Basis?
24 |
II. |
Social Change |
25 |
III. |
Keeping Up With the Times |
26 |
IV. |
Education in the Early Home |
27 |
V. |
City Life and the New Basis for Education |
28 |
Chapter II. Teaching Boys and Girls |
32 |
I. |
The New School Machinery |
32 |
II. |
Rousseau Versus a Class of Forty |
33 |
III. |
The Fallacious “Average" |
34 |
IV. |
The Five Ages of Childhood |
35 |
V. |
Age Distribution in One Grade |
36 |
VI. |
Shall Child or Subject Matter Come First? |
39 |
VII. |
The Vicious Practices of One “Good" School |
40 |
VIII. |
Boys and Girls—The One Object of Educational Activity |
42 |
Chapter III. Fitting Schools to Children |
44 |
I. |
Child Growth—A Primary Factor in Child Life |
44 |
II. |
Children Need Health First |
45 |
III. |
Play as a Means to Growth |
46 |
IV. |
Some Things Which a Child Must Learn |
48 |
V. |
What Schools Must Provide to Meet Child Needs |
51 |
VI. |
The Educational Work of the Small Town |
52 |
VII. |
The Educational Problems of an Industrial Community |
55 |
VIII. |
Beginning With Child Needs |
56 |
Chapter IV. Progressive Notes in Elementary Education |
58 |
I. |
The Kindergarten |
58 |
II. |
Translating the Three R’s |
59 |
III. |
Playing at Mathematics |
60 |
IV. |
A Model English Lesson |
61 |
V. |
An Original Fairy Story |
65 |
VI. |
The Crow and the Scarecrow |
67 |
VII. |
School and Home |
68 |