Proceedings, Bind 9University of Pennsylvania Press, 1922 |
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Side 58
... median age of sixth - grade children all over the country is 12 years , 1 and the norm for the age of 12 years in the Advanced Examination is 80 points . The presumption is that all of the pupils in a sixth grade have approxi- mately ...
... median age of sixth - grade children all over the country is 12 years , 1 and the norm for the age of 12 years in the Advanced Examination is 80 points . The presumption is that all of the pupils in a sixth grade have approxi- mately ...
Side 69
... MEDIANS OF THE MENTAL AGES AND ACHIEVEMENT AGES IN ARITHMETIC AND SILENT READING AND OF THE INTELLIGENCE QUOTIENTS AND ACHIEVEMENT QUOTIENTS OF THE SEVENTH AND EIGHTH GRADE PUPILS OF 22 SCHOOL DISTRICTS OF PENNSYLVANIA IN THE ILLINOIS ...
... MEDIANS OF THE MENTAL AGES AND ACHIEVEMENT AGES IN ARITHMETIC AND SILENT READING AND OF THE INTELLIGENCE QUOTIENTS AND ACHIEVEMENT QUOTIENTS OF THE SEVENTH AND EIGHTH GRADE PUPILS OF 22 SCHOOL DISTRICTS OF PENNSYLVANIA IN THE ILLINOIS ...
Side 85
... median mental age under 14-0 years , while four of the districts have mental ages of 15-0 years or more . The median mental age for the entire group of 1570 children in Pennsylvania in December 1921 is 14-5 which is two months higher ...
... median mental age under 14-0 years , while four of the districts have mental ages of 15-0 years or more . The median mental age for the entire group of 1570 children in Pennsylvania in December 1921 is 14-5 which is two months higher ...
Side 86
... median mental age of 12-8 years , three months less than the October seventh - grade standard 13-1 years . While the combined median mental age of all the districts is relatively lower than that for the eighth grade the extreme ...
... median mental age of 12-8 years , three months less than the October seventh - grade standard 13-1 years . While the combined median mental age of all the districts is relatively lower than that for the eighth grade the extreme ...
Side 87
... median mental ages of 14-0 and 15-6 years . However , these same districts show median achievement ages in arithmetic of 21-5 years and 12-5 years respectively . If the mental ages of these two eighth grades are reliable and if the ...
... median mental ages of 14-0 and 15-6 years . However , these same districts show median achievement ages in arithmetic of 21-5 years and 12-5 years respectively . If the mental ages of these two eighth grades are reliable and if the ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
2d-Class dists achievement age administration arithmetic Arts attendance average basis Blewett Board of Education boys cent child chronological age Committee course of study curriculum DIAGRAM dismissed distribution efficiency eighth grades elementary school English enrollment enter experience extension courses fact geography girls give given guidance Harrisburg home economics home room individual industrial inheritance tax institutions intelligence quotient intelligence tests interest job analysis junior high school Latin lesson mathematics median ment mental ability mental age method needs opportunity organization period Philadelphia photoplay possible practice present principal problems professional progress promotion public school purpose quartile Quotient RADNOR TOWNSHIP reading responsibility rural school activities school districts school system Schoolmen's Week scores selected Social Study standards subjects Table teachers teaching tenure tion township unit University of Pennsylvania vocational
Populære passager
Side 41 - THERE is NO WEALTH BUT LIFE. Life, including all its powers of love, of joy, and of admiration. That country is the richest which nourishes the greatest number of noble and happy human beings; that man is richest who, having perfected the functions of his own life to the utmost, has also the widest helpful influence, both personal, and by means of his possessions, over the lives of others.
Side 109 - All taxes shall be uniform, upon the same class of subjects, within the territorial limits of the authority levying the tax, and shall be levied and collected under general laws...
Side 344 - Vocational guidance should be a continuous process designed to help the individual to choose, to plan his preparation for, to enter upon, and to make progress in an occupation.
Side 111 - The general assembly shall provide for the maintenance and support of a thorough and efficient system of public schools, wherein all the children of this Commonwealth above the age of six years may be educated, and shall appropriate at least one million of dollars each year for that purpose.
Side 135 - A neighborhood is simply a group of families living conveniently near together. The neighborhood can do a great many things, but it is not a community. A true community is a social group that is more or less self-sufficing. It is big enough to have its own centers of interest — its trading center, its social center, its own church, its own schoolhouse, its own grange, its own library, and to possess such other institutions as the people of the community need.
Side 18 - BE NOBLE ! and the nobleness that lies In other men, sleeping, but never dead, Will rise in majesty to meet thine own...
Side 135 - A rural community consists of the people in a local area tributary to the center of their common interests.
Side 138 - No greater mistake could be made than to organize the public school system so as to foster a further development of these conditions. On the contrary, the school system should be so planned as to contribute in the largest possible measure to the breaking down of class distinctions and to stimulating the growth of a larger social consciousness. The most effective means to this end, as far as urban and rural people are concerned, would be the development of high schools at the existing economic and...
Side 132 - The local units for the support of schools should contain, in so far as practicable, enough property taxable for school purposes to raise that portion of the expenses of the school which it is believed should be borne by the local districts without an undue burden upon the owners of property. 3. Some portion of the support of local schools should come from the state government,, the amount being dependent upon certain factors, exact standards for which have not been scientifically determined, but...
Side 110 - Pennsylvania, which constitutional provision provides that 'the general assembly shall not pass any local or special law . . . regulating the affairs of counties, cities, townships, wards, boroughs, or school districts...