conditions. of shepherd life. We read poems of shepherds and weavers. We make reading-lessons to convey information and story. The children express their newly gained knowledge and emotions by writing, painting, modeling, and acting.

The following reading-lessons were made and printed at the

Francis W. Parker School for the use of the second grade in connection with weaving. The methods of using them have been various, since the children differ widely in their reading ability. Sometimes the story has been read aloud by one child. Frequently the class has read silently, using the information acquired in writing, drawing, modeling, and discussion. Sometimes the story has been simplified and written upon the board. Often one group has prepared a lesson and has read it orally to the other children. At times various children have read aloud different parts of a lesson, and thus together have made the whole story. The pupil's interest in the reading is a strong plea for correlated reading-matter, and their widening images and interests in connection with their handwork make a plea for developing the intellectual matter associated with a manual activity.

The collection is far from complete. Descriptions of other skilful weavers are needed-Swedish, Japanese, East Indian. There should be more poems-upon spinning and weaving. Cotton- and linen-working are untouched. Nothing has been done with embroidery and lace-making. But the writer hopes that the present material may be of use to the readers of the Elementary School Teacher, and that many people will help to complete the collection.

SECOND-GRADE READING LESSONS

A SHEPHERD's life

It must be pleasant to be a shepherd in Greece.
Early in the morning it is cool.

The sky is golden around the sun.

The mountains are rosy.

The sheep move slowly over the hill.

Their bells tinkle sweetly.

The shepherd lies on a rock.

He plays his pipe.

The sound floats far away.

His dog lies beside him.

But at noon it is very hot.

The shepherd drives his sheep slowly to a well.

He draws water, and the sheep drink.

Then he drives them to a shelter.

It is a little flat roof of brush.

It stands on short poles.

It makes a little shade.

Here the sheep lie close together and sleep.

There is another smaller roof for the shepherd.
Here he and his dog lie down and sleep.

After a few hours it grows cool.

The shepherd and the sheep wake.

The sheep go out again to eat.
The shepherd follows slowly.

(Used by the teacher; parts of poems committed by the children)

THE SHEPHERD

How sweet is the shepherd's sweet lot;
From the morn to the evening he strays;

He shall follow his sheep all the day,

And his tongue shall be filled with praise.

For he hears the lamb's innocent call,
And he hears the ewe's tender reply;

He is watchful while they are in peace,

For they know when their shepherd is nigh.
-WILLIAM BLAKE.

THE PASSIONATE SHEPHERD TO HIS LOVE

Come live with me and be my love.

And we will all the pleasures prove

That hills and valleys, dale and field,
And all the craggy mountains yield.

There will we sit upon the rocks

And see the shepherds feed their flocks,
By shallow rivers, to whose falls

Melodious birds sing madrigals.

There will I make thee beds of roses

And a thousand fragrant posies,

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