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A MONTHLY MAGAZINE

DEVOTED TO

The Science, Art, Philosophy and
Literature of Education

FRANK HERBERT PALMER, Editor

VOLUME XXXI

SEPTEMBER, 1910-JUNE, 1911

BOSTON

THE PALMER COMPANY

120 BOYLSTON STREET

1911

CONTENTS.

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Agriculture, Place of in Higher Education. L. H. Bailey

Algebra, Suggestions on Teaching Elementary. Ernest B. Lytle
American Notes

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249

175

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406, 480, 550, 624, 690

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472

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Art, History of as a College Discipline.

Biology, High School Course in.

Book Notices

63, 136, 206, 267, 349, 415, 490, 562, 634, 701

Business, College Training for. John M. Lathrop
Certification of High School Teachers. David Snedden
Classics, Some Uses of to Modern Student. Preston S. Moulton
Class Room Idyll. (Poem) R. T. House
College and the Rural Districts. Wallace N. Stearns
College Bred Teachers, Training of.
College Entrance Certificate Board,
School. W. H. Holmes
College Preparation; The College View. Alexander Meiklejohn
College Preparation; The High School View. Charles F. Harper
Colleges and Public Schools, Duty of New England to. Thomas A.
Jagger, Jr.

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College Stagecraft. Frank R. Arnold

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College Students, Self Help among. Clayton H. Ranck
College Training for Business. John M. Lathrop

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Commercial High School Curriculum. Raymond G. Laird
Composition, Oral. Emma M. Bolenius
Conversational Method, The.

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Correspondence Schools. Frank Herbert Palmer
Curriculum, A Secondary School. B. F. Harding
Defective Pupils, Problem of.
Editorial

244

335

562

443

529

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Education, Public, Problem of.

55, 126, 202, 259, 341, 406, 480, 550, 624, 690

Henry L. Upton

English Grammar, Waste in. Guy W. Shallies

536

Entrance Requirements Bogy. W. E. Aiken

131

Essentials, The Three. Charlotte A. Powell

32

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French Literary Anniversaries of 1911.

Geography, Where lay the Emphasis in
German Schools, Religious Problem in.
Girls, Vocational Training for. Idabelle McGlauflin
Habit Formation, The Importance of. O. J. Schuster
Harris, William T. Professor T. Treudly
High School Course in Biology.
High School Course in English. President Charles W. Eliot
High School, How Serve Community. Charles F. Harper
High School, Outside Interests and Major Subjects in. Alice S.
Botkin

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Arthur S. Dewing

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523

73

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Negroes, A great National Resource. Frank P. Chisholm

Ode, An. (Poem) William A. McKeever

Oral Composition. Emma M. Bolenius

Periodical Notes

.72, 140, 210, 278, 354, 422, 498, 566, 638, 710

Private-School Boys, Moral Training of. Charles K. Taylor
Psalm of Life in Latin Verse. (Poem) B. F. Harding
Public Education, Problem of. Henry L. Upton

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Devoted to the Science, Art, Philosophy and Literature

VOL. XXXI

of Education

SEPTEMBER, 1910

No. I

Instruction of Exceptional Children in the New York City Public Schools

ANDREW W. EDSON, ASSOCIATE CITY SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS.

N all probability the most striking phase of modern education is the effort to educate and train chil

I dren who are a little out of step with the masses.

The problems to be worked out in the administration of the public school system in every large city are especially perplexing in New York City, owing to the rapidity of growth of the city, the congestion of population in certain quarters, and the many nationalities to be educated.

In considering these problems, certain facts have had to be accepted and certain principles of action adopted. Among them are the following: education is the right of every child— the physically and mentally handicapped, the truant and delinquent, as well as the normal child; the state is under obligations to provide an education for all; special efforts should be directed toward making exceptional children happy, selfrespecting, and self-supporting; the cost of education is a productive expenditure of money rather than a charity; and it is economical as well as humanitarian to protect the helpless from want, the irresponsible from ignorance and vice, the family from an unusual burden, and the state from an increase of the helpless and criminal classes.

. The main reason for establishing classes in the public

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