Smith, Payson. Education in the forty-eight states. 1939.- no.2. Cocking, W. D. Organization and administration of public education. 1938.- no.3. Frederic, Katherine A. State personnel administration, with special reference to departments of education. 1939.-no.4. Heer, Clarence. Federal aid and the tax problem. 1939.- no.5. Mort, P. R. Principles and methods of distributing federal aid to education. 1939U.S. Government Printing Office, 1939 |
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Pogosti izrazi in povedi
adequate Administration adult education American American Library Association Arkansas attendance average salary Biennial Survey cities curriculum District of Columbia economic educa Education Bulletin educational opportunities elementary and secondary elementary school estimated expenditures facilities Federal funds Government Printing Office grades graduates high school higher education higher institutions Ibid increased institutions of higher instruction junior colleges kindergarten Maryland Massachusetts Mississippi National Education Association Negro pupils Negro schools North Dakota Office of Education percent percentage physical education population private institutions private schools problems Progress Administration Public Education public elementary public school Public Works Administration pupils enrolled reported rural schools school age school enrollment school systems school teachers Secondary Education secondary school social South Carolina Survey of Education Table teachers colleges teaching tion U. S. Government Printing U. S. Office United vocational Washington West Virginia York youth
Priljubljeni odlomki
Stran 143 - For every child who is blind, deaf, crippled, or otherwise physically handicapped, and for the child who is mentally handicapped, such measures as will early discover and diagnose his handicap, provide care and treatment, and so train him that he may become an asset to society rather than a liability.
Stran 133 - Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, and...
Stran 13 - For every rural child, as satisfactory schooling and health services as for the city child, and an extension to rural families of social, recreational, and cultural facilities.
Stran 132 - South, or one-third its intelligence and progress; we shall contribute one-third to the business and industrial prosperity of the South, or we shall prove a veritable...
Stran 13 - For every child an education which, through the discovery and development of his individual abilities, prepares him for life; and through training and vocational guidance prepares him for a living which will yield him the maximum of satisfaction...
Stran 124 - Population Trends and Their Educational Implications," Research Bulletin of the National Education Association, XVI, No. 1 (January 1938), p. 41. CHAPTER XI EDUCATION FOR CHILDREN IN RURAL AREAS . . . if the United States is to maintain the ideal: an equal opportunity through public education for each...
Stran 13 - For every child a community which recognizes and plans for his needs, protects him against physical dangers, moral hazards, and disease; provides him with safe and wholesome places for play and recreation; and makes provision for his cultural and social needs.
Stran 61 - Interior, Office of Education, Bulletin 1932, No. 17; National Survey of Secondary Education, Monograph No.
Stran 14 - For every child, these rights, regardless of race, or color, or situation, wherever he may live under the protection of the American flag.
Stran 64 - ... protection and conservation of life, property, and natural resources, production of goods and services and distribution of the returns of production, recreation, expression of esthetic impulses and education.