قراءة كتاب Cornell Nature-Study Leaflets Being a selection, with revision, from the teachers' leaflets, home nature-study lessons, junior naturalist monthlies and other publications from the College of Agriculture, Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y., 1896-1904
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Cornell Nature-Study Leaflets Being a selection, with revision, from the teachers' leaflets, home nature-study lessons, junior naturalist monthlies and other publications from the College of Agriculture, Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y., 1896-1904
class="tdrt">LXV.
Alice G. McCloskey.
Alice G. McCloskey.
Alice G. McCloskey.
Alice G. McCloskey.
Alice G. McCloskey and James E. Rice.
Anna Botsford Comstock.
Alice G. McCloskey.
Alice G. McCloskey.
Alice G. McCloskey.
Alice G. McCloskey.
John W. Spencer.
John W. Spencer.
John W. Spencer.
John W. Spencer.
C. E. Hunn.
Alice G. McCloskey and I. P. Roberts.
PART I.
TEACHERS' LEAFLETS.
THE SCHOOL HOUSE.
By L. H. BAILEY.

In the rural districts, the school must become a social and intellectual centre. It must stand in close relationship with the life and activities of its community. It must not be an institution apart, exotic to the common-day lives; it must teach the common things and put the pupil into sympathetic touch with his own environment. Then every school house will have a voice, and will say:
LEAFLET I.
WHAT IS NATURE-STUDY?[1]
By L. H. BAILEY.

Nature-study, as a process, is seeing the things that one looks at, and the drawing of proper conclusions from what one sees. Its purpose is to educate the child in terms of his environment, to the end that his life may be fuller and richer. Nature-study is not the study of a science, as of botany, entomology, geology, and the like. That is, it takes the things at hand and endeavors to understand them, without reference primarily to the systematic order or relationships of the objects. It is informal, as are the objects which one sees. It is entirely divorced from mere definitions, or from formal explanations in books.