Acerca de este libro
Mi biblioteca
Libros en Google Play
IV. STANDARDIZATION OF ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS BY STATE SUB-
SIDY (MINNESOTA).
VI.
V. NEED FOR ELEMENTARY EDUCATION. ILLITERACY
REORGANIZATION OF ELEMENTARY EDUCATION.
PAGE
320
323
326
327
330
334
336
CHAPTER XIII. SECONDARY EDUCATION
I. THE STATUS OF THE PUBLIC HIGH SCHOOL AS A COMMON
SCHOOL .
Board of Education v. Dick (Kansas)
II. HOW FAR THE PUBLIC HIGH SCHOOL IS A JUST CHARGE UPON
THE PUBLIC TREASURY
HILL, FRANK A., Massachusetts State Board of Education, 1898
III. AN EFFICIENT SYSTEM OF SCHOOLS FOR AN AMERICAN COM-
MONWEALTH
Iowa State Board of Education
IV. ARE THE TWO FUNCTIONS AT PRESENT FULFILLED BY THE
HIGH SCHOOL COMPATIBLE ?
Fifth Annual Report, Carnegie Foundation for the Ad-
vancement of Teaching, 1910.
V. THE REORGANIZATION OF EDUCATION
Third Annual Report, Carnegie Foundation for the Ad-
vancement of Teaching, 1908 .
Report of the Committee on Economy of Time of the
National Education Association
351
352
VII. STANDARDS OF ACCREDITING SECONDARY SCHOOLS
VIII.
North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools 355
STANDARDIZATION OF SECONDARY SCHOOLS BY STATE SUBSIDY
(MINNESOTA).
357
CHAPTER XIV. INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION
I. PUBLIC EDUCATION AND INDUSTRIAL TRAINING
1. The Unity of the Public Educational System
DEWEY, JOHN, An Undemocratic Proposal
. 365
2. The Distinction between a System of General Education
and a System of Industrial and Technical Education:
Fifth Annual Report, Carnegie Foundation for the
Advancement of Teaching (1910) .
3. Vocational Education: Report of the Federal Commis-
sion on National Aid to Vocational Education
II. THE STATE SYSTEM OF VOCATIONAL EDUCATION
1. Principles and Policies that Should Underlie State Legis-
lation for a State System of Vocational Education:
National Society for the Promotion of Industrial
Education (1913)
2. Wisconsin Law: Vocational Schools
CHAPTER XV. SUPPLEMENTAL EDUCATION
I. THE SCHOOLHOUSE AS A SOCIAL CENTER
369
370
375
WILSON, WOODROW, The Social Center; A Means of Com-
mon Understanding.
II.
III.
THE WISCONSIN FREE LIBRARY COMMISSION
FARMERS' INSTITUTES
386
394
HAMILTON, JOHN, Farmers' Institutes and Agricultural
Extension Work in the United States
398
IV. UNIVERSITY EXTENSION
VAN HISE, CHARLES R., in Biennial Report of the Regents
of the University of Wisconsin, 1906-1908
402
V. THE STATE BOARD OF HEALTH
What the State Board of Health of Idaho Does .
405
CHAPTER XVI. HIGHER AND PROFESSIONAL
EDUCATION
I. TYPES OF STATE SYSTEMS OF HIGHER EDUCATION
Sixth Annual Report, Carnegie Foundation for the Ad-
vancement of Teaching (1911)
407
NEW YORK SCHOLARSHIP LAW (1913)
413
III. STATE AID WITHOUT STATE CONTROL
Seventh Annual Report, Carnegie Foundation for the Ad-
vancement of Teaching (1912)
V. IOWA STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION.
DUPLICATIONS OF WORK AMONG STATE INSTITUTIONS
Second Annual Report, Iowa State Board of Education
VII. PROFESSIONAL EDUCATION
VIII. STATE SUPERVISION OF Degree-ConferrING INSTITUTIONS
ROGERS, HENRY WADE
IX. THE UNIVERSITY AND THE STATE
VAN HISE, CHARLES R.
429
431
435
DIVISION IV
FINANCING THE SCHOOL SYSTEM
CHAPTER XVII. FUNDS AND TAXATION
I. HISTORY OF THE MASSACHUSETTS SCHOOL FUND
Sixty-fourth Annual Report, Massachusetts State Board of
Education, 1899-1900
II. THE WISCONSIN COMMON SCHOOL FUND
WELLS, OLIVER E.
III. THE MINNESOTA SCHOOL FUND
SCHMAHL, J. A., Conservation in Minnesota by Early
Pioneers
IV. THEORY ON WHICH TAXATION FOR PUBLIC EDUCATION IS BASED
Report of the Virginia Educational Commission, 1912
V. STATE REQUIREMENTS; INEQUALITIES OF SCHOOL BURDENS ;
STATE AID
HILL, FRANK A., Sixty-second Annual Report, Massachu-
setts State Board of Education, 1897-1898
443
447
VI. INEQUALITIES IN TAXING POWER FOR SCHOOLS IN ILLINOIS
MANCHESTER, O. L., Twenty-eighth Biennial Report, Super-
intendent of Public Instruction of Illinois, 1908-1910 460
CHAPTER XVIII. APPORTIONMENT AND SUBSIDIES
I. MICHIGAN: DISTRIBUTION OF STATE SCHOOL MONEY
Report, Superintendent of Public Instruction, 1909-1910
471
II. THE DISTRIBUTION OF SCHOOL REVENUES: OHIO
Report of the Ohio School Revenue Commission, 1907 .
III. STATE SUPPORT: EDUCATIONAL STANDARDS: APPORTIONMENT OF
FUNDS
Study of Education in Vermont, Carnegie Foundation for
Advancement of Teaching (1914)
IV. EXAMPLES OF GOOD APPORTIONMENT LAWS
1. The Missouri Apportionment Law
2. The California Apportionment Law .
3. The New Jersey Subsidy-Apportionment Law
476
481
484
485
488
491
II. MISCELLANEOUS EDITORIALS
1. School Books and Home Industry: Editorial, Houston
(Texas) Post, 1907
2. About Home-Printed Text-books: Editorial, Houston
558
560
561
3. Foolish Text-book Legislation: Editorial, Dial, 1909
III. REPORT OF THE GEORGIA SCHOOL BOOK INVESTIGATING COM-
MITTEE
563
DIVISION VI
THE STATE AND THE TEACHER
CHAPTER XXII. THE TRAINING OF TEACHERS
I. TRANSFORMING NORMAL SCHOOLS INTO COLLEGES
vancement of Teaching (1912) .
573
II. THE PROBLEM OF THE TRAINING OF TEACHERS for the PUBLIC
SCHOOLS OF IOWA: DUPLICATION OF WORK BETWEEN
THE IOWA STATE TEACHERS' COLLEGE AND THE
STATE UNIVERSITY
1. Second Biennial Report, Iowa State Board of Education 576
2. Letter from Dean Russell on Duplication
III. TRAINING CLASSES IN HIGH SCHOOLS
1. Normal and Industrial Training in High Schools: Eight-
eenth Biennial Report, Superintendent of Public In-
struction, Kansas, 1911-1912
2. High School Training Classes in South Carolina: TATE, W. K., in Forty-third Annual Report, State Super- intendent of Education for South Carolina, 1911
CHAPTER XXIII. THE CERTIFICATION OF
TEACHERS
I. THE LICENSING OF TEACHERS IN INDIANA
RAWLES, W. A., The Centralization of Administration in
Indiana
II. THE CERTIFICATION OF TEACHERS IN THE UNITED STATES
CUBBERLEY, E. P., Fifth Year Book of the National Society
for the Scientific Study of Education (1906)
578
582