What the Schools Teach and Might Teach - John Franklin Bobbitt

(Perpustakaan Sri Jauhari) #1
    Fire    Protection
Roads and Road Transportation
Newspapers and Magazines
National Defense
Conservation of Natural Resources
Liquor Problems
Parks and Playgrounds
Housing Conditions
Mining
Health, Sanitation, etc.
Pensions
Unemployment
Child Labor
Women in Industry
Cost of Living
Pure Food Control
Savings Banks
Water Supply of Cities
Prisons
Recreations and Amusements
Co-operative Buying and Selling
Insurance
Hospitals

After drawing up such lists of topics for study, they should be assigned to
grammar grades and high school according to the degree of maturity necessary
for their comprehension. Naturally as much as possible should be covered in the
grammar grades. Such as cannot be covered there should be covered as early as
practicable in the high school, since so large a number of students drop out, and
all need the work. Of course, this would involve a radical revision of the high
school courses in history. It is not here recommended that any such changes be
attempted abruptly. There are too many other conditions that require
readjustment at the same time. It must all be a gradual growth.


Naturally, students must have some familiarity with the general time relations of
history and the general chronological movements of affairs before they can
understand the more or less specialized treatment of individual topics.
Preliminary studies are therefore both necessary and desirable in the
intermediate and grammar grades for the purpose of giving the general

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