Cp37/.9 
 C52r 
 
 Cherry 
 
 A Report on 
 Special Education 
 
Sty* Sfhrarn 
 
 of % 
 
 (ttnilwttmi 0f Hortly QIarnltmana 
 
 C5R 
 
 iJ 
 
A Report 
 
 ON 
 
 Special Education 
 
 Issued by the 
 
 State Superintendent op Public Instruction 
 Raleigh, North Carolina 
 
Publication No. 233 
 
 A Report on Special Education 
 
 Prepared By 
 
 ANNIE M. CHERRY, 
 
 Director of Experimental Programs 
 in Elementary Education. 
 
 Issued by the 
 
 State Superintendent of Public Instruction 
 
 Raleigh, North Carolina 
 
 1941 
 
CONTENTS 
 
 Page 
 
 Foreword _ _ ___ 5 
 
 Chapter I: Introduction 5 
 
 The Faith That Is Within Us __._._ 5 
 
 Public Education a State Function 8 
 
 Clarification of Terms... ■_ _ 10 
 
 Statement of Purposes 11 
 
 Chapter II: The Present Situation 13 
 
 In the Public Elementary Schools 14 
 
 The Nature and Extent of the Problem 14 
 
 The Educational Opportunities Available for Meeting Growth 
 
 Needs of Exceptional Children 16 
 
 Type Programs in Progress 18 
 
 A Program for All Exceptional Children in a City 
 
 Administrative Unit 18 
 
 A Sight-Saving Class _... 25 
 
 Occupational Groups in a County-City Administra- 
 tive Unit __ 31 
 
 A Program of Democratic Living for All Children 35 
 
 A County-wide Professional Study Program Intro- 
 ducing Guidance 44 
 
 Present Significant School Practices Affecting Child De- 
 velopment 48 
 
 Contributing Services of Various Allied Groups 52 
 
 In the Residential Schools — ■. 59 
 
 Descriptions of Programs in Progress 60 
 
 The State School for the Blind and the Deaf 60 
 
 The North Carolina School for the Deaf- _ 62 
 
 The Stonewall Jackson Manual Training and Industrial 
 
 School 64 
 
 The Eastern Carolina Training School 66 
 
 The State Home and Industrial School for Girls 67 
 
 The North Carolina Orthopedic Hospital School 70 
 
 The Caswell Training School _ 71 
 
 Cases of Other Handicapped Children 74 
 
 General Comments 74 
 
 Educational Implications 77 
 
 Chapter III: The New Program 82 
 
 Outline of Proposed Program.. 86 
 
 The Task Before Us... 98 
 
FOREWORD 
 
 Universal education is one of the tenets of American Democracy. But 
 this attempt at universal education, the education of all, has practical 
 limitations, one of which is the encouragement of education en masse with 
 too little regard for the individual child. Even in this program of education 
 for all it is doubtful if the present general practice of education en masse 
 is an absolute practical necessity. May it not be due in part to one's 
 philosophy of education or to an unawareness of the real problem? 
 
 The children who deviate from the normal are the ones who at present 
 fail most completely in having their educational needs met. It has been 
 said that the most retarded child in the public schools is the child with 
 a superior intellect. This bulletin on Special Education is concerned with 
 the deviates or the exceptional children. They fall into three major divi- 
 sions: the physically handicapped, the mentally different, and the socially 
 or emotionally maladjusted. No statistics are needed to convince one of the 
 seriousness or bigness of the problem. In every present school situation 
 may be found children who belong in one or more of these groups. 
 
 This bulletin is the work of Miss Annie M. Cherry. Most of the data 
 deal with the situation in 1939-40. The programs described under the head- 
 ing "Type Programs in Progress" are for that year. No doubt in most 
 instances these programs have been improved, and undoubtedly there are 
 other programs throughout the State that are just as promising, if not 
 more so. Those presented here are indicative of what may be done. 
 
 It is hoped that this publication on Special Education may add to the 
 awareness of the problem, and that it may be suggestive of some things 
 which may be done. A very wholesome and stimulating philosophy charac- 
 terizes and permeates the entire bulletin. 
 
 State Superintendent of Public Instruction. 
 October 21, 1941. 
 
 v9 
 
 0- 
 
Digitized by the Internet Archive 
 
 in 2011 with funding from 
 
 Ensuring Democracy through Digital Access (NC-LSTA) 
 
 http://www.archive.org/details/reportonspeciale1940cher 
 
Chapter I: Introduction 
 
 The Faith That Is Within Us 
 
 Upon the principle of the equal right of every individual to 
 "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness" this government of 
 ours was founded. For more than a century and a half, it has 
 been the American dream to establish this capstone to human 
 happiness and to make it secure for all people. This conception 
 of the right of the individual to equality of opportunity is unique 
 and fundamental to our whole scheme of national life. In order 
 to preserve this principle inviolate, it becomes the primary func- 
 tion of education in this great democracy which we call America 
 to help guide each individual in his training for such efficiency — 
 civic, economic, moral, political — involving a well-rounded social, 
 emotional, physical, mental, and spiritual development as his 
 capacity makes possible. The supreme goal toward which all 
 efforts should be directed is to enable every child, regardless of 
 his gifts or limitations, to develop increasingly all of his potential 
 powers to the highest level of which he is capable and to help him 
 live happily and successfully as a worthy contributing member 
 of the social group. This then defines our duty. 
 
 Although we like to believe in the principle long ago enunciated, 
 "that all men are created equal", frankness requires that we ad- 
 mit this is not in all respects true. When it is applied to the 
 children of school age alone, this fallacy is pronounced. Records 
 show that a large number of our school children are handicapped 
 economically, physically, socially, culturally, mentally, and emo- 
 tionally. The background of many often fastens upon them 
 either an inferiority or a superiority complex which is frequently 
 difficult to overcome. There are some who feel that they have no 
 talent and that success for them is impossible; while others 
 assume an exalted opinion of their ability and their achievements 
 without valid reasons. In many instances, even the versatile 
 child with many talents and aptitudes is badly in need of in- 
 telligent guidance. There are boys and girls who are sick, 
 hungry, cold, homeless, and friendless; there are others who are 
 mistreated, forced to do manual labor in excess of their physical 
 strength and ability, robbed of childhood, turned perhaps into 
 delinquents because of unfortunate circumstances — apparently 
 forgotten and neglected. Suffice it to say, there are certain 
 children in every school, both elementary and high school, whose 
 
6 A Report on Special Education 
 
 normal growth along the definite lines of physical, social, emo- 
 tional, and mental development has not been well-rounded for 
 various reasons and so has not kept pace with their level of 
 maturity. 
 
 Similarly, "equality of educational opportunity" does not mean 
 that all children must be treated the same way or given the same 
 uniform or stereotyped curriculum to master. Recently it has 
 been interpreted by the N. E. A. Committee on the Economic 
 Status of the Rural Teacher "as a fair chance to make the most 
 of life" and considered as "one of the expected privileges of those 
 who live in a democracy". Since research and careful study, as 
 well as improved technics of measurement, have found all chil- 
 dren to be so different from what they were once supposed to 
 be — so different that machine-like methods of class instruction 
 will not prove satisfactory in helping their personalities unfold 
 normally and naturally at their own rate and commensurate with 
 their ability — it is evident that their education must be under- 
 taken in a different way. 
 
 An effective program of education, therefore, must not only 
 recognize the many individual differences of each child, but must 
 also make ample provision for meeting adequately the distinct 
 needs and interests of each individual child in the group in 
 keeping with his capacities and abilities. In fact, the true test 
 of the adequacy and the efficiency of such a program must mean 
 the excellence of the training provided for each individual child 
 with reference to what he can do best from every standpoint of 
 his growth — physical, mental, social, and emotional. In terms of 
 this point of direction, one would assume that all methods, 
 means, measurements, and other aspects of the learning process 
 should be selected and interpreted. 
 
 In order to help accomplish this task, the thoughtful teacher 
 must necessarily conceive of education in terms of desirable child 
 growth in all of its aspects rather than in terms of subject- 
 matter accomplishment, and must measure her success in terms 
 of her ability to project a program that will contribute vitally to 
 the development of each individual child in the group. She must 
 be concerned, and rightly so, with much more than routine 
 teaching of textbook subject-matter— as was true a generation 
 ago, and still is in many school systems. She must also realize 
 the importance of helping each individual child achieve those 
 vital things which now seem most promising for the well- 
 balanced, harmonized development of his total personality, to the 
 end that he may make the most complete participation possible 
 
Introduction 7 
 
 in the civilization of which he is a part. Likewise, she must ex- 
 press an unlimited belief in the capacity of every individual to 
 grow, to achieve, and to help make desirable changes in himself — 
 a belief that every human being has potentialities that can be 
 used to his own advantage and that of society. This confidence 
 is fundamental, for it breathes life, spirit, and warmth into the 
 whole program of guidance and adjustment. All members of the 
 teaching and administrative staff need to develop both a similar 
 faith in individual pupil power to make progress along some 
 definite lines and a willingness to give them an opportunity to do 
 so. 
 
 Such a conception of education will also entail great modifi- 
 cations in curricula, as well as in activities, practices and tech- 
 niques, materials of instruction, means and methods of guidance, 
 pupil promotion, and all pertinent administrative changes in- 
 volved. This may mean that some of the old subject matter of 
 education will be adjudged of little or no intrinsic value to the 
 best development of the children in question. If so, it should be 
 omitted so that room may be made both for the gradual un- 
 folding of the potentialities of each individual child and for 
 showing him something of the problems he will have to face as 
 a citizen of a changing world. In this event, we must be willing 
 to view the situation critically and then to direct our whole 
 energies toward making the necessary desirable adjustments 
 needed to promote his program of integrated living and learning 
 on the highest plane. This will bring educators face to face with 
 many crucial questions that will demand intellectual security and 
 promptness in the answering if we are to be safeguarded from the 
 evils of wasteful competition and from the prejudices, fears, and 
 frustrations that are part and parcel of our present insecure and 
 chaotic civilization. 
 
 For the most part, educators and statesmen alike are prone to 
 consider "equality of opportunity" for America's children mainly 
 in terms of administration. It would be futile at this point to 
 minimize the importance of equalizing on a sound basis such 
 highly desirable conditioning factors as those relating to the 
 administrative aspects of the work, for example — proper housing, 
 transportation facilities, and so forth. However, in the last 
 analysis, the chief focus should be riveted upon the appropriate 
 program of fine educational experiences that is actually provided 
 for the specific growth and development of each individual child 
 concerned. This should be recognized as the care of the entire 
 
8 A Report on Special Education 
 
 problem, and all other matters in this connection should be 
 viewed as contributory means toward its proper solution. 
 
 Thus it would follow that, in varying degrees, there would be 
 in operation a dynamic program of education in every school that 
 would help each individual child to experience fullest growth 
 possible in terms of his abilities and his present and emerging 
 social needs — looking toward the happiest adjustment he can 
 make in life and the most constructive contribution he can make 
 to society. This then would represent the true democratic func- 
 tioning of our schools for the good of all. 
 
 Public Education A State Function 
 
 Public education as expressed in the Constitution of North 
 Carolina is a State function. In 1933 by legislative enactment, 
 the total responsibility for operating the public school system in 
 North Carolina for an eight months' annual term became the sole 
 obligation of the State. Since the State has accepted this im- 
 portant task of financing all of the public schools, representing 
 approximately 900,000 children, it is only logical to assume that 
 the State is likewise obligated to provide an adequate and an 
 appropriate program of education that offers reasonably equi- 
 table, but not necessarily identical, educational opportunities to 
 each child, both white and Negro, within her borders. In order 
 to be true to her trust, this responsibility must also include 
 taking into account the proper care and training of every excep- 
 tional child and making ample provision for those facilities which 
 his special condition demands. While practically all children 
 have certain educational needs in common, it must be remembered 
 that many pupils have special needs which require individual 
 attention. 
 
 As a natural outgrowth of this change, many thinking people 
 — those directly and those indirectly concerned with the solution 
 of this problem — are asking educational authorities these search- 
 ing questions : "How well are the needs of children — all children 
 — being met in North Carolina today? What provisions have 
 been made for meeting the specific needs of the handicapped 
 children, the problem cases, and the otherwise unsuccessful 
 children found in our schools? If such conditions exist, as are 
 reported from time to time, what is being done to remedy them ?" 
 
 In answer to these pertinent inquiries, the record shows that 
 this important part of the work was not overlooked when the 
 present educational program for the State was being planned. 
 
Introduction 9 
 
 Among other suggestions made to the Governor and to the 
 General Assembly of 1937 by the State Superintendent of Public 
 Instruction relative to the improvement of the public schools at 
 that time, he expressed the belief that "the State should recognize 
 the responsibility for providing better opportunities for excep- 
 tional children, both the bright and the retarded." Later that 
 same year further evidence of this convicition was given, when 
 he said, 'Too long have we neglected the unsuccessful school child, 
 and in too few instances has provision been made for the suc- 
 cessful advancement of each and every individual child enrolled 
 in our schools." 
 
 A similar recommendation was presented in the Biennial 
 Report of the State Superintendent for 1936-1938, as follows : 
 
 As stated in my report to the General Assembly of 
 1937, something should be done to give the exceptional 
 school child, both the fast moving type and the one that 
 is normally slow, a better opportunity to prepare him- 
 self for society. Under our present graded system, 
 which is inevitable where large numbers are given in- 
 struction, the curriculum is organized for the average 
 child. I believe we should not only instruct these aver- 
 age children, but that we should also provide instruction 
 appropriate for these children having exceptional mental 
 abilities. 
 
 As a logical follow-up in this connection, the General Assembly 
 of 1937 appointed a Commission to study this whole question 
 and "to determine ways and means of providing more suitable 
 and adequate instruction in the public schools for exceptional 
 children." For seemingly uncontrollable circumstances, it was 
 not possible for the committee to function. Under the authority 
 of legislative enactment in 1939, the work of the Commission was 
 continued for another period for the purpose of further studying 
 the situation before making a report of their findings and recom- 
 mendations. However, no funds were provided to finance any of 
 the activities connected with the project. In light of this fact, 
 it is obvious, therefore, that the potential efforts of this group 
 have been cramped and curtailed from the outset and that the 
 results to be expected likewise may be limited to the point of 
 diminishing returns to the individuals to be served. 
 
 Moreover, the record further points out that over a period of 
 years the people of North Carolina have given tangible expression 
 to their interest in the welfare of exceptional children by making 
 special provision for the more unfortunate groups. For the most 
 part, the needs of these individuals are being served by the 
 
10 A Report on Special Education 
 
 residential schools that were established officially through legis- 
 lative action, namely : The State School for the Blind and Deaf, 
 The North Carolina School for the Deaf, The Stonewall Jackson 
 Manual Training and Industrial School, The Eastern Carolina 
 Training School, The State Home and Industrial School for Girls, 
 The Orthopedic Hospital School, and The Caswell Training 
 School. 
 
 Clarification of Terms 
 
 Since there is often a misconception among educators, as well 
 as the public generally regarding the true meaning of the term 
 "exceptional children", it seems wise to clarify our thinking 
 along this line at the outset and to establish a common basis of 
 understanding upon which to move forward together. "What 
 children constitute this group?" is a question asked frequently. 
 By many they are considered only those children with very special 
 talents and abilities along either general or specific lines ; by some 
 they are variously termed the below-average, the dull-normal, 
 the slow-learning, the over-age, the unsuccessfuls — in other 
 words, the mentally handicapped; while by others they are re- 
 ferred to as the problem children, the trouble makers. 
 
 However, there are numerous educational groups throughout 
 the country who are in consonance with the all-inclusive classi- 
 fication adopted by the White House Conference and accepted by 
 the Senior Specialist in the Education of Exceptional Children, 
 U. S. Office of Education; namely, the physically handicapped, 
 the mentally different, and the socially maladjusted. These 
 three main divisions include eight distinct major groups of 
 "exceptional children", as follows: 
 
 The Physically Handicapped 
 
 1. The crippled 
 
 2. The deaf and hard-of -hearing 
 
 3. The blind and the partially seeing 
 
 4. The speech defective 
 
 5. Children of lowered vitality or delicate children, in- 
 cluding cardiac cases 
 
 The Mentally Different 
 
 6. The mentally retarded 
 
 7. The mentally gifted 
 
 The Socially or Emotionally Maladjusted 
 
 8. Children presenting serious behavior problems 
 The last interpretation presented has been accepted for our 
 
 consideration in the discussion that follows. In this connection, 
 
Introduction 11 
 
 it is to be understood that "special education" and "education of 
 exceptional children" are used interchangeably to refer to the 
 special educational facilities and opportunities provided, both in 
 our public schools and in our residential schools, for those chil- 
 dren who have exceptional problems and, therefore, need special 
 help in order to develop fully their capacities or to overcome 
 their limitations. It must also be remembered that these terms 
 include those children who are a part of the regular class group 
 as well as the ones working in separate classes or individually. 
 
 Statement of Purposes 
 
 In order to plan wisely and well a comprehensive, long-view 
 program of special education that will bring about improved 
 educational opportunities on a State-wide basis for all exceptional 
 children enrolled in the public elementary schools and in the 
 residential schools of North Carolina, it is necessary (1) to 
 determine the nature and extent of the problem itself, and (2) 
 to view critically the nature and scope of the work that is being 
 projected at the present time in an effort to meet this need. It 
 is expedient not only to find out what is current educational 
 practice in North Carolina today, but also to what extent it is in 
 consonance with our expressed fundamental beliefs regarding 
 democratic living and learning. 
 
 Since definite and detailed statistical and descriptive records 
 concerning the present status of special education in the various 
 schools of the State are not available from the annual reports 
 submitted by city and county superintendents at the close of each 
 fiscal year, or from other sources, it is impossible to obtain a true 
 and accurate picture without making a special study of the total 
 situation. However, as a beginning point in this direction, an 
 effort has been made by the writer of this report to assemble as 
 much pertinent information along this line as was possible in a 
 brief period of time, and to make the findings available as a 
 basis for further study of this problem in its relation to the new 
 program. 
 
 In an initial attempt to discover where we are in our present 
 stage of growth and development, in terms of educational think- 
 ing and practice regarding special education, only a cursory glance 
 at the situation from a cross section view could be made. There- 
 fore, much of the material herewith- presented is of necessity 
 general in nature and limited in breadth of scope. Some of the 
 information was secured firsthand through personal visits to 
 eighty-three individual classrooms during the spring term, and 
 
12 A Report on Special Education 
 
 through private interviews with teachers, principals, and 
 directors of the programs in the local situation and with similar 
 groups during the Summer School Sessions. Other material was 
 gathered from official records and reports on file in the various 
 offices, State and local, and from questionnaires filled out by 
 teachers attending the various summer schools in the State. 
 Although great care has been exercised in the assembling of 
 these facts, there is no assurance that inaccuracies have not 
 occurred. 
 
 Major activities in this connection have been concerned with 
 finding out, as far as possible: 
 
 1. The present educational opportunities available for meeting 
 the specific needs and interests of the physically handi- 
 capped, the mentally different, and the socially maladjusted 
 in the public elementary schools and in the residential 
 schools of the State. 
 
 2. Present practices in relation to certain selected factors 
 basic to an adequate program. 
 
Chapter II: The Present Situation 
 
 Since the findings of the famous White House Conference on 
 Child Health and Protection held in 1930 were made available to 
 the American public, many who are responsibly concerned with 
 and interested in the right care and development of boys and 
 girls have become conscious of how inadequately this country is 
 providing proper educational opportunities for our exceptional 
 children. In addition to the three-quarters of a million children 
 exhibiting behavior problems at that time, the report also pointed 
 out that there were one-half million mentally retarded children 
 and equally as many gifted or superior children. To this list 
 were added the thousands of handicapped children of one type or 
 another. The extent of the problem itself staggered our best 
 thinking. 
 
 Today there are approximately 22,000,000 children ranging in 
 age from 5 to 14 enrolled in the elementary schools of the Nation, 
 public and private. According to the study made in 1938 by the 
 Advisory Committee on Education, appointed by the President of 
 the United States, the following startling facts indicate that our 
 problem has not yet been solved: 
 
 1. There are 800,000 children between the ages of 7 and 13 
 years who are not going to school in the United States. 
 They are not going to school because schools are not avail- 
 able for them to attend, or are so located that attendance is 
 practically impossible .... 
 
 2. One and a half million handicapped children are not re- 
 ceiving the right kind of education which is indicated as 
 desirable for their particular needs. 
 
 In reference to the magnitude of the problem facing educators, 
 Dr. Elise H. Martens, Senior Specialist in Education of Excep- 
 tional Children, United States Office of Education, truly sounded 
 the nation's "clarion call to arms" in behalf of this host >of chil- 
 dren needing special consideration when she said, in part : 
 
 The great summation of all these figures presents a 
 challenge calling for united and persistent effort in or- 
 ganizing an educational program which will meet the 
 varying needs of this army of children who will one day 
 become an army of adults and a very real part of the 
 vast citizenry of our democracy. Shall they be a 
 contributing part of our social life, or shall they become 
 liabilities that will drain the resources of society? The 
 answer which we make to that question will be ex- 
 pressed in the provisions which we are willing to make 
 for them while they are still children; in the sincerity 
 
14 A Report on Special Education 
 
 with which we shall undertake to capitalize their 
 powers and minimize their handicaps; in the effective- 
 ness with which we plan to educate them in those things 
 which they can do and prevent the helplessness that 
 results from lack of training; finally in the skill with 
 which we diagnose their difficulties and avert the un- 
 social attitudes that result from maladjustment. The 
 exceptional child is most certainly an economic factor. 
 Shall we spend our money to educate him aright to 
 social efficiency, or shall we spend it for almshouses, 
 hospitals, reformatories and prisons to house him when 
 he is grown? 
 
 State school departments, school superintendents, and 
 supervisors cannot get away from the insistent prob- 
 lem presented by the presence of these children in their 
 communities and the obligation of making some educa- 
 tional provision for them which shall be in keeping 
 with their needs rather than with our convenience. 
 Some are facing the situation squarely and are attempt- 
 ing to provide some special instruction for one or more 
 types of exceptional children in their communities. 
 Others recognize the existence of the problem but stand 
 helpless and hopeless before it, feeling that the children 
 are too scattered and finances are too low to admit of 
 a solution. Still others are hiding their heads in the 
 sand, as it were, and refuse to see that there is a prob- 
 lem. 
 
 What then can North Carolina answer in response to the 
 direct challenge made in regard to meeting the educational needs 
 of her exceptional children? Let us look more critically at the 
 situation that exists and then evaluate what has been accom- 
 plished as a result of the various activities that are being pro- 
 jected in the public elementary schools and in the residential 
 schools of the State. 
 
 IN THE PUBLIC ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS 
 The Nature and Extent of the Problem 
 
 At the outset, it is obviously important that all those who are 
 responsible for planning and helping to provide maximum service 
 for the different types of exceptional children in the public 
 schools of the State should learn as much as possible regarding 
 the extent of the general problem as indicated by our present 
 available records. Statistics are of value in this connection in 
 that they not only indicate the prevailing tendency, but also point 
 out the general direction in which the program is moving. The 
 
The Present Situation 15 
 
 objective evidence set forth may be of further value in focusing 
 proper attention upon the immediate need for more intelligent, 
 constructive action relative to stimulating the improvement and 
 enlargement of appropriate educational opportunities for all 
 children with exceptional problems. 
 
 In the white public elementary schools of North Carolina 
 during the school year 1937-1938, 465,435 children were enrolled 
 in the seven elementary grades and the ten special-class divisions. 
 Of this number 66.2 per cent were of normal age for their grade 
 and 2.4 per cent under age. It is a rather disconcerting fact to 
 record that 3.2 per cent were four years or more over-age, 4.5 per 
 cent were three years over age, 8.5 per cent, two years, and 15.2 
 per cent, one year. In other words, 31.4 per cent of the whole 
 number were older than the normal age for the grades in which 
 they were placed and were retarded from one to four or more 
 years. 
 
 In all of the regular elementary grades there was a wide range 
 in age-grade status and distribution. Out of an enrollment of 
 83,731 pupils, the first grade presented 15,710 pupils who were 
 over-age for the grade in which they were located — or 18.8 per 
 cent, the smallest per cent of retarded children in the elementary 
 schools. It is interesting to note that this percentage increased 
 consistently in each higher grade until the sixth grade was 
 reached, when a slight marginal decrease became evident for 
 both the sixth and the seventh grades. However, the ratio ex- 
 ceeded the 28 per cent level for all of the grade groups, except 
 the first grade, and finally reached 38 per cent for the fifth grade. 
 
 The growth in over-ageness of the two combined special groups 
 of 60.2 per cent was even more increasingly significant. Here 
 again there was a variation in steadiness. According to the 
 official report, there were 473 out of 821 pupils enrolled in the 
 primary-special class, or 57.6 per cent whose ages ranged far in 
 excess of the normal age for children of this level. Similarly, 
 this was true of the grammar-grade-special group, who had 411 
 over-age pupils out of 647, or 63.5 per cent of the total number. 
 
 For various reasons, more than 100,500 elementary school 
 children, or 21.6 per cent of the total elementary school enroll- 
 ment, experienced failure at the close of the 1937-1938 school 
 term. Strangely enough, the first-grade group stood at the head 
 of this line of discouraged boys and girls by having not only the 
 largest number of these left-overs or repeaters, but also the 
 largest percentage of the total number of failures for the entire 
 elementary school system, and with the exception of one special 
 
16 A Report on Special Education 
 
 group, the largest percentage for the individual grade enrollment. 
 To be exact, 26,551 first graders, representing 26.4 per cent of all 
 the left-overs for the term and 31.7 per cent of the total mem- 
 bership for this grade group itself, were unsuccessful. 
 
 The other extreme was true in relation to pupil promotion. 
 While the record shows that the lowest rate of acceleration 
 existed in the first grade (68.3 per cent), the highest rate oc- 
 curred in the seventh grade, when an 82.1 per cent efficiency level 
 was reached. In spite of the 10.4 per cent mount made by the 
 second grade at the outset, there was a more or less steady in- 
 crease for each succeeding grade, with only slight variations in 
 two of the intermediate grade groups. 
 
 A close-up view of the two special groups indicate that here 
 again fewer of the children involved experienced success than 
 one might reasonably have a right to expect. The grammar- 
 grade-special group achieved the lowest record of 65.2 per cent 
 for the entire elementary school and the primary-special exceeded 
 the first grade — or the next in line — by only one point. 
 
 On the basis of the above data, conclusive proof has been 
 produced to establish the fact that there are some children en- 
 rolled in every elementary grade throughout our school system 
 who are unsuccessful for various reasons, and who are, there- 
 fore, needing special help of one kind or another in order to find 
 the proper solution to their specific problems. Each year many 
 teachers and principals are no doubt confronted with this search- 
 ing question : "What can we do to meet intelligently the needs 
 and interests of these pupils and thereby enable them to move 
 forward rapidly and successfully and escape the blighting effect 
 of repeated failure?" In answer to this perplexing problem, 
 school administrators and teachers have a two-fold task to per- 
 form: (1) to study each child in question and discover all they 
 can about his specific growth needs, and (2) to help meet these 
 needs so far as possible by providing a school program that is 
 best suited to his level of maturity. 
 
 The Educational Opportunities Available for Meeting 
 Growth Needs of Exceptional Children 
 
 In the process of adjusting to an ever-increasing range in 
 abilities, needs, and interests of those enrolled, school officials are 
 finding it necessary not only to extend the school facilities and 
 offerings, but also to broaden the objectives of the educational 
 program to include more desirable aspects of child development. 
 More and more, the schools are accepting the responsibility for 
 
The Present Situation 17 
 
 changing their courses, their methods and techniques, and their 
 organizations to meet more fully and wisely the varying needs 
 and interests of boys and girls of different abilities and back- 
 grounds. 
 
 For the most part, the educational opportunities that have been 
 available thus far have centered chiefly about the mentally re- 
 tarded and the socially maladjusted groups. Prior to 1937, no 
 provision as to personnel, finance, and instructional organization 
 was made by any organized school group for the blind and 
 hard of hearing, the crippled, the speech defectives, and the 
 mentally gifted. However, it must be noted that certain remedial 
 defects of the physically handicapped have been given individual 
 attention in varying degrees by some schools. In one city school 
 a special class for the delicate children was conducted for a period 
 of time. 
 
 The reports secured firsthand from a number of schools in the 
 State, varying in type from village consolidated schools to city 
 units, indicate that various approaches have been used from time 
 to time in a conscientious effort to find a solution to phases of 
 this important problem. Chief among these have been special 
 classes, ungraded classes, opportunity classes, and remedial sub- 
 ject groups. Certain systems of classification, clinical service, 
 and individual aid have also been in operation. 
 
 During 1937-1938, 569 primary children were enrolled in special 
 classes scattered over the State in seven county and ten city ad- 
 ministrative units; while 422 grammar-grade children were at 
 work in seven county and equally as many city administrative 
 units. The unofficial record for the school year just closed does 
 not show a considerable observable change in this respect. In the 
 main, the general pattern remained the same. However, authen- 
 tic reports have come from many of the individual school units 
 that promoted special classes last year to the effect that this type 
 classification has been discontinued by them this school term. 
 In spite of this, there is no evidence that the needs of the children 
 have been met more adequately than before the establishment 
 of special classes. Nor does the record cited earlier regarding 
 the failure of the children previously enrolled in these groups 
 indicate that this type organization has served them successfully. 
 
 Although North Carolina has not yet established a State-wide 
 public school program for meeting adequately the needs of all 
 types of exceptional children, there is evidence that a number of 
 school systems are facing the issue boldly and in turn are trying 
 to meet the challenge presented by this large and important 
 
18 A Report on Special Education 
 
 group. Furthermore, it is generally understood that com- 
 mendable programs have been projected by school units as a 
 whole and by individual teachers within the system itself in an 
 effort to face the situation fairly. 
 
 In many school situations throughout the State there are 
 teachers and administrators with vision who have the courage 
 continually to reorganize and develop cooperative democratic 
 programs based upon the distinctive growth needs of the indi- 
 vidual child. Accounts of such definite contributions to education 
 should be made available to other teachers in the field. The 
 different types of programs which follow are illustrative of how 
 certain school units have adapted, in varying degrees, their 
 organization, procedures, materials of instruction, and subsequent 
 activities — looking toward the development of meaningful ex- 
 periences that will carry the members of the particular learning 
 group progressively forward in more desirable ways of living. 
 
 TYPE PROGRAMS IN PROGRESS 
 
 A Program for All Exceptional Children 
 in a City Administrative Unit 
 
 When plans were made by the Greensboro City School officials 
 for the year 1937-1938, special consideration was given to the 
 development and the projection of a more balanced school pro- 
 gram that would better serve the needs of all the children 
 enrolled. This objective involved taking into account the large 
 number of boys and girls throughout the system who presented 
 specific problems of one type or another, and adjusting the 
 curriculum offerings, methods of teaching, and classifications in 
 such a way that these children might experience more desirable 
 growth, achievement, and happy living. 
 
 In order to fulfill this additional service, the School Board 
 created the position of helping teacher for the exceptional chil- 
 dren in the system and appointed a well-qualified person to serve 
 in this capacity. Such an appointment represented the first 
 official school action in the State to meet this obligation on a 
 broad, all-inclusive basis. 
 
 Within the last two years under the leadership of the helping 
 teacher assigned to this special task, the Greensboro City School 
 System has made a fine beginning toward initiating a definite 
 program that takes into account all eight groups included in the 
 major divisions listed for exceptional children and attempts to 
 make provision for their individual differences. During this 
 
The Present Situation 19 
 
 time the theme has been "Let us set the child in our midst and 
 know him". In this connection, a conscious effort has been put 
 forth "to study the whole child — physically, mentally, socially, 
 and emotionally — and to guide his interests and abilities into the 
 development of the most worthwhile citizen as far as his capaci- 
 ties permit". As an outgrowth of this goal, the following major 
 objectives were set up: 
 
 1. To work toward the growth and development of an inte- 
 grated personality for every pupil. 
 
 2. To adjust the curriculum to meet the needs of all children 
 enrolled. 
 
 3. To prevent, if possible, retardation in the skill subjects. 
 
 As the long-view goal in mind was to develop a type program 
 that would prevent retardation in the schools, the initial program 
 of work for the exceptional children in the system was centered 
 largely about a survey of the causes and the extent of the present 
 problem. Among the first considerations in an effort to eliminate 
 this condition was the development of a systematic and con- 
 tinuous plan for the discovery and appraisal of existing pupil 
 needs. Accordingly, questionnaires calling for pertinent data 
 regarding pupil status were filled out by all elementary teachers 
 in the system. The tabulated results served not only to locate 
 those grades in the nine elementary schools that had the greatest 
 number of failures, but also to discover specifically those indi- 
 vidual children who were not having a successful school ex- 
 perience. Furthermore, the record showed that the largest 
 number of retardates were in the first grade and that 2 per cent 
 of the total enrollment in the nine schools checked were retarded 
 from one to four or more years. 
 
 This general survey work was followed by diagnostic indi- 
 vidual and group testing in order to find the cause of each 
 individual disability. A comprehensive Child Study Summary 
 Record was compiled for each exceptional child and filed with his 
 other individual personal records. Based upon the belief that a 
 one-track curriculum for all pupils would not lead to successful 
 achievement, the information thus assembled was used as a guide 
 in planning more intelligently a program to meet his specific 
 needs. Various significant factors that influence the learning 
 process were likewise taken into account. 
 
 In order to further accomplish the objectives set forth at the 
 outset, the program as a whole was divided into four phases: 
 remedial, corrective, special, and preventive. 
 
20 A Report on Special Education 
 
 Remedial. The plan and method of remedial instruction 
 called for the formation of adjustment groups in different sub- 
 ject matter fields to be integrated with the regular classroom 
 work, and involved diagnostic testing, planning remedial work 
 with teacher and pupils, group and individual teaching, and check- 
 ing improvements. For example, those pupils who ranked below 
 their grade and were unable to read materials on their grade level 
 worked in special guidance groups for both corrective and 
 remedial reading. After each case was studied and diagnosed by 
 means of test data and other reliable information, carefully 
 planned remedies adapted to the level of his scholastic ability 
 were applied to meet the discovered needs. Although special em- 
 phasis was given to reading, similar individual and group work 
 in other subjects was also attempted. This was an endeavor to 
 help the academically handicapped child become successful in his 
 daily work, without segregating him from the larger group and 
 thereby emphasizing his shortage unduly. As a further service 
 in this connection, a beginning has been made toward building a 
 Materials Bureau for the use of retarded children. It consists 
 of reading books and materials on varying interest and difficulty 
 levels and helpful aids for constructive drill work and develop- 
 ment in vocabulary training, reading techniques, and other 
 subject-matter difficulties. 
 
 Corrective. At the outset, the corrective work was focused 
 upon the accomplishment of three specific activities : 
 
 1. Finding out the physical defects of individual children and 
 securing corrective measures for each, if possible. 
 
 2. Providing especially for examination of those children with 
 defective speech, followed by appropriate training and 
 practice leading to the correction of the defect and to the 
 proper speech development. 
 
 3. Stressing correction of posture through carefully chosen 
 games the first year and by combining the work with the 
 developmental and corrective speech program. 
 
 Special. The suggested plan for special work involved making 
 specific provision for the growth and development of the more 
 gifted children, those children with limited abilities, and those 
 presenting behavior problems. Here an attempt was made to 
 recognize the diversified interests and abilities of the individual 
 pupils in the above groups and to develop a more satisfactory 
 curriculum for meeting some of their expressed needs on their 
 own maturity level. However, no very definite changes in the 
 
The Present Situation 21 
 
 present curriculum have been effected to date, as a result of the 
 proposed program. 
 
 Preventive. To the end that each school entrant's needs may 
 be met satisfactorily, the helping teacher is directing her efforts 
 and enlisting the active support of the school group. The fol- 
 lowing activities projected in the interest of a preventive program 
 should bear productive fruit : 
 
 1. Meeting with mothers at "Summer Round-Up" in various 
 schools and discussing with them reading readiness and 
 some of the implications for child growth; holding indi- 
 vidual conferences with those who have handicapped chil- 
 dren, and sharing with them helpful bulletins regarding the 
 growth and development of the young child. 
 
 2. Carrying forward a cooperative speech development pro- 
 gram in a first and a second grade, and compiling a bulletin 
 on Choral Speaking for Development of Speech, with special 
 attention given to posture and other vital aspects of the 
 work. 
 
 3. Checking vocabulary requirements for first grade. This has 
 already contributed to the reduction of academic achieve- 
 ments expected. 
 
 4. Appointing special committees to study during vacation 
 period the reading materials needed for pre-primers, the 
 integration of reading and the social studies, the relation of 
 child development to reading readiness, and other allied 
 topics. It should be stated here, however, that the com- 
 mittee work did not materialize on account of unavoidable 
 changes in personnel being made too late to effect desired 
 results. 
 
 The following brief statements, compiled from the Summary 
 of Results and other reports made by the helping teacher regard- 
 ing the most satisfying accomplishments during the two-year 
 period, are likewise indicative of the scope of work attempted 
 thus far: 
 
 1. A system-wide survey of retardation was made in order to 
 locate the causes and to provide necessary remedies. 
 Through a study of individual differences, as an outgrowth 
 of the survey results, increased interest was aroused in the 
 prevention of a similar condition from developing in the 
 system. Greater interest was also stimulated in the needed 
 changes in the first-grade program. 
 
 2. The work in remedial reading has grown throughout the 
 elementary schools. Twenty-seven groups in twenty-two 
 grades were tested, followed by the organization of adjust- 
 ment groups as an aid toward eliminating the deficiencies 
 located. Plans and materials adapted to suit the different 
 reading levels were provided and the necessary oral checks 
 
22 A Report on Special Education 
 
 were given at regular intervals. As a result of the work 
 accomplished through the administration of the remedial 
 reading program and the proper adjustments of pupils 
 within the grades, two special grades were discontinued and 
 all but six pupils were considered eligible for regular grade 
 placement. During three months of remedial training with 
 certain groups, the pupils scored higher than those to whom 
 no special help had been given. On the whole, satisfactory 
 gains were shown and pupils were enabled to move forward 
 who otherwise might have been retained. 
 
 3. A diagnostic study in spelling was made throughout the 
 sixth grades. Remedial measures were used to advantage 
 with many of the groups involved. 
 
 4. Seventy-five cases of extreme disabilities were examined and 
 detailed records were made of the findings. 
 
 5. The Stanford-Binet Tests were administered to twenty-two 
 pupils. After the study was made, suggestions were offered 
 regarding next steps. 
 
 6. One hundred thirty-three pupils with defective speech were 
 tested in order to locate their specific handicaps. The de- 
 fects discovered were classified as follows: stammering, 
 lateral lisping, infantile speech, and those speech difficulties 
 resulting from deafness, spastic cases, retarded mentality, 
 and malformation of the organs of speech, such as soft 
 palate, cleft palate, and tongue tie. Appropriate remedial 
 or corrective practice exercises for each case, followed by 
 systematic check ups, were given. Once a month on regular 
 schedule, the helping teacher worked with each child indi- 
 vidually at varying length periods, but not exceeding forty 
 minutes. Although the time limit between contacts with 
 the pupils made satisfactory results a rather slow process, 
 definite improvement was shown with those who were served 
 during the two-year period. It was found that there were 
 three very deaf children who needed lip reading instruction. 
 
 7. Through the cooperative efforts of the helping teacher and 
 the City Health Department, a hard-of -hearing testing pro- 
 gram provided by the State Board of Health was secured 
 for all the children in the elementary schools of the city, 
 both Negro and white. The results obtained from the 
 hearing acuity tests through the use of the audiometer indi- 
 cated that 477 pupils had defective hearing and were unable, 
 therefore, to profit maximally from the school program 
 offered. 
 
 8. Those children experiencing eye difficulties were tested. 
 Whenever it could be arranged, all necessary corrections 
 were made. See the Sight-Saving Class for the program of 
 work carried forward in the interest of those children with 
 serious eye defects. 
 
 9. A study of malnutrition cases was continued as formerly. 
 This was carried on through the Health Department. 
 
The Present Situation 23 
 
 10. Teachers were given definite help in classifying their pupils 
 and in overcoming problem situations. 
 
 11. Various bulletins were compiled for the use of the teachers 
 in the interest of the program. Notably among these were : 
 The Child Study Summary Bulletin for Exceptional Chil- 
 dren, A Diagnostic Child Study Chart for Enrolling Adjust- 
 ment Groups, A Choral Speaking Anthology for Speech 
 Development and Correction, Helpful Hints for the Excep- 
 tional Child, and Studies in Retardation regarding Defective 
 Speech, Reading Readiness, Remedial Reading, Special 
 Classes, Remedial Groups, and so forth. 
 
 Appraisal. 
 
 Suffice it to say, Greensboro has taken the initial step forward 
 along this line and is leading the way for the State as a whole in 
 organizing the first school-wide program in the interest of all 
 children who have problems or who are not making a satisfactory 
 adjustment to their environment. Within a two-year period the 
 duties of the helping teacher in charge of the work have been 
 expanded until now she is the official Director of Training for 
 Exceptional Children. Prior to this time, however, her work has 
 been chiefly that of a helping teacher for those individual pupils 
 who were unsuccessful for various reasons and for varying time 
 limits. 
 
 The efficiency of such individualized training is dependent upon 
 a definite follow-up program being maintained by the regular 
 classroom teacher who works closely with the special teacher in 
 carrying out directions and suggestions of value in further help- 
 ing the individual child overcome his difficulties. As time has 
 passed, many of the classroom teachers in the system have recog- 
 nized more and more the great need for this specific work with 
 children experiencing problems and have assumed their personal 
 responsibility in relation to it. However, too much of the obli- 
 gation was left to the helping teacher to warrant as closely an 
 integrated program from resulting as was desirable for the im- 
 provement of the child participating. Now that the function of 
 the person guiding the work has been enlarged to the extent that 
 her direct focus of effort is centered upon helping the teachers 
 meet this problem more adequately, it is to be expected that the 
 ultimate objectives of the program will be accomplished more 
 quickly and with less dissipation of time and energy. 
 
 Work with groups in special classes of mentally retarded chil- 
 dren has gone forward continuously, but not always with very 
 satisfactory results. To date none of the segregated special 
 
24 A Report on Special Education 
 
 classes has been tested scientifically and assigned for special 
 training by a teacher who was specially trained for that particular 
 work. 
 
 There is a place in the world for these children to fill — a work 
 for them to do. They should receive their share of educational 
 attention. This must be recognized by the school. Measures 
 should be taken to give these children the type training, both 
 kind and amount, that they can do successfully on their own 
 maturity level and that will better equip them to live happily and 
 profitably. Shop work and other suitable trade instruction should 
 be made available to them as a preparation for vocational activi- 
 ties. A practical course in home making and better living could 
 be arranged in the elementary schools in connection with the 
 junior high school and at no extra cost. All in all, a program 
 should be planned for them that will more nearly fit their life 
 needs and interests, as well as abilities, and yet will not be stig- 
 matizing in effect. In the administration of such a program the 
 teacher must of necessity be free to adapt the methods, also the 
 amount and type of experiences offered, so as to promote optimum 
 growth on the part of each individual child. This would likewise 
 involve the establishment of standards of accomplishment in 
 keeping with his ability to make progress. 
 
 If the type program as conceived by the Director of the Train- 
 ing of Exceptional Children is properly coordinated and efficiently 
 carried forward by all concerned with the education of the chil- 
 dren, it should aid each exceptional child to make those desirable 
 adjustments that would result in a maximum of life satisfactions. 
 More and more, the teachers, the pupils, the school officials, the 
 parents, and the community must work together cooperatively 
 to find the causes of the difficulty and then endeavor to bring 
 about a wholesome learning condition that will promote desirable, 
 all-round pupil growth and will eliminate the necessity for con- 
 tinuing to maintain the type remedial and corrective program 
 herein described. Furthermore, the full significance of this 
 division and all that it entails as a worthwhile need in the depart- 
 ment of instruction must be recognized, and the program of 
 work set forth must be regarded as a logical and integral part of 
 the curriculum and not as a minor phase of it. 
 
 In order to prevent repetition and stagnation and to better 
 insure a happy, successful adventure through school, it is to be 
 hoped that in accordance with the plans of the official in charge, 
 full provision will be made for an early diagnosis and study of 
 each pupil at his school entrance and for the establishment of a 
 
The Present Situation 25 
 
 desirable developmental program that will be carried on, if neces- 
 sary, through a prolonged span of years in the primary school by 
 (1) shifting the emphasis from the teaching of skills to matura- 
 tion and readiness ; (2) providing a balanced program of instruc- 
 tion in the traditional subjects and the arts, based upon the 
 individual child's maturity and social fitness at the time; and 
 (3) substituting informal letters and conferences with parents 
 for formal report cards. Such an arrangement may involve the 
 organization of a junior-primary grade for those children whose 
 all-round development will not permit their successful moving 
 forward at the time with the regular first-grade program. If so, 
 it should be effected by skillful and intelligent planning. 
 
 A Sight-Saving Class 
 
 Statistics show that about twenty per cent of our school 
 children have some defect of vision. Moreover, the most con- 
 servative estimates indicate that a small group, about one child 
 in a thousand of the elementary school population, have defects 
 so serious that they should not continue in the regular school 
 without special educational tools. Many communities have found 
 that one child in five hundred more nearly approximates the ratio. 
 The needs of these children differ greatly from those of the 
 normally seeing children; so appropriate procedures must be 
 made effective to take care of their distinct needs, if the school 
 expects to make progress in solving the problem of sight conser- 
 vation. The welfare of this exceptional group demands our best 
 planned endeavor based upon intelligent understanding of the 
 problems inherent in the situation. 
 
 Here again Greensboro has blazed the trail and has won the 
 merited distinction of having established the first and only sight- 
 saving class in the State for the benefit of the partially seeing 
 children in the city system who, because of seriously defective 
 vision, cannot be educated profitably under conditions provided in 
 the regular grade or who, by attempting the prescribed school 
 work, similarly might increase their eye difficulty. The work 
 was begun in 1937 under the direct financial sponsorship and 
 leadership of the Greensboro Kiwanis Club and with the coop- 
 eration of the Superintendent of the City Schools, the City School 
 Board, and the State Commission for the Blind. 
 
 The sight-saving class is located in the Central Junior High 
 School and serves pupils from grades one through eight in the 
 entire school system. During its existence sixteen children have 
 been enrolled. However, there are eleven in membership this 
 
26 A Report on Special Education 
 
 year, with all grades represented except the fourth and the sixth. 
 As the work is largely individual, the number per teacher must 
 necessarily be small. The teacher in charge of the class since its 
 organization had special training at Columbia University for the 
 specific work involved. This included specialized courses of in- 
 struction in sight-saving and the hygiene of the eye under 
 educational leaders in this particular field, followed by supervised 
 observation in the sight-saving classes being conducted there 
 according to accepted standards of excellence. Furthermore, she 
 attended daily lectures at New York Medical Center given by 
 some of the most eminent eye physicians known, in order that 
 she might have some understanding of the most common eye 
 diseases and their treatment and, therefore, know better how to 
 help the pupils conserve their vision. 
 
 The teacher of the class works cooperatively with the Health 
 Department and the opthamologists of the city in an effort (1) 
 to locate the children with eye difficulties who are eligible for 
 sight-saving instruction, and (2) to promote an adequate eye- 
 health program that will meet their all-round needs. According 
 to the record on file, this, in brief, is the procedure followed: 
 
 A pupil is admitted to the class upon the recommen- 
 dation of his opthamologist. On entering the school and 
 again in the -fourth and seventh grades, each pupil's 
 vision is tested by the City Health Department. The 
 names of those who have serious visual handicaps are 
 turned over to the educational authorities. The teacher 
 of the class then investigates each by consulting the 
 pupil's own eye physician, whose recommendation de- 
 termines where the pupil shall be placed. If the pupil 
 is admitted to the sight-saving class, the teacher follows 
 the opthamologist's recommendation in the conservation 
 of the pupil's vision. The eye physicians of the city are 
 to be congratulated upon their cooperation in the work. 
 Not all suspects can be detected through the Health 
 Department as each client is not tested annually, and it 
 is only through the alert opthamologists that many 
 learn of the advantages of the class. 
 
 A cooperative plan of conducting the class is in operation, 
 whereby the work is coordinated with that of the regular class. 
 In this way, the pupils have all of their oral work with the 
 regular classes, but return to the specially equipped room for the 
 preparation of their assignments and other work that requires 
 close use of their eyes. They also participate in all of the social 
 and recreational activities, such as trips, class meetings, audi- 
 torium programs, group discussions, and general activity and 
 
The Present Situation 27 
 
 play periods that are an outgrowth of the work carried on in the 
 regular grade. No exceptions are made to the general plan, 
 unless the work assigned conflicts with the program recommended 
 by the doctor for a particular child. 
 
 Since emphasis must be centered upon individual work in this 
 situation, the teacher is an indispensable helper for each pupil. 
 Among other services, it is her special responsibility to teach 
 arithmetic, reading, spelling, and writing to each pupil. At times 
 one may find her reading to the group specific assignments, made 
 in the regular class, that are not available in large print. Or she 
 may be enlarging, by means of a special typewriter, certain 
 materials for use of individual students, such as tests, memory 
 work, dictionary work, and so forth. Then again she may be 
 engaged in helping different children master certain techniques 
 of the touch system in typing in order that they may develop a 
 more satisfactory way of preparing their written work. 
 
 "Eye hygiene is taught in the class in order that the pupils 
 may know how and why to properly care for their eyes. Pupils are 
 encouraged to become ear-minded, — that is, to listen to stories, 
 to hear news and plays on the radio, and to attend lectures. 
 During the school day pupils in the class are not permitted to 
 use their eyes for close work more than twenty or twenty-five 
 minutes continuously. They are encouraged to engage in a 
 different type of activity, such as clay modeling, mass painting, 
 and typing, or they may rest their eyes by simply looking in the 
 distance for a few minutes. Even if continued use of diseased 
 eyes does not harm the eyes themselves, it does place the child 
 under such a nervous strain that he cannot react normally to 
 situations that he must of necessity meet." 
 
 Such an arrangement affords an opportunity for the pupils not 
 only to work under more or less normal conditions with maximum 
 efficiency and minimum strain, but also "to mingle and compete 
 with other children as do those of normal vision". At the same 
 time it safeguards the possibility of their developing a feeling of 
 inferiority that might result from segregation or from failure to 
 achieve success. 
 
 All equipment and procedures are carefully scrutinized and 
 appraised from the standpoint of their influence on the eye health 
 of the children involved. In order that their specific needs may 
 be met with comfort and efficiency, this classroom, with a possible 
 exception, is specially furnished with modern equipment that has 
 been approved according to accepted standards for such classes. 
 Not only does such an environment promote better conditions for 
 
28 A Report on Special Education 
 
 eye hygiene, but it also stimulates the improvement of and the 
 provision for better postural habits. 
 
 Adequate, well-diffused, and well-distributed illumination, both 
 natural and artificial, supplies a maximum of uniform light 
 throughout the day with a minimum of glare for the pupils. The 
 indirect lights that were installed for use in this room are auto- 
 matically controlled by a photo-electric cell, which is so set as to 
 permit at all times a minimum of 30-foot candles of light in com- 
 parison with about 10 in the regular classroom. Six outlets are 
 also provided in order to insure a balanced light as well as a 
 sufficient amount. 
 
 As a further aid toward minimizing eyestrain, all desks, wood- 
 work, walls and ceiling, furniture, and the like, are in dull mat 
 finish. The desks are both movable and adjustable. Not only 
 can they be moved from place to place in the room in order that 
 each pupil may obtain the kind and amount of light best suited 
 to meet his working needs at the time, but they can also be 
 raised or lowered to the correct height for him and adjusted by 
 means of a slide to the proper focal angle for his individual read- 
 ing. Likewise, the books are printed in 32-point type on dull, 
 unglazed, egg-shell tinted paper to insure more comfortable, 
 happy reading experiences during the day. Special maps, globes, 
 paper, pencils, chalk, and other special types of supplies and 
 materials are available. Typewriters with large, bulletin-sized 
 type are also provided as a definite part of the equipment for the 
 use of both pupils and teacher. All are designed to make seeing 
 easier and thereby to aid in conserving sight. 
 
 The following Summary Report from the teacher at the close 
 of the year's work is indicative of the all-round pupil growth that 
 has taken place in a brief period: 
 
 Although the class has been in operation for only two 
 years, gratifying results have been seen. The progress 
 of the pupils — mentally, physically, and socially — has 
 been quite satisfactory. 
 
 Standard tests, though not always an accurate meas- 
 urement of a pupil's progress, are the best known means 
 of measuring progress at present. According to these, 
 all pupils made normal progress during the school year 
 and several made far above normal. Judging from their 
 past records, there is no doubt that the majority of them 
 were greatly aided by the type of instruction offered in 
 the class. 
 
 There was evidence of physical improvement. Posture 
 was improved, the degree of improvement depending 
 somewhat upon the ability of the pupil to see the print 
 
The Present Situation 29 
 
 at the distance provided by the desk. However, using 
 the blackboard instead of paper for written arithmetic, 
 and substituting the typewriter for other written work 
 whenever possible, did eliminate much of the bad posture 
 that was necessary for them to assume in order to do 
 their written work heretofore. 
 
 There has been improvement in vision. One child has 
 had his vision restored to almost normal through 
 operations and is no longer a member of the class. 
 Although he was in the class only temporarily, he could 
 not have done his work in a regular grade last year while 
 he was under treatment. A year's work was saved and 
 the child's spirit was unbroken. Another pupil will be 
 able to leave the class next year, if not sooner, as the 
 result of operations. Upon entrance in the class, he 
 rated three grades below average in reading ability. As 
 he was able to see the print in the books last year, he is 
 now an average pupil in the same grade as his former 
 classmates. He has not only regained lost ground, but 
 also his own self respect .... 
 
 Social adjustment is something that cannot be meas- 
 ured, but can only be observed. Those most closely 
 associated with the pupils know that in many instances 
 attitudes have become more wholesome and social ad- 
 justments have been greatly improved. This is because 
 the pupils work under much less strain. Improved 
 physical environment has made adjustments simpler. 
 
 The child who has learned to know his limitations and 
 who has accepted his handicap with the determination 
 to make the most of his abilities has a better chance 
 not only to protect his eyes, but to conduct himself in 
 a perfectly normal and wholesome manner among his 
 associates. 
 
 Appraisal. 
 
 The program of work that has been organized and carried out 
 thus far in the Greensboro Sight-Saving Class was no ordinary 
 task. Freeing these exceptional children for more efficient pro- 
 gress along several distinct lines of living and learning was ac- 
 complished largely through the intelligent, cooperative planning 
 and sharing of those several groups responsibly concerned with 
 this particular undertaking. It is also significant to note that 
 the unified efforts of the contributing participants were based 
 upon a fundamental understanding of the problems underlying 
 the situation. Furthermore, their focus was centered upon the 
 satisfactory accomplishment of the goal set out to be achieved. 
 As a result, it is not surprising that the individual adjustments 
 made to date have been on a fairly high efficiency basis. 
 
30 A Report on Special Education 
 
 However, in this connection, care should be exercised to the 
 extent that the school program in all of its ramifications offers 
 sufficient opportunities to these children to practice democratic 
 living in a functional way. Since it is necessary to depart- 
 mentalize the work, there will be many serious omissions and 
 commissions unless the day's activities are properly integrated 
 and closely articulated with purposeful experiencing. Those in 
 charge should watch this aspect of the program and prevent a 
 further handicap from developing in these children. Appropriate 
 procedures along all lines of growth must be made effective if the 
 school expects to meet their all-round developmental needs and 
 thus help them become well-balanced, integrated personalities. 
 This presupposes that each individual child must be studied care- 
 fully and that the cumulative data assembled must be used in- 
 telligently, not only in planning his educational progress, but also 
 in guiding him properly to make desirable adjustments when 
 facing complex situations. 
 
 Now that the school system has the services of a Director of 
 Training for Exceptional Children, it stands to reason that the 
 work with the partially seeing children will be extended to in- 
 clude additional cases whose difficulties have not been very 
 apparent heretofore. Such administrative activities as these 
 will doubtless enter in: Securing transportation to and from 
 school for those children who do not live on a bus line or do not 
 have other means of getting to school ; financing a thorough eye 
 examination by an opthamologist of those children showing 
 visual difficulties who cannot pay the cost involved; making 
 satisfactory arrangements for the proper transfer of children 
 from one school to another in the system; and making other 
 similar adjustments. It may also involve establishing an addi- 
 tional class for high school students needing specific help, or 
 continuing the present plan in operation through the high school 
 years. In any event, the special sight-saving educational facili- 
 ties should be enlarged as rapidly as the situation demands in 
 order that the peculiar needs of all partially seeing children in 
 the school system may be met. 
 
 A close follow-up of those children who leave the class should 
 be maintained and records of their progress kept on file in the 
 school. If such a coordinated service can be established between 
 the regular teacher and the teacher of the Sight-Saving Class, 
 it will safeguard the best interests of each child by helping to 
 prevent gaps and lapses from occurring as a result of using, 
 means and procedures that are not suited to his particular handi- 
 
The Present Situation 31 
 
 cap. In the long run, the promotion of a consistent program 
 based on his needs would represent, among other important 
 factors, a great saving of feelings and attitudes that underlie the 
 proper building of a well-adjusted individual. 
 
 Occupational Groups in a County-City Administrative Unit 
 
 The general statement made at the outset is applicable to the 
 New Hanover County Schools regarding those elementary school 
 children in the entire system from fourteen to eighteen years of 
 age who had fallen out of step with the regular classes and were 
 not progressing satisfactorily in their school work. Unhappily, 
 the majority of these children had experienced failure from time 
 to time and so had been unable to advance each year from grade 
 to grade with their classmates; many had lost faith and con- 
 fidence in their ability to achieve; while others, lacking in emo- 
 tional stability, had developed a sinister feeling against school 
 and society in general. All were in need of a program designed to 
 meet their special requirements. It was evident that unless these 
 children were given an opportunity to study the things which 
 they were interested in and could understand, they would leave 
 school. 
 
 In order to meet the needs of these over-age, slow-learning 
 children, the Special Department of the New Hanover High 
 School in Wilmington was added in 1937. Under the leadership 
 of a carefully selected person delegated to this specific task, a 
 particular program was offered for their special benefit. "Life 
 is a never ending process of adjustment", commented, the head 
 of the Department when questioned about the work, "and suc- 
 cess depends upon finding that thing to do that is best suited to 
 one's interests and abilities. In spite of all their problems, we 
 believe that under proper guidance and direction the majority of 
 these children can be helped to overcome some of their difficulties. 
 Consequently, we set as our major objective the guidance of these 
 pupils (1) in developing all the powers within them; (2) in facing 
 problems sanely without frustrations and conflicts ; (3) in finding 
 their place in society; and (4) in making their contribution, how- 
 ever small, towards the betterment of the community in which 
 they live." 
 
 During the first year the program was in action, there was an 
 enrollment of 145 in the Department. However, for various 
 reasons, 4 dropped out by the middle of the term. The major 
 factor that entered into the selection of pupils for the classes 
 organized was retardation. However, the results of achievement 
 
32 A Report on Special Education 
 
 and intelligence tests, administered and evaluated by the teachers, 
 were used to some extent together with the teacher's general 
 estimate of each pupil. Likewise, the records of the physical 
 defects, as discovered by the regular physical examination given, 
 were an available source of information in this connection. 
 
 The only special work that was carried on throughout the first 
 year with any degree of success was that done in the manual arts 
 room. The teacher in charge felt that, though the children were 
 not skilled, they had developed better working habits. Regular 
 sewing classes for the girls were started the last half of the term 
 and proved to be most successful. Those with the highest mental 
 equipment showed ability and interest in learning to make their 
 clothes while others who lacked the capacity for sustained effort 
 liked to embroider with bright colors and to make small household 
 articles. All of them manifested keen interest and pleasure in 
 the art work that was initiated for the first time with the group. 
 
 At the beginning of last term the name of the Special Depart- 
 ment was changed to the Occupational Group. Provision was also 
 made for the boys and girls to work in separate classes during the 
 five-hour day program. The schedule was so arranged that about 
 half of the time was used in studying the minimum essentials of 
 a modified course in arithmetic, reading, English, and the social 
 studies that were closely related to the practical work carried on 
 in the shop and in the home making activities. The rest of the 
 day was spent in the shops and the workroom, where the boys 
 and girls had an opportunity for practice in repairing articles and 
 making useful and beautiful things. Art, music, and physical 
 education for both groups were also a definite part of the pro- 
 gram. In addition to these activities, there were also classes for 
 girls in various aspects of home making and better living. 
 
 The Department maintains a file containing accurate and de- 
 tailed records for each child. These include the results of the 
 teacher's achievement tests and observations, the individual case 
 history, the personality and interest inventory, the health record, 
 and a record of the child's social behavior at school and else- 
 where. The information gained from home visits is also recorded 
 on the individual card which is kept for each child. By means of 
 the data assembled, the teaching personnel has at their command 
 a readily available source of information that can be used ad- 
 vantageously in the interest of each child's program of living. 
 
 The achievements that have been made thus far are cited in 
 the last Annual Summary, as follows : 
 
The Present Situation 33 
 
 During the two years the Department has been in 
 existence, we have seen a marked improvement in the 
 pupils in many ways, the most significant of which has 
 been in character development. Each student was 
 keenly conscious of being a failure and used every 
 mechanism known to psychiatrists in his effort to com- 
 pensate, evade, or defend his actions. We truly feel now 
 that there is a finer spirit of cooperation, that they ac- 
 cept responsibility more readily, have greater confidence 
 in themselves, have higher ideals, show more respect and 
 consideration for each other and those in authority, 
 manifest more pride in themselves and their work, and 
 have developed a more pleasing personality. In fact, 
 they seem happy and contented and enjoy going to 
 school. A group of girls when asked what they con- 
 sidered their greatest achievement for this year replied 
 that they thought the development of their personality 
 the outstanding improvement. 
 
 In spite of the low scholastic record, the achievement 
 tests each year show that most of the pupils made as 
 much progress as they were capable of making. Of the 
 number promoted to the high school in 1938, 90 per cent 
 of them are passing their work. 
 
 The home making, industrial and fine arts, and crafts 
 exhibit held in May gave a fair idea of the types of 
 special work this Department offers. Incidentally, the 
 practical work and the homemaking courses hold their 
 chief interests. It is certain that without these they 
 would not consider remaining in school. 
 
 The physical education program has made a good 
 beginning and we think that the development of this 
 phase of our activities together with music will perhaps 
 meet a greater need of these pupils than anything else. 
 A well rounded physical education program will assist 
 greatly in producing a more integrated personality and a 
 better citizen for our changing civilization. 
 
 Appraisal. 
 
 Here is a concrete illustration of how one school system, com- 
 posed of both city and rural schools, organized a Special Depart- 
 ment at one central point to serve the entire group of unsuccessful 
 elementary children from fourteen to eighteen years of age en- 
 rolled in all of the elementary-school units represented. The 
 school authorities themselves will agree that they waited far too 
 long to focus their definite attention upon the special needs of 
 this over-age group who were not profiting by the regular school 
 offerings. However, when they became aware of the situation, 
 it reflects to their everlasting credit that they set about to 
 
34 A Report on Special Education 
 
 establish a new-type program designed to contribute vitally to 
 the development of these children at the time. 
 
 In this connection it was of significant value that a person who 
 was well-qualified both by special training and successful ex- 
 perience for work of this type was selected to be in charge. 
 Although adequate housing facilities, equipment, and instruc- 
 tional materials necessary to serve the newly constituted 
 Department in its entirety were not available at the outset, these 
 have been supplied as rapidly as possible. Each year the part- 
 time services of additional teachers from other departments of 
 the school have also been shared with this division. From the 
 beginning, transportation has been provided for those children 
 who were not accessible to the school. Manifestly, all of these 
 tangible evidences of cooperative effort are indicative of the fine 
 support given in the interest of those children who are facing 
 acute problems of their own that must be solved one way or 
 another. 
 
 In the light of increased knowledge and better understanding 
 of the group and their needs, the program should be revised. 
 However, such changes could be effected more quickly and more 
 satisfactorily for the good of all concerned if the teaching per- 
 sonnel as a whole had a fundamental background for under- 
 standing this type child and his special problems. Then the day's 
 experiencing could be adjusted more skillfully to meet his specific 
 needs and interests. It would seem that the special services of a 
 professional worker would be of inestimable value to the teachers 
 of this group, not only in giving them a new point of direction, 
 but also in helping them coordinate their efforts and integrate the 
 work on a more comprehensive basis. 
 
 On account of the over-ageness of the group, a greater variety 
 of vocational opportunities than is the case now should be made 
 available for both boys and girls. Such well-chosen offerings 
 would prove most helpful in furnishing them a broader and more 
 practical outlook toward real living. 
 
 There is also a distinct need for a very marked reorganization 
 of the industrial arts program in keeping with the modern con- 
 ception of the basic place this subject should have in a learning 
 situation. The content should be enlarged to include those ex- 
 periences that contribute more directly to the solution of vital 
 problems of present-day life regarding food, shelter, clothing; and 
 other similar needs. More important still, the on-goingness of 
 the activity itself should be given special consideration. So 
 fundamental are the permanent values to be derived from a 
 
The Present Situation 35 
 
 broadly conceived and intelligently executed program that the 
 suggested changes should be incorporated as soon as it is prac- 
 tical. 
 
 The fact that a large number of the children left school at mid- 
 term the first year the Special Department was organized should 
 not be attributed directly to a lack of holding power of the new 
 program in operation. Nor was it due solely to the various diffi- 
 cult adjustments that had to be made. On the basis of firsthand 
 observation, it seemed evident that the deadening effects of the 
 Platoon System of work that has been carried forward in the 
 elementary grades throughout the system for a period of years 
 were largely responsible for the existing condition. However, a 
 fine beginning has been made toward eliminating this undemo- 
 cratic practice in the schools. It is to be hoped that soon every 
 trace of it will be uprooted and that a program, adjusted to meet 
 the needs and interests of each individual child enrolled in the 
 schools and based upon an intelligent, sympathetic understanding 
 of his total equipment, will be substituted for it. Then every child 
 would be moving forward successfully and happily at his own rate 
 of progress. All things being equal, such a program in action 
 would help to prevent a similar devastating condition now exist- 
 ing among the older children from ever developing. 
 
 A Program of Democratic Living for All Children 
 The program of work, initiated and projected by Miss Ada E. 
 Valentine with a group of unsuccessful elementary school children 
 in a village consolidated school over a period of years, is a venture 
 in democratic living and learning for all types of children to be 
 found in our public schools. Its main purpose is to enable every 
 child to experience the fullest growth possible in terms of his 
 abilities and emerging social needs regardless of his present 
 equipment or stage of growth and development. Furthermore, 
 it purports to give boys and girls new horizons, richer and more 
 abiding interests, and loftier aims and ideals, which will help 
 them to live ever better the life of each day as they face it. 
 
 The work moves forward in a wholesome, natural way through 
 active pupil participation in solving their individual and group 
 problems and in projecting the next steps in more desirable ways 
 of living. In this school experience one observes all of the worth- 
 while features of the traditional program as an integral part of 
 the day's activities. However, there are also evidences of more 
 progressive procedures resulting in independent thinking and 
 acting on the part of each individual child. The entire program 
 
36 A Report on Special Education 
 
 is based upon the guiding principle, generally understood by all, 
 that children learn to do by doing. "In the philosophy expressed 
 and in the principles underlying the program, there are no failures 
 and no dependents, but an unmistakable and workable democracy 
 of everyday living as evidenced in the freedom of the individual 
 child to use his own God-given powers to their fullest extent and 
 capacity as he achieves success in the worthwhile educational 
 experiences the school provides for him." Special significance is 
 given to the importance of happy, successful experiencing. 
 
 Briefly, the most persistent major features involved in this 
 program of creative living and learning include : 
 
 1. A Scientific Study of Children. 
 
 In order to have an intelligent understanding of each indi- 
 vidual child, his present equipment and needs, the school 
 should have an accurate picture of what the child's back- 
 ground has been to date — his physical and mental health, 
 what social and emotional adjustments he has had to make, 
 and the like. By means of personal interviews and con- 
 ferences with parents and pupils, questionnaires filled out 
 by both, observations, scientific achievement and intelligence 
 test data, individual cumulative pupil records and case his- 
 tories, group and individual profile charts representing the 
 school behavior of each child in the group, progress reports 
 of pupil personality development, official records of pupil 
 attendance and age status, and other available statistical 
 facts, pertinent firsthand information is assembled that 
 makes it possible for many phases of the child's life to be 
 examined in a most objective and thorough way. On the 
 basis of the total findings, here each child's needs and in- 
 terests in relation to the harmonized development of his 
 total personality are treated with intelligent human under- 
 standing. 
 
 2. Educational and Vocational Guidance of Children. 
 
 If guidance is to be effective in ministering directly and 
 intelligently to pupil growth, it must rest upon an accurate 
 knowledge and complete understanding of all those im- 
 mediate and remote factors which impinge upon and con- 
 dition the present status, the human needs, and the 
 opportunities of the individuals concerned. This program 
 consists of studying the individual child scientifically, of 
 learning to know his abilities and his limitations, and, in the 
 light of this knowledge, of helping him to achieve a way of 
 life fully satisfying to himself and to society. It is not an 
 attempt to make all children follow the same beaten path; 
 on the contrary, it is a distinct effort to help each child find 
 the path appropriate to his own individual needs and 
 aptitudes. 
 
The Present Situation 37 
 
 3. Healthful Living. 
 
 School life to a child should mean a valid, creative, satis- 
 fying experience that helps him to build those qualities that 
 make for successful and healthful living. In this school 
 situation we find an on-going, significant life of its own 
 generating, always in full sway. The open sesame for par- 
 ticipating in a normal, happy day is a diversified program, 
 arranged by the teacher and the children planning together 
 for their wholesome development in relation to educational 
 achievement, health in general, recreational activities, and 
 avocational interests. 
 
 The freeing of all the energies and potential powers of the 
 child, not only through individual and group development of 
 a large variety of interests, but also through medical, surgi- 
 cal, and dental service, through proper nutrition, rest, and 
 exercise, and through the development of habits that will 
 make him a healthy and socially acceptable person, is of 
 primary concern. Since the possibility of instilling health 
 knowledge and health habits is greatest in the school period 
 of life, this program set out to perform these distinct duties 
 toward promoting human efficiency and human happiness. 
 In an effort to fully discharge these, every child is the bene- 
 ficiary of the best medical, dental, and psychological ex- 
 aminations available. Every possible opportunity for the 
 development of right health habits and right living practices 
 is a part of each day's work. 
 
 As an aid toward providing such services, members of 
 various groups coordinate their efforts with the school in a 
 most effective and far-reaching way. The following typical 
 health activities involving community relationships con- 
 tribute vitally to the all-round growth needs of these 
 children : 
 
 a. Yearly physical examinations are given each child by 
 the County Health Department, followed by the tuber- 
 culin test. Without exception all positive cases are 
 X-rayed. 
 
 b. Through the cooperation of the Division of Oral Hy- 
 giene, State Board of Health, complete dental service 
 with follow-up program is given to all children in this 
 group and to others throughout the school who are 
 unable to finance such service. 
 
 c. Under the leadership and direction of the local Lions' 
 Club, a free eye clinic is conducted by a specialist for 
 the benefit of those children in the school needing such 
 service but who are unable to secure it without help. 
 All necessary corrections are made regardless of the 
 cost involved. As a result, the children given a thor- 
 ough examination and properly fitted with glasses are 
 now more happily and efficiently engaged in their task 
 of moving forward toward successful and healthful 
 living. 
 
38 A Report on Special Education 
 
 d. With the services of a psychologist and a psychiatrist, 
 each child in the group is tested scientifically. 
 
 e. In order that the younger children may have more 
 comfortable rest periods each day, a sufficient number 
 of cots have been provided. 
 
 f. Recreational activities are participated in daily. 
 
 g. Hot lunches are served to all children in the group and 
 to the undernourished children throughout the school. 
 Two pupil-maintained free lunch rooms are in operation 
 daily to meet the needs of these groups. This is made 
 possible through the cooperative service of the homes 
 represented, certain organizations and individuals in 
 town, the State and County Boards of Charities and 
 Public Welfare, and the Works Progress Administra- 
 tion. These contribute supplies (vegetables, meat, 
 milk, and the like) and labor. In no case is any child 
 pauperized, but instead he makes his contribution on 
 the basis of his ability to give — much or little. A 
 supervised indoor lunch period with all of its attendant 
 health features is observed. 
 
 4. Participation as a Measure of Achievement. 
 
 The focal point of the society in which these children, 
 differing both in chronological and ability age levels, live and 
 work together six hours each day is simply wholesome re- 
 sponsibility — the responsibility of each child to himself and 
 to each individual in the group as well as to the larger group 
 itself. The whole conduct of the group involved is based 
 upon the interaction of group and individual. The activities 
 that go on in the room, the physical care of the room, the 
 social relationships among the children and the relationships 
 between the children and the teacher, their contacts with the 
 school as a whole and with the community, all are used with 
 the end in view of gradual progression in the business of 
 living with people. 
 
 5. Utilizing Community Resources. 
 
 In every community there are available environmental re- 
 sources that offer productive possibilities for opening up the 
 world in far-reaching ways. Miss Valentine uses these to 
 introduce the children to the social, industrial, artistic, and 
 natural phases of their surroundings and to give them a 
 growing understanding and appreciation of the world in 
 which they live. By means of direct observations and con- 
 tacts, the children are led to investigate, interpret, enjoy, 
 and utilize their environment from both a social and a 
 natural science point of view and likewise to project them- 
 selves into new fields of thinking, feeling, and doing. 
 
The Present Situation 39 
 
 6. Creative Expression. 
 
 All children should have the right to live in a rich environ- 
 ment, to exercise to the fullest all of their powers of ex- 
 pression, and to have every avenue to their souls open and 
 in use. In support of this conviction the teacher concerned 
 has tried faithfully to help create conditions and provide 
 materials which would arouse each child to live fully and 
 happily and to express himself and his potentialities freely 
 and effectively in some chosen form of his own best ideas, 
 inspirations, and emotions. 
 
 7. Academic Work. 
 
 Creative teaching is concerned with all of the complex 
 situations one meets in everyday life and is not limited to 
 any specific field of subject matter. In this situation em- 
 phasis is placed upon learning through active participation 
 in meaningful and purposeful experiences, growing out of 
 real situations of vital interest to the child and through 
 which desirable knowledges, skills, habits, attitudes, and 
 ideals are developed. In order to carry forward his activities 
 successfully, the child realizes a vital need for the mastery 
 of certain tool subjects, techniques, and pertinent content 
 material, and then sets about on his own initiative to learn 
 those essential facts and skills necessary for the desired 
 accomplishment. 
 
 8. Spiritual Training. 
 
 The important role of spiritual values in the shaping of 
 human life and conduct is considered here as a balance of all 
 other values in a symmetry of life fashioned after the per- 
 fect ideal. Here a conscious effort is made to start going 
 in each child those enterprises, ambitions, and tastes that 
 will fill both his leisure time and his work hours with clean, 
 ennobling, and joy-giving activities. 
 
 9. Parent Education. 
 
 Home and school, parents and teachers, must have com- 
 mon objectives, purposes, plans, and similar techniques that 
 are desirable if the child's life at school and at home is an 
 integral whole. As a means toward developing a consistent 
 regime and policy for each child to follow in his daily living, 
 effort is put forth through a variety of desirable activities 
 to establish better parent-child and parent-teacher relation- 
 ships. 
 
 10. Evaluation of Pupil Progress. 
 
 In an effort to evaluate individual pupil progress, success 
 is not measured in terms of grades and credits, but in terms 
 of the character, the culture, and the effectiveness of the 
 personalities of the children. 
 
40 A Report on Special Education 
 
 Some of the most fundamental principles taken into account 
 at all times in this school situation are: 
 
 1. The children are given every opportunity to practice bal- 
 anced and unselfish acting and sharing in their solution of 
 problems relating to the group as a whole or to any indi- 
 vidual member. 
 
 2. Through careful teacher guidance each child is helped to 
 analyze his own needs and interests, draw his own conclu- 
 sions, and to set up his own program of ivork, play, study, 
 and health, accordingly ; likewise he is helped to make those 
 adjustments leading to permanent desirable changes needed 
 in carrying forward satisfactorily his program of living. 
 
 3. No child is a complete failure, but on the other hand, he 
 experiences growth in a real way and is successful from the 
 beginning according to his capacities and his interests. 
 
 4. The whole community is the teacher's schoolroom, her 
 laboratory; to the children, it is their world, their work- 
 shop, their home. 
 
 5. As far as possible, everything that does not carry over into 
 the life of the child and does not help to strengthen his 
 moral, mental, physical, and social liber then is eliminated 
 from the program. However, this understanding teacher 
 guides the child in such a way as to help him include at the 
 appropriate time those things adjudged worthwhile to his 
 all-round development. 
 
 6. In evaluating pupil progress, the changed ways of behaving 
 are considered as the real test of learning rather than the 
 oral command of subject matter, and the emphasis is placed 
 upon the actual living through a valuable experience. 
 
 As a result of this satisfying way of living and growing, 
 learning and working, there is every indication that desirable 
 growth, development, and adjustments along many lines have 
 been effected in the daily life of every child participating. Some 
 observable evidences of the productive changes made in these 
 children are: (1) the quickening of interest; (2) the improve- 
 ment in ability to think creatively and critically; (3) the im- 
 provement in ability to become socially minded; (4) the pro- 
 gressive achievement in all phases of growth; and, (5) the 
 growth in ability to make desirable changes in their program 
 of living. 
 
 In the last analysis, the all-important determining factor is 
 the releasing and freeing of the creative power that is some- 
 where imprisoned in every child. To a degree, improved indi- 
 vidual pupil action along the following lines of right living is 
 evident: cooperation, persistence, personal self-dependence in 
 care of own things and in surroundings, right attitude toward 
 school and school work, respect for older people, initiative, lead- 
 ership, resourcefulness, profitable use of leisure time, fairness 
 toward others and himself in games, civic responsibility, ability 
 
The Present Situation 41 
 
 to talk intelligently before group, interest and participation in 
 group activities without self -consciousness , consciousness of 
 rights of others, respect fon contributions of others, desire for 
 knowledge and information concerning his everyday life and 
 environment, keen powers of observation, desire to share with 
 others, desire to create, ability plus a desire to read and write 
 that prompts voluntary "doings", ability to plan and carry out 
 own plans, ability to present worthy judgments, right attitude 
 toward conduct, and a respect for feelings of others. 
 
 The information assembled on the Attendance and Age Status 
 Tables for the year reflects credit upon the holding power of 
 such a program. Manifestly, the fact that 95 per cent of this 
 group attended school every day — in spite of handicaps — is in- 
 dicative of this. 
 
 Appraisal. 
 
 If we accept education as growth throughout all of life and as 
 broad and as versatile as all of the processes of living, then we 
 must adjust all methods of teaching and training to the intelli- 
 gent understanding and knowledge of the child as an integral 
 personality and of childhood as a stage of the continuous stream 
 of living. Likewise, if our conception of behavior is the growth 
 of the child in relation to his environment, then we must have the 
 type of school where the child's total personality can expand 
 properly and grow happily, naturally, and continuously, and 
 where his character can develop maximally through doing pur- 
 poseful things of interest to him under the wise leadership of a 
 well-adjusted teacher with an alert, observing, learning attitude 
 toward childhood and its problems. Therefore, in light of this, 
 the work of Miss Valentine comes as a unique contribution in the 
 field of educational endeavor. 
 
 This genuine expression of educational art depicts a new atti- 
 tude toward childhood and youth, an enlarged appreciation of the 
 nature of young people and of the sound conditions under which 
 they grow most richly and fully. It is an alliance between 
 abundant living and effective learning ; it is a spirit that pervades 
 over all and through all ; it is a way of life that should be within 
 the reach of all children. 
 
 Instead of being dominated by theories previously formulated 
 and accepted, Miss Valentine strives to help boys and girls unfold 
 normally and healthfully at a rate commensurate with their in- 
 herent powers. Nothing helps accomplish this like a program 
 that takes the child as it finds him, discovers just where he 
 stands in all lines of his growth, and then sets about trying to 
 
42 A Report on Special Education 
 
 harmonize his attitudes and his abilities. Here the child's per- 
 sonality is not sacrificed for outworn and outmoded rules and 
 creeds, but is guarded zealously as his most precious birthright. 
 It is her unchanging conviction that there are extraordinary 
 possibilities in ordinary people, and that if the doors of oppor- 
 tunity are thrown wide so that all boys and girls can develop the 
 best that is within them, amazing results will be obtained from 
 unlikely sources. 
 
 So she labors to contribute vitally and directly toward leading 
 boys and girls to develop within right ideals and aspirations, 
 right purposes and motives that will cause them to think nobly 
 as well as critically, co work effectively and to desire to serve 
 the welfare of all as well as their own advancement, enjoyment, 
 and well-being. Therefore, she seeks always to see the proper 
 relationships in each situation and to guide each pupil's reac- 
 tions intelligently through effective study and experiencing in 
 enough real and vital situations so that each child may evolve 
 ways of right behaving, may become self-directing, and finally 
 may "build such dynamic outlook, insight, habits, and attitudes, 
 as will enable him to hold to his course amid change." In truth, 
 each day's experiencing is teeming with fruitful possibilities for 
 helping all children to lose themselves in their own chosen in- 
 terests, and then, through the proper guidance of the releases 
 set in motion, to find a satisfying way of life by which to chart 
 their own courses aright from day to day. 
 
 In true perspective, this program of democratic living is neither 
 curriculum centered nor child centered, but life centered; it is 
 primarily concerned with neither the amount the child learns nor 
 with the uniqueness of what he creates, but with his emotional 
 stability and his ability to live completely and to get along with 
 others well; it believes in developing control from within, not 
 from without ; it emphasizes creation, not acquisition ; it subordi- 
 nates subject matter to personality; it substitutes the social 
 motive of group participation for the competitive motive of indi- 
 vidual achievement; it considers the changed ways of behaving 
 as the real test of learning rather than the oral command of sub- 
 ject matter, and places its emphasis upon the actual living 
 through a valuable experience; it measures its success not in 
 terms of grades and credits, but in terms of the character, the 
 culture, and the effectiveness of the personalities of the children. 
 
 Finally, the true spirit of this school experience may be 
 characterized thus : 
 
The Present Situation 43 
 
 And so, working and playing together, the children 
 and teacher created a singing, happy home where love 
 and work and friendship developed: Joy in Living, 
 Skill in Doing, Ideals of Serving, Desire for Growing, 
 Appreciation of Beauty, and Belief in and Reverence for 
 the Goodness of a Divine, All-giving Power. 
 Here we have a type of work which could well be used as a 
 guide by all grade teachers. The entire program is based upon a 
 long-range view of desirable maximum child development in all 
 of its corresponding relationships. It offers protection against 
 many serious handicaps and hazards of everyday life that pro- 
 foundly affect his physical, emotional, social, and intellectual 
 growth. Thus it contributes either directly or indirectly toward 
 a better part in life by making it possible to care more adquately 
 and effectively, not only for neglected children and those in danger 
 of becoming delinquent, but also for all other children in the sys- 
 tem. Such a school is an unmixed blessing, whether it serves as 
 an adjuster of the average child, the supplier of the deficient 
 experiences to those who need them, or the happy exercise ground 
 for a superabundance of experience to those able to move ahead. 
 In several important respects, this total school experience in- 
 volves many crucial and highly significant features. Because 
 of the distinctive values accruing from this type program which 
 is suited to the best development of all children, it seemed de- 
 sirable that an accurate account should be recorded of this effort 
 to further educational progress. Therefore, a comprehensive, 
 firsthand study of this project was made in order to determine 
 those elements of greatest worth inherent in the developmental 
 process and to preserve these for the use they may be in giving 
 guidance and direction to present and future educational plans 
 in North Carolina, and for the value they may be to others in 
 initiating or furthering a constructive program. This experi- 
 ment, however, was completed at the close of the last school 
 term. 
 
 For a detailed report of this program, see Publication No. 200, 
 issued by the State Department of Public Instruction, Raleigh, 
 North Carolina. 
 
 A similar program has also been carried forward most suc- 
 cessfully by Miss Valentine with a typical third grade group of 
 forty children in a rural consolidated school. The same funda- 
 mental tenets were adhered to as formerly ; the same philosophy 
 of democratic living was expressed throughout the day's happy, 
 successful experiencing together. 
 
44 A Report on Special Education 
 
 In spite of the short time this large group worked together 
 on this new basis, it was significant to note that pronounced 
 individual pupil growth along all lines was effected. This only- 
 serves to furnish further proof that a program of creative living 
 and learning in action, as described above, will serve equally- 
 well all types of children to be found in our public schools — not 
 only the average child, but also those with exceptional problems. 
 
 A County-wide Professional Study Program 
 Introducing Guidance 
 
 Only recently has North Carolina become guidance-conscious. 
 To many this consideration naturally raises several pointed ques- 
 tions : "How will guidance fit into the picture we have conceived 
 of education? Of what value will this new function be to those 
 being educated? What changes will that entail in our present 
 plan? Where shall we begin? How shall we proceed?" Before 
 the schools subscribe to this new movement in any one particular, 
 however, it is important at the outset that they view the vital 
 aspects of the program as a whole and thereby get the proper 
 perspective of the total picture upon which to base their decisions. 
 
 Thus far many definitions of education have been propounded. 
 Doubtless there will be many more viewpoints expressed as time 
 passes. For our consideration at this point, Dr. William H. 
 Kilpatrick's general interpretation of education as the "process 
 of building self by guiding and enriching life so that more life 
 ensues" seems highly significant and entirely adequate to follow 
 as a foundation base at the present. Moreover, he states further 
 that "self is but life summed up into one pattern. Life is but the 
 self alive and active." If this major premise is accepted, then 
 one must naturally conclude that all education is guidance — the 
 master key that helps each child unlock the door that leads to the 
 development of his better self. 
 
 In order that the schools may take this into account and pro- 
 vide fully for the continuous, harmonious growth of each child 
 enrolled, the fundamental concept of education must be enlarged 
 in the minds of all educators to include child guidance, not as a 
 separate function but as an integral part of the whole — to be 
 followed at the appropriate time by a specialized aspect of the 
 term. Thus an all-inclusive educational program in progress 
 notes from the beginning those significant facts and trends re- 
 lating to every child and then seeks to make early individual 
 adjustments that will prevent the fixing of bad habits, the 
 ignoring of specific handicaps, and the stifling of outstanding 
 
The Present Situation 45 
 
 abilities. Instead of being unduly concerned with the amount of 
 subject matter to be mastered, the teachers in such a program 
 vision as their larger task the proper development of their pupils 
 in good habits of work, worthy intellectual interests, wholesome 
 social attitudes, high ideals of personal conduct, and a set of 
 sound life values. 
 
 From the time they enter school, children display distinguish- 
 able traits, both native and those resulting from growth and 
 training. However, schools are only beginning to realize the 
 importance of studying the whole child, of learning to know his 
 abilities and his limitations from every standpoint, and in the 
 light of this knowledge, of helping him to develop a better inte- 
 grated personality and a socially satisfying way of life. To give 
 such guidance, teachers need more and more to understand child 
 development at all levels of his growth, to study the most appro- 
 priate ways of meeting individual and group situations, and how 
 to project a program that will help effect the desired goal set out 
 to be achieved. 
 
 It then appears that those who guide our youth should be fully 
 aware of the need for rendering appropriate guidance service on 
 the most comprehensive basis possible. Not only should there be 
 an awareness, but there must be actual training in how to attack 
 the ever-growing problems as they arise. Supervisors and ad- 
 ministrators in various school systems are becoming increasingly 
 dependent upon programs of in-service professional training as a 
 direct means for stimulating improvement and bringing about 
 desirable changes in point of view and working methods on the 
 part of their teaching staffs. Such an opportunity, all things 
 being equal, will help them build a living, dynamic program of 
 education fitted to the varying needs, aptitudes, capacities, and 
 interests of each child in the group here and now. 
 
 The following outline of the tentative county-wide professional 
 study program in progress in the Mecklenburg County Rural 
 Schools is indicative of what can be projected on a twofold basis 
 in the interest of both teacher and pupil growth and development : 
 
 Realizing the increasing need for a more definite program 
 which would enable boys and girls to meet situations of 
 life, the Professional Study Committee of Mecklenburg 
 County Teachers' Association selected Guidance as the 
 theme for study for the next three years. The following 
 definition was accepted : "Guidance is a process of acquaint- 
 ing the individual with various ways in which he may dis- 
 cover, and use his natural endowment, in addition to special 
 training available from any source, so that he may live, and 
 
46 A Report on Special Education 
 
 make a living, to the best advantage to himself and to 
 society." 
 
 AIM FIRST YEAR 
 
 1. Familiarize ourselves with meaning of Guidance in 
 schools. 
 
 2. Evaluate our present Guidance Program. 
 
 3. Decide on what we can and will do. 
 
 4. Summarize and put into pamphlet form outstanding 
 phases of work during year. 
 
 METHOD OF PROCEDURE 
 
 1. Professional Study Committee appointed by Superin- 
 tendent and Supervisor, composed of representatives 
 from following groups: High School Principals, High 
 School Teachers, Agriculture, Home Economics, Gram- 
 mar Grade and Primary. 
 
 2. Committee unanimous in choice of Guidance as theme 
 and requested assistance from the State Supervisor of 
 Occupational Guidance, under whose direction they 
 have worked. 
 
 3. Each local school selected two counselors, one high 
 school and one elementary. High school counselor 
 serves as chairman of high school group in following 
 capacities : 
 
 (a) Assists in group and individual counseling, and 
 dealing with individual problem cases; assists 
 home-room teacher in planning and working out 
 details of home-room periods. 
 
 (b) Serves on County Guidance Committee which 
 meets upon call. 
 
 (c) Has charge of all Guidance material and building 
 up library reference material. 
 
 (d) Member State and National Vocational Guidance 
 Association. 
 
 (e) Coordinates Guidance work. 
 
 4. Monthly county-wide meetings. General session one 
 hour, departmental groups (9 High School, 8 Elemen- 
 tary) one hour. Each department selected its chair- 
 man and Program Committee at first meeting. In de- 
 partmental groups, discussion of Guidance from stand- 
 point of individual pupil development along following 
 lines : 
 
 (a) Guiding pupils in solving personal problems and 
 making home and school adjustments. 
 
 (b) Adjustment of failures, causes of absences and 
 dropping out. 
 
 (c) Adequate school records for individual students. 
 
 (d) Development of civic responsibilities. 
 
The Present Situation 47 
 
 (e) Follow-up of high school graduates with view of 
 better meeting needs. 
 
 (f) Study occupational fields and aid in selection of 
 suitable life work. 
 
 (g) Development of experimental and exploratory 
 units in field of work for inclusion in regularly 
 scheduled subjects. 
 
 (h) Recreational program and use of leisure time. 
 3. Evaluation of high schools using State Bulletin No. 6 
 and Guidance Service Section G. 
 
 Appraisal. 
 
 In consideration of the initial plans herewith presented, it 
 appears that the Mecklenburg County rural schools are making 
 an intelligent approach to the county-wide study of guidance as a 
 logical part of the entire school program. Their immediate 
 activities involve taking into account the present status of the 
 program already underway in their schools and evaluating it 
 critically in terms of a new concept of educational guidance. This 
 procedure should be of undoubted value in giving proper direction 
 to the projection of desirable next steps. The fact that the com- 
 mittee in charge decided upon a minimum three-year period of 
 concentrated study on this problem is indicative of the long look 
 ahead this group is taking in a desire to find satisfactory con- 
 clusions upon which to establish a constructive program and then 
 to proceed on this basis. 
 
 There is a definite need in our schools for a well-balanced edu- 
 cational program that will help each individual child on his own 
 level of growth search happily and inquisitively for proper solu- 
 tions to his specific problems and at the same time enable him to 
 bring about permanent desirable changes within himself. It is 
 to be hoped that the consistent efforts of all the groups repre- 
 sented in the Mecklenburg situation will be coordinated in such a 
 way as to build a unified functional program from the first grade 
 through the high school on an increasingly higher level. The 
 professional services available from the regularly employed rural 
 school supervisor in the county as well as from the State super- 
 visor of Occupational Guidance should be of distinct service to 
 the various committees in helping them formulate their detailed 
 plans and make the proper orientation necessary to adequate 
 functioning in school living. If this is effected, then educational 
 guidance as an integrating factor in our schools will come to have 
 a broader and a more significant meaning in the all-round de- 
 velopment of better harmonized personalities. 
 
48 A Report on Special Education 
 
 PRESENT SIGNIFICANT PRACTICES AFFECTING 
 CHILD DEVELOPMENT 
 
 Although it is generally conceded by school people themselves 
 that current remedial and corrective practices on the whole might 
 well be improved, the efforts of those centers in the State that 
 are forging ahead along this line must not be minimized. The 
 brief statements of activities cited below are indicative of the 
 most significant changes that are being made at the present time 
 in various school units toward the improvement of school pro- 
 grams in general : 
 
 1. A brief survey was made recently regarding (1) certain 
 specific pupil and teacher needs that were met satisfactorily 
 during the last school term, and (2) the professional ex- 
 periences participated in by teachers during the year. 
 Teachers cooperated by filling out information blanks that 
 called for some of the significant features characteristic of 
 a meaningful program. Others helped by giving their frank 
 and unbiased reaction to certain fundamental principles upon 
 which a program of democratic living and learning must be 
 based. 
 
 When the information was tabulated, the composite re- 
 sults indicated that the schools represented have made a 
 bare beginning toward meeting some of the vital needs of 
 children along the lines suggested, — for example, a thorough 
 physical examination of each child and the elimination of 
 defects found ; facilities and necessary materials provided 
 and used properly during the school day for resting and 
 sleeping, for washing and drying hands, and so forth ; oppor- 
 tunities for developing creative expression; and opportuni- 
 ties for social growth through active participation in the 
 program in a variety of ways. It was encouraging to note, 
 however, that the progress to date has been on a sane but 
 progressive basis. Moreover, a foundation has been laid for 
 rapid expansion from this point, provided proper profes- 
 sional guidance is available. 
 
 As a natural consequence, it followed rather logically from 
 the record that the teachers, on the whole, were in need of 
 the following professional assistance: (1) Constructive 
 services of various State, county, and community agencies ; 
 (2) intelligent professional guidance in the solution of im- 
 mediate problems and in the projection of desirable next 
 steps ; and (3) sufficient materials of varied type to promote 
 healthful living and creative expression. A close-up view 
 of the total data compiled furnished further contributing 
 evidence that narrowed professional experiences, re-enforced 
 by limited professional guidance, were helping to prevent 
 many teachers from moving forward more successfully to- 
 ward meeting the needs and interests of boys and girls. 
 
The Present Situation 49 
 
 2 An increasing number of teachers are recognizing more and 
 more the importance of using cumulative pupil records 
 based on continued observation, scientific test data, and 
 other available pertinent information to locate the specific 
 difficulties of each particular child presenting a problem and 
 to determine the type program best adapted to his present 
 stage of all-round growth. And so in these more favored 
 situations, the selection of the children who seem to stand 
 most in need of special education is not dependent upon 
 chance, but is based upon intelligent understanding. There 
 are some classes that have had the benefit of superior 
 psychological service and guidance from the State Board of 
 Charities and Public Welfare, the University of North Caro- 
 lina, the Caswell Training School, and other institutions. 
 
 3. In case of those children who are hard of hearing, have de- 
 fective vision, or are suffering from cardiac or other 
 troubles, it is found that certain adjustments in regard to 
 seating arrangement, use of materials, amount and kind of 
 recreational and concentrated school activities, proper rest 
 and nutrition, and the like, are made frequently by teachers 
 — if they are aware of the difficulty involved. 
 
 4. Similarly, proper attention is being given in some schools to 
 such matters as physical, mental, social, and emotional 
 health of the children enrolled. And so instead of forcing 
 children into molds, the teachers in question are beginning 
 to reorganize the courses of study, methods, and discipline 
 to fit the children as they are and to make use of a broader 
 and more inclusive curriculum based upon the fundamental 
 needs of the group. Where this condition is present, 
 different groups of pupils are traveling at different rates 
 and covering different amounts and different kinds of sub- 
 ject matter happily and satisfactorily under the wise 
 guidance of an understanding teacher. 
 
 Likewise, a flexible daily program is slowly replacing the 
 formal, rigid, iron-clad, set-out-to-be-followed period-by- 
 period schedule ; and larger integrated units of experience in 
 real living are taking priority over small, unrelated, isolated 
 units of subject matter set-out-to-be-learned as daily- 
 ground-to-be-covered. Appropriate to this broader concep- 
 tion of method are the newer grading systems and programs 
 of evaluation which are being used to some extent by indi- 
 vidual teachers. Increasingly, our schools are beginning to 
 realize the importance of providing a stimulating school en- 
 vironment in which creative teaching and learning can take 
 place and which best conditions child development. And so 
 there is a gradual breaking away from the old regime and 
 all that it entails. 
 5. More and more teachers are showing a growing desire to 
 understand children as developing individuals. Increasingly, 
 we find those who study the child and his responses in order 
 to secure leads for the wiser guidance of his all-round 
 
50 A Report on Special Education 
 
 growth. Likewise, there are some who use advantageously 
 a variety of realistic experiences, firsthand contacts, and 
 observations as a natural source for helping the child relate 
 to his life what he is learning. 
 
 6. The educator today who takes into account the ability of the 
 child to profit maximally from the total educational situation 
 must also be concerned about the sort of grouping and the 
 varied school opportunities and experiences that will best 
 promote his development. This precludes the belief that 
 education should be a continuous process without evident 
 breaks and gaps between the grades or between school 
 divisions. 
 
 A fine example of this viewpoint in action is the Hayes 
 Barton School of the Raleigh City System. Here all grade 
 lines have been eliminated in the primary school. Each 
 child is permitted to move forward at his own accomplish- 
 ment rate without having an opportunity to experience 
 failure of promotion in the first three grades. As soon as he 
 completes the work in this division satisfactorily, he enters 
 the grammar school. It is to be hoped that this plan will be 
 projected on each succeeding level and eventually will be in 
 operation in each division throughout the system. 
 
 A similar organization has been initiated in a few systems 
 within the past year or so; however, the type philosophy 
 that was underway failed to warrant a measure of success to 
 the project. No doubt by now, there are other school units 
 in the State operating on a satisfactory basis. 
 
 7. Perhaps the greatest effort is directed toward helping chil- 
 dren reach standard in the fundamental subjects. And so 
 when the need arises, subject groups are formed and con- 
 centrated work is launched. Various means are employed to 
 accomplish this goal. Some teachers organize the work on 
 an individual basis. Here an effort is made to help each 
 child analyze his own needs, set up his own program of work, 
 and then advance at his own rate. Others hold to small 
 flexible groups, so that a child may be transferred from one 
 to another when different levels of progress are evidenced. 
 There are some teachers who functionalize their program. 
 By so doing, they guide each individual child to participate 
 in a vital activity for which he feels a definite need or 
 interest and then use this need to help motivate him into 
 the various subject-matter fields. In this instance, the 
 materials made available are carefully selected with refer- 
 ence to difficulty, stimulating content, and special appeal to 
 the interests of the individual. 
 
 If extreme care is not exercised to prevent it from oc- 
 curring, there will be school situations in which the em- 
 phasis is shifted inadvertently from pupil development to 
 achievement gains. For example, in one school last year the 
 music teacher spent one period in the afternoon helping 
 those children in one grammar grade who were having 
 
The Present Situation 51 
 
 reading difficulties. Although easier material was used for 
 this work, there was no evidence that the teacher was aware 
 of the specific difficulty of each child in the group or that she 
 was adapting her method to meet the existing needs. Nor 
 did the children seem conscious of their particular responsi- 
 bility in regard to any part of the program. This remedial 
 plan, as carried out, was rather perfunctory in type and 
 proved to be of very little, if any, direct value to the children 
 involved. In this case the regular teacher could have used 
 the hour with the group far more advantageously — even in 
 spite of the crowded situation. 
 
 It is an accepted fact today that our elementary schools are 
 making greater progress in regard to the democratic re- 
 organization and administration of the school program and 
 the establishment of newer and more acceptable school 
 practices than any other division of the school system. Like- 
 wise, it may be said that the primary grades are leading the 
 way in effecting those fundamental constructive changes 
 upon which other school progress depends. The following 
 activities, taken from a progress report on "Trends in the 
 Improvement of the Kindergarten-Primary Work in North 
 Carolina" that was made by Miss Hattie S. Parrott, Division 
 of Instructional Service, State Department of Public In- 
 struction, are of special interest because of the implications 
 inherent therein for the building of a program that will 
 better insure all-round growth, development, and success on 
 a sound basis: 
 
 a. In cooperation with the local Parent-Teacher Association, 
 pre-school clinics are held during the spring term in the 
 various schools of the State. At that time, physical 
 examinations are given by the members of the Health De- 
 partment to those children who expect to enter school in 
 the fall. If possible, all defects are remedied during the 
 summer months. 
 
 In this connection, the Beginners' Day Program has 
 been established as a regular part of the school work. 
 Each school provides a program of activities for the day 
 which tends to interest five-year-olds in "belonging" to 
 the school. The parents visit the school with the pre- 
 school child, and the time there is spent in becoming ac- 
 quainted with the first-grade teacher, the school nurse, 
 the dentist, and the local physician or the health officer. 
 By interviews and examinations, information concerning 
 the present equipment of the child is recorded for future 
 use by the teacher. The introduction to the classroom is 
 a pleasant one, and the pre-school child goes away for the 
 time being and looks forward with keen interest to the 
 day when he can enter school. The parents and teachers 
 are better acquainted and work together to insure first- 
 grade readiness to the school beginner. 
 
52 A Report on Special Education 
 
 b. Junior-primary grades are organized in many schools in 
 order to provide more adequately for the needs of the 
 immature children entering school before they are six 
 years of age. No formal learning is attempted in these 
 grades, but the physical, mental, and social needs of the 
 children provide the basic foundation of the curriculum 
 as developed. 
 
 c. In order to train teachers for the work with children of 
 pre-school age (children below six years of age), a kinder- 
 garten unit in two of the training schools for teachers 
 in the State has been organized. Children of kinder- 
 garten age are admitted, and a curriculum is developed to 
 suit their needs and interests. 
 
 d. Special classes for immature and undeveloped pupils, in- 
 cluding the subnormal group, are operating in experi- 
 mental centers for the purpose of research and study in 
 curriculum development. The chief purpose in this plan 
 is to demonstrate the practicability of a curriculum made 
 up of learning experiences in "better living" with little 
 emphasis on formal learning from books. 
 
 e. Many of the new elementary school buildings provide 
 separate toilets for very young children. Junior equip- 
 ment (toilets, lavatories, and drinking fountains) is also 
 installed. Movable furniture (individual tables and 
 chairs) is provided in practically all of the new primary 
 building units. In some situations, buildings for very 
 young children (called Primary Units) are constructed 
 and fitted up to suit the needs of growing boys and girls 
 of the pre-school and primary-school age. 
 
 f. Local branches of the Association for Childhood Educa- 
 tion have been organized in different sections of the 
 State — bringing together nursery school, kindergarten, 
 and primary teachers. 
 
 g. Study groups are conducted for mothers of pre-school 
 children and special institutes and lectures are provided 
 for the parents and teachers who wish to better under- 
 stand children at various age and growth levels, begin- 
 ning with the child of nursery-school age. 
 
 h. A nursery school has been established in connection with 
 the Home Economics Department of the Woman's Col- 
 lege of the University of North Carolina. Students in 
 Home Economics may observe and participate in the 
 nursery school program. 
 
 i. Special libraries of literature in the field of pre-school 
 education are available for students and educational 
 workers in this State. 
 
 CONTRIBUTING SERVICES OF VARIOUS ALLIED GROUPS 
 
 The several youth-serving agencies concerned directly with 
 promoting different aspects of general health and child welfare 
 
The Present Situation 53 
 
 are working in harmony with the schools on both a coordinated 
 and a cooperative basis. These include such groups as public 
 health units, extension services, child welfare groups, Parent- 
 Teacher Associations, Federal agencies, and similar organizations. 
 The following specific activities are typical of some of the most 
 effective direct help rendered by them to the children on the 
 elementary school level: 
 
 1. In cooperation with the Federal Surplus Commodities Corpo- 
 ration, the distribution division of the State Board of 
 Charities and Public Welfare, functioning through its 
 district and local units, has provided free school lunches for 
 85,072 undernourished school children in 1073 schools thus 
 far this year. Ninety-two counties out of a possible one 
 hundred are participating in this service. Moreover, the 
 Works Progress Administration has furnished special lunch 
 room workers for those schools complying with certain regu- 
 lations, and also supervisors to direct the work and hold it 
 up to a high standard of excellence. As a further aid in 
 this connection, garden and canning projects have been car- 
 ried forward in many communities by local W.P.A. workers. 
 
 Many schools have also had the services of one or more 
 persons in the promotion of their sanitary program, work- 
 ing under the jurisdiction of district supervisors and in 
 cooperation with the school administration. 
 
 It is not enough for the schools to have the tangible con- 
 tributions of these various agencies. There are other im- 
 portant educational considerations to be taken into account. 
 Now that the administrative details in this connection have 
 been worked out satisfactorily, those who are responsible 
 for integrating these services more fully into the regular 
 school program will no doubt continue to unify their efforts 
 until maximum results are obtained. 
 
 2. Under the leadership of the official school groups, the Home 
 Demonstration Agent, and the Parent-Teacher Associations, 
 some of the rural communities in North Carolina have con- 
 ducted over a period of years cooperative garden and can- 
 ning projects in the interest of the school hot lunch program. 
 To the generous supply of canned goods provided by the 
 community at large are added various contributions from 
 the different homes represented. The larger children cook 
 and serve the lunch under the guidance of the teacher in 
 charge. This community-wide hot lunch plan enables every 
 child to have the benefit of a hot dish each day during the 
 school term. The educational outcomes thus far have been 
 invaluable to all concerned. Halifax County Rural Schools 
 present a fine example of how this type of coordinated pro- 
 gram — initiated by the former county superintendent of 
 schools and the rural school supervisor — has been developed 
 and operated cooperatively on a county-wide basis for a 
 period of twelve or more years. 
 
54 A Report on Special Education 
 
 3. Pre-school clinics are sponsored each spring by the school 
 officials and the Parent-Teacher Associations. Concen- 
 trated effort is put forth to make the day's activities con- 
 tribute to a better preparation for each child beginning 
 school in the fall. Effective follow-up work is often done 
 with those children who have defects to be remedied during 
 the summer months or who need to take certain immuniza- 
 tion tests. 
 
 4. The local city and county health departments assist the 
 schools in promoting child-health services by providing 
 general direction and guidance, consultation, educational 
 materials, and other pertinent help when it is needed. More 
 attention is centered, however, upon such activities as: 
 conducting physical examinations of all pre-school children 
 prior to school entrance and of other elementary school 
 children periodically during this period ; administering im- 
 munization tests; checking for evidences of certain devas- 
 tating diseases among children; controlling the spread of 
 contagious and communicable diseases ; and promoting other 
 similar health measures. 
 
 Some health units conduct most successful tonsil clinics 
 during the summer months for the benefit of those children 
 who are unable financially to pay the full cost of such an 
 operation at a regular hospital. Various local organizations 
 often cooperate by sponsoring those cases who cannot meet 
 even a minimum clinic charge. It must be admitted, how- 
 ever, that many needy children have been deprived at times 
 of such a service, due to the fact that the organized medical 
 group intervened and blocked the original program. When 
 such a plan is operated on a sound basis, such interference 
 should not be tolerated by thinking citizens. 
 
 Constructive follow-up work often fails to claim a pro- 
 portionate part of the time given to the total school health 
 program, due largely to a lack of personnel staff sufficient 
 to meet the immediate demands made upon the services of 
 the department. More emphasis should be placed upon (1) 
 the thorough examination of all children who most need it 
 at the time; (2) the correction of conditions causing ill 
 health; and (3) an even more intensive preventive program 
 on an educational basis than is the general practice now, 
 including the continuous supervision of the child from his 
 infancy until he reaches school age, and the development 
 of intelligent cooperation on the part of the home and the 
 school. Moreover, the school health departments, working 
 in close harmony with the local physicians and the school 
 group, would make another most significant contribution to 
 child welfare if they assembled a complete register of every 
 physically handicapped child in the area served. Whatever 
 is needed to help effect these vital additions to the excellent 
 program already in operation should be made available 
 without further delay. 
 
The Present Situation 55 
 
 For many years the State Board of Health has served the 
 various needs of children on a very high plane. Perhaps no 
 single activity has left a more pronounced immediate and 
 long-view educational imprint on the elementary school 
 children of the State than the dental health program, 
 initiated and projected by the Division of Oral Hygiene 
 under the leadership of Dr. Ernest A. Branch. Although 
 the chief emphasis has be'en directed toward prevention in 
 its proper relation to personality development, due con- 
 sideration has also been given to such factors as research, 
 education, examination, and correction. 
 
 The following Summary Report on file in the Director's 
 office presents an accurate picture of the work participated 
 in by the Division of Oral Hygiene and the general plan of 
 operation followed : 
 
 Mouth Health Teaching in the Schools of 
 North Carolina 
 
 The four essential factors in arriving at and carrying on 
 the present plan and set-up for the teaching of mouth health 
 in the schools of the State are as follows : 
 
 a. North Carolina has a dentist, recommended by the North 
 Carolina Dental Society and appointed by the Governor, 
 as a member of the State Board of Health. 
 
 b. North Carolina is the only State having a law requiring 
 that a dentist be a member of each County Board of 
 Health, provided a dentist lives within the confines of the 
 county. 
 
 c. North Carolina is one of the few States that have, in their 
 Boards of Health, Divisions of Oral Hygiene on an 
 equality with other divisions and directed by licensed 
 dentists who devote their full time to the work. 
 
 d. The Division of Oral Hygiene of the North Carolina State 
 Board of Health has, in addition to the Director, a staff 
 of thirty licensed dentists and an educational consultant. 
 
 The Director is responsible for the activities of the 
 Division. He supervises and directs the dentists in the field, 
 teaches mouth health in the teacher-training institutions of 
 the State, lectures to civic clubs, and meets with appro- 
 priating bodies to secure outside funds to help finance the 
 program. 
 
 The dentists on the staff go into the schools and teach 
 mouth health didactically and through demonstration. The 
 didactic teaching is graded and fitted to the different grades 
 and groups. In the lower grades the story method is used 
 and the stories are illustrated with stereopticon views, 
 
56 A Report on Special Education 
 
 blackboard drawings, posters, models, et cetera. In the home 
 economics department foods and food values in their relation 
 to tooth and bone building are stressed, and in the science 
 department the dentists take up tooth histology. 
 
 After the didactic teaching has been done, the mouths of 
 the children in each grade are inspected. The children are 
 classified by their grade teacher as to their ability to pay. 
 The dental office is now set up, especial care being taken to 
 make the appearance of the office and the dentist contribute 
 to the constructive educational value of our activity, and we 
 are ready for the demonstrative part of our teaching. In 
 this teaching the necessary dental corrections are made for 
 the underprivileged children without any cost. 
 
 The dentist's teaching in the classrooms is supplemented 
 by follow-up educational material. This material consists 
 of mimeographed sheets for each of the elementary grades. 
 Stories, pictures, the presentation of scientific information, 
 and other methods are used in teaching the value of clean, 
 healthy mouths .... 
 
 Another phase of the educational program is a dental 
 news service for grammar grade and high school papers. 
 Mimeographed sheets, containing a story illustrating some 
 phase of caring for the teeth, are sent in whatever quantities 
 are desired to schools publishing mimeographed papers. 
 These sheets go out twice monthly during the school year. 
 
 A method of visual education which has been very popular 
 and successful in teaching mouth health is the puppet show 
 which the Good Teeth Council for Children and the Carolina 
 Playmakers help us in promoting. This play is presented to 
 approximately 175,000 children every school year. 
 
 Sgt ifZ 5(5 SjS 
 
 The financing of the Division of Oral Hygiene is from the 
 State Board of Health, the Children's Bureau of the Federal 
 Government, and appropriations by counties, cities, Women's 
 Clubs, Parent-Teacher Organizations, individuals, et cetera. 
 This latter money is secured through the presentation of 
 the needs and benefits of the work to these organizations 
 by the Director of the Division .... 
 
 The arrangement for mouth health programs in the coun- 
 ties of the State is that the county pays one-half of the 
 expense and the State Board of Health pays the other half. 
 The length of time spent in the counties depends both upon 
 the needs and the amount of the appropriations by the 
 counties, together with the allocation to the State Board of 
 Health for this activity. 
 
 Mouth health programs were conducted in sixty-one coun- 
 ties and four city units during the school year 1937-1938. 
 The 3,676 lectures which were given by the dentists on the 
 staff were attended by 164,886 children. The necessary 
 dental corrections were made for 68,282 underprivileged 
 
The Present Situation 57 
 
 children. Thousands of referred children are finding their 
 way to the offices of private practitioners, according to 
 verbal reports from dentists in private practice. 
 
 6. The State Department of Vocational Rehabilitation was 
 set up for the purpose of providing rehabilitation service 
 for those physically handicapped individuals in the State 
 who are sixteen years of age or older and are in need of 
 specific help. Although the crippled children of normal 
 elementary-school age are not eligible to be served directly 
 to any great degree by this division, they receive too many 
 courtesies therefrom not to record it here. In fact, it may 
 be said that the Rehabilitation Department more or less 
 considers all physically disabled as their special wards, and 
 so they never hesitate to render whatever service they can 
 to them whether it is their particular responsibility or not. 
 
 7. In many communities various local civic organizations and 
 social agencies are extending a vital service to the excep- 
 tional children by re-enforcing the efforts of the school in 
 far-reaching ways. Chief among these activities are: 
 providing special medical treatment, also visual and dental 
 services for certain cases ; furnishing eyeglasses for indigent 
 children; furnishing funds for special equipment needed, 
 such as cots for general rest periods, necessary furniture 
 and other materials for the use of children with defective 
 vision, playground and gymnasium apparatus, and so forth ; 
 sponsoring specific school projects; helping needy cases; in- 
 forming the general public concerning various aspects of 
 the school program and enlisting their active support; 
 occasionally furnishing transportation from the home of the 
 handicapped child to the center set up to meet his needs. 
 
 8. The two active mental hygiene clinics in the State, located at 
 Charlotte and Winston-Salem respectively, are making 
 articulate their activities with those of the school groups 
 and other agencies concerned with child growth and are 
 thereby rendering valuable services to childhood. The first 
 volume of the Mental Hygiene News, published by the 
 Mental Hygiene Society in July 1939, carried the following 
 articles regarding their specific contributions : 
 
 Charlotte Clinic Continues Service 
 
 The Charlotte Mental Hygiene Clinic is completing its 
 second year of operation as a Community Chest agency. 
 
58 A Report on Special Education 
 
 At the request of the other agencies and school authorities 
 the Clinic accepts adult as well as children's cases, although 
 the greater part of its work is still in the field of child 
 guidance. 
 
 The Clinic is governed by a board, elected from the 
 Charlotte Mental Hygiene Society. The society itself car- 
 ries on an educational program in the community, interpret- 
 ing the work of the Clinic to the public at large. Clinic 
 referrals come from other chest agencies, the county welfare 
 and health departments, the public schools, and private indi- 
 viduals. Society members work with the clinic staff on 
 specified committees to advance the general program. 
 
 One committee has made a special study of the need for 
 remedial reading work in the city schools. This project was 
 suggested by the large number of pupils with reading diffi- 
 culties who were referred to the Clinic. The school princi- 
 pals have been most interested and cooperative. 
 
 Because of its limited financial resources, the clinic board 
 and staff have decided that they can be of greatest service 
 to the community as a consultation agency. A modest per- 
 centage of direct treatment cases is handled regularly, 
 however, and it is their intention to increase the number of 
 these cases as rapidly as the available psychiatric services 
 will permit. 
 
 The staff includes an executive secretary, a psychiatric 
 case worker, and an office secretary on full-time service, and 
 a psychiatrist, a psychologist, and a medical examiner on 
 part-time basis. 
 
 Child Guidance Work Serves Winston-Salem 
 
 The Child Guidance Clinic, which has been the major pro- 
 ject of the Winston-Salem Hygiene Society, has now com- 
 pleted eighteen months of service . as a mental hygiene 
 facility for children in this community. 
 
 A total of 256 children have been referred to the Clinic. 
 Of this number 104 have received full study and treatment. 
 Full service at the Clinic means the cooperative work and 
 examinations of the entire staff: social worker, psycholo- 
 gist, physician, and psychiatrist. One hundred children 
 have been accepted for psychological tests and for advice 
 relating to the results of these tests. Thirty-five cases have 
 been carried for consultation. Seventeen cases were with- 
 drawn before treatment was carried out. In thirty instances 
 cases have been carried in cooperation with some other 
 agency, thus sharing the responsibility for carrying out 
 treatment plans. 
 
 Causes for referral to the Clinic do not always indicate 
 the exact problem as it is defined after examination, but 
 they do portray the original need for assistance. The 99 
 full-service cases came for these reasons : 
 
The Present Situation 59 
 
 Behavior problems 53 
 
 Retarded in school 15 
 
 Personality deviation 11 
 
 Educational problems 13 
 
 Habit training 4 
 
 Training programs for children 
 
 with a physical disability 2 
 
 Guidance for gifted child 1 
 
 99 
 The work of the Clinic will be materially improved when 
 the community can offer such facilities as children's case 
 work, boarding and foster-home care, vocational training, 
 and increased recreational and leisure-time activities. 
 
 IN THE RESIDENTIAL SCHOOLS 
 
 There is an amazing number of children of school age through- 
 out our country who cannot be educated properly or profitably in 
 the regular day classes of the public schools. It is heartening to 
 note, however, that every State in the Union has made some pro- 
 vision for the education of her seriously handicapped children by 
 establishing residential schools for their benefit. Even though 
 the programs followed are widely divergent in regard to offerings 
 and facilities, methods and techniques, organization and adminis- 
 tration, as well as accomplishments, the one main objective to- 
 ward which all efforts are directed is practically the same. 
 Likewise, there is often a wide variation in the time element 
 involved, in the number served, and in the amount and kind of 
 educational opportunities provided for the exceptional children 
 and for those more fortunate ones. 
 
 Those atypical children for whom special educational facilities 
 of a residential type are considered essential are the blind, the 
 deaf, the crippled and delicate children who are confined in a 
 hospital for physical treatment, the socially maladjusted types of 
 a serious nature, and the low mentally deficient. Some of these 
 cases could have been avoided; others must be regarded as in- 
 evitable. Be that as it may, each one presents a separate and 
 distinct educational problem that must be taken into account. 
 Moreover, appropriate plans and procedures must be developed 
 whereby the specific needs of each individual case and type may 
 be met advantageously. If these changes are not forthcoming, 
 both the child and society will suffer for this deficiency. 
 
 As early as 1845, North Carolina recognized her responsibility 
 along this line and promptly took legislative action that resulted 
 in the establishment of the State School for the Blind and Deaf. 
 
60 A Report on Special Education 
 
 From time to time, special plans have been made for other handi- 
 capped groups until now seven residential schools are maintained 
 for the benefit of five different types. 
 
 In spite of the continued progress that has gone forward, 
 North Carolina does not claim that her residential schools in 
 operation are serving all of the children in the State who should 
 have an opportunity to profit by the program offered. With the 
 exception of the list of the blind that was assembled by the Blind 
 Commission, no complete official roster of the different types 
 eligible to attend these schools has ever been compiled. Con- 
 sequently, the actual number to be served is an unknown fact. 
 In the second place, the equipment and facilities available now in 
 the various schools are not considered sufficient to meet the 
 known needs at the present time — inaccurate as the record may 
 be. There is a long waiting list for practically all of the insti- 
 tutions. These two items alone point out quite clearly that the 
 nature and extent of the total problem have not been viewed in 
 true perspective. Until this is done, adequate long-view plans 
 that are based upon the existing needs cannot be developed in- 
 telligently. 
 
 The brief descriptions herewith presented of each school pro- 
 gram in progress is indicative of the nature and scope of the 
 work that is being carried forward in the interest of these several 
 groups : 
 
 Descriptions of Programs in Progress 
 
 STATE SCHOOL FOR THE BLIND AND DEAF 
 
 The State School for the Blind and Deaf, the oldest school in 
 the State for handicapped children, was founded early in 1845. 
 On May first of the same year, the school began its work with 
 only seven pupils in very modest quarters in the capital city. In 
 this conjunction a special department for the Negroes was opened 
 in 1869 on a separate site. However, since 1895, when the white 
 deaf children were moved to a new home in Morganton, the white 
 blind children alone have received their training in the Raleigh 
 institution. Today both groups occupy more adequate plants 
 that are equipped with modern facilities and situated on excellent 
 new sites with sufficient space to meet the needs of the insti- 
 tutions for some time. Additional improvements along various 
 lines are being made as rapidly as possible. 
 
 The school enrollment has grown steadily since its beginning. 
 This increase has been attributed largely to the cooperative 
 efforts of the State Commission for the Blind, working in 
 
The Present Situation 61 
 
 harmony with the State School itself. Among other activities, 
 this Commission made during 1936 perhaps the first complete 
 survey of all the blind in the State. The present enrollment 
 includes 180 white blind, 98 Negro blind, and 100 Negro deaf. 
 
 The following excerpts taken from the 1936-1938 Biennial 
 Report of the Superintendent give a general picture of the work 
 carried on within the school for the white blind : 
 
 The State School for the Blind and Deaf was origi- 
 nally planned to be a special division of the public school 
 system, which would take care of the blind and deaf and 
 furnish to them public school education similar to what 
 was furnished to seeing and hearing children in the 
 State. It furnishes classes in literary work up through 
 the high school grades, preparing the children thor- 
 oughly for entering the higher institutions. The high 
 school has been on the approved list of the Southern 
 Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools since 
 1925, and no question has been raised as to its eligi- 
 bility. 
 
 The School also furnishes excellent music opportuni- 
 ties for the blind in piano, voice, violin, and orchestra 
 work. Industrial divisions for both boys and girls 
 furnish good opportunities for learning trades in which 
 many make a living after leaving school. For the girls 
 there is a department for sewing and also arts and 
 crafts, which all girls are required to take. Piano tuning 
 is offered for the boys and shop work is required of all 
 boys. This work includes chair caning and mattress 
 making and, to a limited extent, broom making. 
 
 The School has an excellent health program, retaining 
 for its work each year a regular practicing physician, 
 a firm of eye, ear, nose, and throat specialists, and also 
 a graduate nurse in charge of the infirmary at the 
 school. The physical education department fits in with 
 this work. One teacher has charge of the gymnasium 
 and swimming pool and also outdoor games and plays 
 which aid greatly in the health program of the insti- 
 tution .... 
 
 The faculty consists of fifteen literary teachers, six 
 music teachers, four teachers of industrial work, and 
 six in the health work .... 
 
 Last year we changed the school from eleven grades 
 to twelve grades above the kindergarten, which has 
 greatly improved our literary work. This gives us 
 practically an ideal arrangement for furnishing the best 
 possible opportunities in literary training and also pro- 
 vides more time for work in music, industrial work, and 
 other departments .... 
 
62 A Report on Special Education 
 
 According to the course of study prescribed for each grade, the 
 academic work is more or less formal in type and centers about 
 subjects rather than pupil activities and experiences. The daily 
 schedule that is followed from day to day further supports this 
 belief. 
 
 The United States Government appropriates $125,000 per 
 annum to the American Printing House for the Blind. All 
 schools of this type are allowed to draw their supply of books and 
 some teaching materials from this source. This aid has been of 
 particular value financially and educationally to the North Caro- 
 lina State School. 
 
 At the request of the school authorities, Columbia University 
 through its Division of the Handicapped is at the present time 
 making a survey of the school as a whole. This activity should 
 prove helpful in planning next steps more intelligently. 
 
 THE NORTH CAROLINA SCHOOL FOR THE DEAF 
 
 The North Carolina School for the Deaf at Morganton, created 
 by a special law passed by the General Assembly in 1891, is a 
 free public school operated for the benefit of those children who 
 are handicapped by deafness. However, it must be remembered 
 that for a period of forty-nine years prior to its opening on 
 October 2, 1894, the deaf children in the State received their 
 training at the Institution for the Deaf and Dumb and Blind at 
 Raleigh. According to the revised By-Laws governing the work 
 of the school, ''it shall be the aim of the school in its total pro- 
 gram to attain, among other things, the following specific 
 objectives: 
 
 1. To seek in every way to help each deaf child become a well- 
 rounded individual who fits into American community 
 life .... 
 
 2. To so equip each child vocationally that he or she may be as 
 nearly as possible self-sustaining. 
 
 3. To develop in each child, as far as possible, a strong healthy 
 body, intelligent attitudes toward health, and wholesome 
 health habits. 
 
 4. To secure for each child, as far as possible, a formal edu- 
 cation through twelve grades on the same level as other 
 public schools in the State. 
 
 5. To develop in each child full capacity in speech-reading. 
 
 6. To develop in each child, as far as possible, capacity to use 
 normal speech." 
 
The Present Situation 63 
 
 Under the leadership of an educational director and two as- 
 sistants, a staff of thirty-five grade teachers was responsible for 
 carrying forward the academic work of the school for the 372 
 pupils enrolled in the primary, grammar, and high school 
 divisions during the term 1938-1939. The State prescribed 
 public school course of study was followed; likewise, the same 
 adopted textbooks were used. Since the oral or speech method 
 is employed throughout the school, every child who enters the 
 institution must be taught orally before he can make progress in 
 the regular work outlined. Consequently, special preliminary 
 courses are given these children at the outset that will enable 
 them to develop language understanding to lay the foundations 
 for speech, to stimulate and develop residual hearing, to secure 
 correct voice placement, and to develop speech-reading. How- 
 ever, if it is necessary to continue the concentrated oral training 
 for some children over a long period, teaching speech and speech- 
 reading becomes a major activity rather than a minor one. 
 
 Through the cooperative efforts of all concerned, the work of 
 the vocational department has been coordinated with that of the 
 school in a most acceptable manner. For the most part, the 
 vocational program is not launched until the seventh grade, when 
 those boys and girls who have an aptitude for certain vocations 
 start their trade practice instruction. Last year there were 
 three organized special-vocational classes in the grammar school 
 and one manual-vocational class in the high school. The director 
 in charge of the work reported that definite instruction in the 
 following activities was given during the past biennium: 
 
 For the boys: General shop work, woodworking and car- 
 pentry, tailoring, printing, dairying, garden- 
 ing, and poultry raising. 
 
 For the girls: Applied arts, home making, cooking, sewing, 
 and dress making. 
 
 With the cooperation of the State Bureau of Labor, the 
 majority of the boys and a number of the girls who completed 
 training during this period have secured employment in the 
 various industries. 
 
 In order to carry out a program of vocational training that will 
 enable each student to have his full chance, it was further stated 
 that the work of the department should be opened to students 
 earlier and that it should also be expanded to include instruction 
 in different trade areas, such as: machine shop work, auto- 
 mobile mechanics, vocational agriculture, home economics, and 
 
64 A Report on Special Education 
 
 handicrafts. In this connection, a demonstration home for the 
 girls' work where various courses can be integrated with actual 
 practice is considered a definite need, also additional modern 
 equipment for the different activities in progress. 
 
 A full-time director of physical education is employed by the 
 school. The major portion of her time is spent doing corrective 
 work in its various phases with the girls, directing organized 
 play, and teaching swimming to all the girls and to the boys 
 under twelve years of age. The athletic work with the boys has 
 been made possible by the voluntary service of several faculty 
 members. 
 
 In addition to the services rendered students on the elementary 
 and secondary levels, a teacher-training department is main- 
 tained for the purpose of training young women to teach the 
 deaf. To be eligible to enter this normal training class, a young 
 woman must have had at least two years of college work, must 
 have good health, also normal vision and hearing. 
 
 The school authorities have followed the standards set up by 
 the Conference of Executives of American Schools for the Deaf 
 in the selection of their teaching personnel. As a result, each 
 teacher at the school has had one year of special training in a 
 recognized institution engaged in training teachers of the deaf, 
 in addition to four years of college training, and also holds a 
 college degree. 
 
 It is to be hoped that every precaution will be used throughout 
 the day's program to make it unnecessary for the students to 
 practice the sign language as a means of communication ; but, on 
 the other hand, active speech participation should be encouraged 
 at all times as the best avenue to attain ease and facility in the 
 use of the English language. Furthermore, every opportunity 
 should be given these children to have varied contacts with both 
 children and adults who are not handicapped as they are. This 
 will be a fine way to help orient them on a sound basis into the 
 outside world in advance of their occupational approach to it. 
 
 STONEWALL JACKSON MANUAL TRAINING AND 
 INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL 
 
 The 1907 State Legislature authorized the establishment of a 
 school that would attempt to salvage human waste by giving a 
 fair chance to the boys of the State who needed its care and 
 direction. Accordingly, with the aid of a small appropriation 
 from the State and with additional help from certain local and 
 State groups, the Stonewall Jackson Manual Training and In- 
 
The Present Situation 65 
 
 dustrial School opened its doors at Concord two years later with 
 one student. During the thirty years that have passed, the 
 record shows that nearly 5,000 delinquent boys have come under 
 the direct influence of the institution and have thereby been 
 given a better opportunity to make the proper adjustment to 
 society and develop into more acceptable citizens. 
 
 From the beginning they are treated as human beings and are 
 "made to feel that they are not peculiar children but just normal 
 boys who, perhaps from lack of training and proper environment, 
 have picked up or acquired habits which are not acceptable nor 
 desirable." Likewise, the school has endeavored to build for 
 them that type home "which would approximate the activities, 
 the environment, and the requirements of a good home." 
 
 The day's routine is so organized that all of the boys go to 
 school half the day and work the other half. However, the en- 
 tire program is arranged for the intellectually normal who have 
 developed anti-social attitudes. Consequently, the mentally 
 deficient in the group find themselves unable to cope with the 
 general set-up of the institution and so present additional 
 problems to the school. Surprising as it may seem, no provision 
 has been made to date for studying the individual cases scien- 
 tifically and then planning a program to meet their specific needs 
 on the basis of the findings. The management recognizes this 
 deficiency in regard to special problem cases and recommends 
 that such boys be sent to a central clinic for psychological and 
 psychiatric study and then placed in an institution capable of 
 dealing with them. 
 
 Regular school attendance is required of all the boys at the 
 institution. Classroom work follows the usual traditional pro- 
 cedure and centers about the different subjects taught in each 
 grade. Special emphasis is placed upon definite study of the 
 assignments made. 
 
 During the past fiscal year 486 boys, ranging in age from eight 
 to eighteen years and in grade placement from first grade to 
 seventh grade, were enrolled in the school. With the exception 
 of two boys in the sixth grade and eight boys in the seventh 
 grade, all of them were over-age for the grade in which they 
 were located. The widest range occurred in the second-grade 
 group with a one to ten-year variation, and the lowest in the 
 seventh grade with a one to four-year difference existing. 
 
 The following account of the activities participated in by the 
 boys during out-of -school hours is typical of the work program 
 that is carried forward there : 
 
66 A Report on Special Education 
 
 Every boy has something to do. He soon finds his 
 level of work that interests and holds him. Each one 
 has a part to perform in the activities in the operation 
 of the school. The bakers set the dough and bake the 
 bread; the laundry boys gather the clothes and return 
 them clean, fresh, and ready for use; the dairy boys 
 bottle and deliver around 175 gallons of milk daily, so as 
 to have ready one quart per day for each boy and suffi- 
 cient quantities for cooking; the vegetable gatherers 
 bring in daily an abundance of vegetables for table use ; 
 the farm boys cultivate the garden and crops ; the poul- 
 try yard workers busy themselves to furnish eggs and 
 poultry for use; the shoe repair force keeps shoes 
 mended and fit for wear; the plumbing force stops the 
 leaks and repairs the breaks in the cottage homes and 
 other buildings ; the sewing room boys make the clothes 
 for our cottages; the printing of cards, blank checks, 
 stationery, and so forth, aside from publishing our 
 weekly magazine, The Uplift, is done by the boys in the 
 printing department; the carpentry shop and machine 
 shop have their complement of boys making repairs to 
 buildings and machinery. 
 
 As each department is essential in the operation of 
 the school, each boy is taught the importance of his 
 part, not only in his own department, but its effect upon 
 the smooth working of the whole system. With few 
 exceptions, the boys do not find time to indulge their 
 inclinations that have made them out of touch with the 
 social order of their community. As a whole they for- 
 get to be bad in rendering a necessary service to others. 
 The most casual observer can see a complete change of 
 attitude. On this basis the school has operated for 
 nearly thirty years and has returned a majority of the 
 boys to their homes where they take their places in 
 almost every occupation that builds the progress of the 
 State and moulds her sturdy citizenship. 
 
 A very careful follow-up of all the boys who leave the insti- 
 tution on parole is made from time to time by the school 
 authorities, and a record is kept of their accomplishments. Ac- 
 cording to the detailed reports on file, there are many individual 
 cases who have "kept their own counsel" and are making 
 splendid contributing citizens in their several communities. 
 
 THE EASTERN CAROLINA TRAINING SCHOOL 
 
 In an effort to serve the boys in Eastern Carolina who were 
 needing definite guidance, the Eastern Carolina Training School 
 located near Rocky Mount was established by a special act of the 
 1923 Legislature. According to the last report on file, it had an 
 
The Present Situation 67 
 
 average resident population of 130 boys for the year and a normal 
 capacity for 150. The. educational status of the group ranged 
 from first grade through the ninth, with an age distribution from 
 ten to nineteen years, and a general retardation spread of 90 per 
 cent for the combined grades represented. 
 
 For a period of eight months an elementary school is in opera- 
 tion for the benefit of the boys enrolled in these grades. The 
 work in progress and the plan of procedure used are fashioned 
 along traditional lines with specific emphasis upon the mastery 
 of subject matter apart from its use. Although there is no or- 
 ganized high school for the students of this level, a special class 
 is arranged for those who wish academic training. 
 
 For the most part, the older boys spend their time participating 
 in various activities of interest to them about the school. "Be- 
 sides the farm and dairy work there must be cooking and 
 cleaning, laundrying and the repairing of clothes. The farm 
 machinery and automobiles must be kept in repair. The build- 
 ings themselves must be checked constantly. Painting, re- 
 placing windows, plumbing and electrical appliances must be 
 looked after. So every day in the year boys are doing these jobs 
 and thereby learning how to do things." 
 
 Recreation plays a significant part in the life of the boys. The 
 work of this department is under the leadership of a director who 
 is definitely responsible for planning and supervising the play and 
 recreational activities for the different groups. In addition to the 
 usual organized games, various forms of entertainment, such as 
 plays and games, motion picture shows, and so forth are pro- 
 vided. Besides the two afternoons during the week that are 
 given over entirely to recreation, every boy has a specified time 
 each day for play. 
 
 THE STATE HOME AND INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL FOR GIRLS 
 
 The State Home and Industrial School for Girls at Eagle 
 Springs is familiarly known as Samarcand Manor. During the 
 biennium 1936-1938 it had an enrollment of 220 girls, varying in 
 chronological age from ten to eighteen and in over-ageness 
 relative to educational grade placement from one to nine years. 
 Each young girl on admission to the school is studied very care- 
 fully as an individual case during the initial period of observation 
 and is given special consideration by the classification committee 
 of the institution, composed of the social investigator, the psy- 
 chologist, the physician, the recreational leader, the principal of 
 the school, the occupational director, and the chaplain. 
 
68 A Report on Special Education 
 
 After a thorough diagnosis of the various aspects of her stage 
 of growth and development has been made by these staff mem- 
 bers, the complete reports submitted are viewed as a whole by 
 the entire group and analyzed in detail in order to determine, if 
 possible, what program would best fit her specific needs and 
 interests at the time. All pertinent studies that had been made 
 by the welfare agencies prior to the child's enrollment, and other 
 available records of value are also used in this connection as a 
 further means toward developing a constructive plan for her 
 proper care and guidance. This tentative follow-up program is 
 subject to revision and adjustment at any time that desirable 
 changes are needed to help the individual child attain more ac- 
 ceptable goals in her program of living. Medical treatment, 
 academic training, recreational activities, and vocational guidance 
 are all planned and carried out with this objective in mind. 
 
 As a definite means toward adapting the school curriculum to 
 the needs of each individual child, the school as a whole has been 
 organized into two main divisions, the academic and the voca- 
 tional. For the period reported there were 24 girls enrolled in 
 the academic classes and 183 in the different vocational groups. 
 
 The academic school offers direct, individualized instruction to 
 children in grades four through eight who show an ability to 
 achieve along this line. Here the Dalton Plan has been instituted 
 as the method of procedure to follow in teaching the prescribed 
 course of study for our public schools. The following excerpts 
 from the school report regarding the academic work in progress 
 are self-explanatory: 
 
 In order that, with a limited number of teachers, we 
 might be able to teach girls coming in at all times of the 
 year and ranging from the fourth through the eighth 
 grade, we adopted the Dalton Plan. By this method the 
 girls of the segregated medical group were also enabled 
 to keep up their school work without interruption. 
 
 In accordance with this plan, each girl when she en- 
 tered school was given a carefully planned typewritten 
 assignment of the work of the first month. The 
 teachers were not to hold any formal classes, but were to 
 be ready at all times to give any help asked for. As soon 
 as a girl finished an assignment in any subject, she was 
 given a test on that subject. When she had passed tests 
 on all her subjects, she was to be given the assignments 
 for the next month. 
 
 This plan went into effect at the beginning of our 
 school year in September 1937. Since that time we have 
 enrolled eleven in the eighth, four in the seventh, six in 
 the sixth, one in the fifth, and two in the fourth grade — 
 
The Present Situation 69 
 
 twenty-four in all. Nineteen of these had been in school 
 long enough to attempt the Stanford Achievement Tests 
 given in April. Sixteen passed these tests, some having 
 made much more than a year's progress as shown by the 
 tests. Of the three who failed, two were poorly pre- 
 pared so that their ability to pass was doubtful from the 
 first. ' 
 
 We feel that on the whole the Dalton Plan of instruc- 
 tion has been more satisfactory in our grades than the 
 former class method of instruction ; however, one of its 
 weakest points is in the little opportunity which it 
 affords for group participation in projects. We fear that 
 the individual student is somewhat handicapped through 
 this weakness, but that its merits overbalance its weak- 
 nesses for our group. 
 
 For those girls who have not yet completed the first three 
 grades, but who would profit by further work in the three R's, a 
 special ungraded class has been organized in which the funda- 
 mentals in these subjects are taught. A similar class for certain 
 children in the vocational school has also been arranged. An 
 effort is made for this formal work to be an outgrowth of a need 
 based upon their daily experiences in life situations. 
 
 The vocational school was organized to meet the needs of those 
 girls who the school authorities feel reasonably sure have reached 
 their maturation level in regard to academic achievement, but 
 could be benefitted by vocational guidance and training in classes 
 developed to stimulate interest and skill in manual activities com- 
 mon to their local communities. 
 
 The school promotes extra-curricular activities as an integral 
 part of the training for more wholesome use of leisure time. 
 Although the girls are encouraged to participate in the various 
 interest groups on their own level, membership is on a voluntary 
 basis. The following organized activities, some seasonal and 
 others year-round, are contributing to the growth and develop- 
 ment of those sharing in them: Scout troops, playground, dra- 
 matics, glee club, home makers' club, nature study, toy orchestra 
 for small children, and Dixie girls. 
 
 While the institutional program of specialized correctional 
 training and treatment claims the major attention of the school, 
 emphasis is also centered upon working out plans and adjusting 
 situations in the home environment that will better enable each 
 child to succeed when she returns to the community on parole. 
 The authorities in charge consider this vital phase of the total 
 rehabilitation period one of significant value in helping to ac- 
 complish maximum restoration for each individual under treat- 
 
70 A Report on Special Education 
 
 ment; so its importance is not minimized nor overlooked in the 
 general scheme of things. 
 
 THE ORTHOPEDIC HOSPITAL SCHOOL 
 
 The Orthopedic Hospital at Gastonia, with a maximum 
 capacity of 160 beds, has been in operation since 1921 for the 
 benefit of indigent crippled children sixteen years of age or 
 under who are mentally sound and whose deformities, in the 
 opinion of the surgeons, can be either cured or improved. During 
 this time the physically handicapped boys and girls who were 
 temporarily hospitalized there had an opportunity, while they 
 were undergoing their corrective treatment, to continue, to a 
 limited degree, some of their school work under the guidance of 
 one teacher employed to serve the entire group. However, 
 definite educational facilities were not provided as a State func- 
 tion for this group until the 1939 General Assembly enacted legis- 
 lation to this effect and appropriated sufficient funds for the 
 establishment and maintenance of a school within the hospital 
 itself on a twelve-months' basis. 
 
 Accordingly, the State's newest and, in many respects, most 
 unusual unit in the system of public education began its period of 
 service in July with five teachers allotted by the State School 
 Commission and with a total pupil enrollment of 128 — 83 white 
 children and 45 Negro. The report for October indicates that 
 148 children out of an average daily population of 159 registered 
 at the hospital for the month were enrolled in the school, with 
 grade levels ranging from nursery school through high school. 
 Since the pupil membership for each grade group varies from 
 week to week, due to frequent admissions and dismissals of 
 patients, many adjustments must be made constantly by both 
 pupils and the entire hospital personnel. As a result, the 
 teachers often find it necessary to adapt their procedures and 
 program of work to conform to the routine changes that occur 
 from time to time. Recently, sixteen N.Y.A. helpers were em- 
 ployed to assist the school in varying capacities. 
 
 The purpose of the school, as set forth by the authorities in 
 charge, is not only to enable these children to continue their 
 education on the grade level consistent with their home school 
 and to prevent any loss of time from school that otherwise would 
 be occasioned by hospitalization, but also to give them the bene- 
 fit of those particular activities that involve therapeutic and 
 rehabilitating values. Upon admission to the institution, follow- 
 ing a clinical diagnosis at one of the State clinics, the children 
 
The Present Situation 71 
 
 are sent to a receiving ward for approximately three weeks. 
 During this probationary period a further inventory of their 
 physical and educational needs is made by the hospital and school 
 staffs in an effort to discover their limitations in detail. All 
 available school records are also studied as an aid in properly 
 classifying each individual pupil. Recommendations are made 
 by the physicians in charge regarding proper rest, exercise, oc- 
 cupational therapy, and the kind and amount of school work 
 that each pupil can participate in profitably. 
 
 The schedule for the day's work is so arranged that the formal 
 subjects are taught during the morning hours, while bedside 
 teaching in the wards and the special activities are left for the 
 afternoon period. In so far as possible, the curriculum provided 
 is similar to that prescribed for the regular public school and 
 centers about the subject fields. If it can be arranged to ad- 
 vantage, group teaching is done in the various wards. Music 
 classes are taught frequently in this way and are enjoyed greatly 
 by the children who put forth every effort to participate in one 
 way or another. The special departments of the school that are 
 now fully organized and functioning are : occupational therapy, 
 music, "Cheerful Children" (the school publication), and the 
 library. All of the children participate in the music program, 
 while about 40 per cent are making use of the library facilities. 
 An opportunity to share in the craft activities is available for all 
 children above the second grade. For those who are not able to 
 go to the shop, craft work is taught on each ward one afternoon 
 period during the week. A gymnasium is provided where, under 
 the direction of skilled orthopedic surgeons and nurses, corrective 
 exercises are given as an aid to restoring the use of crippled arms 
 and legs. 
 
 THE CASWELL TRAINING SCHOOL 
 
 The Caswell Training School at Kinston was created by legis- 
 lative enactment in 1911 for mentally defective boys and girls 
 between the ages of six and twenty-one years and for mentally 
 defective adults who meet certain specific requirements. Among 
 the vital purposes of the school as prescribed by the Consolidated 
 Statutes, the first one set forth was "to segregate, care for, train, 
 and educate mental defectives." Within less than thirty years 
 the institution has grown in physical proportions many times its 
 original size. It has likewise gone forward in the presentation 
 of a program better suited to the needs of the State's most un- 
 fortunate children. 
 
72 A Report on Special Education 
 
 An integral part of the program is the academic division, or the 
 school department, in session for nine months under the leader- 
 ship of the principal and five regular teachers. According to the 
 record for 1938, the 326 children participating in school activities 
 were grouped into five main divisions, namely: kindergarten, 
 pre-primary, primary, intermediate, and advanced. As there is 
 a wide variation between the mental and chronological ages of 
 these children, the course of study for the different groups does 
 not correspond similarly to that set up for regular classes so 
 labelled. On the contrary, an effort is made to adjust the work, 
 as far as possible, to meet the mental maturity level of the group. 
 For example, one would find the intermediate boys and girls 
 attacking first and second-grade work, while the advanced group 
 would be studying North Carolina history and geography and 
 other related subjects. However, the academic work seldom ex- 
 ceeds the fourth-grade level. Each year a specific school project 
 is selected and carried out by each teacher in her classroom 
 activities and progams. A study of North Carolina was the 
 general theme about which the academic work in all departments 
 of the school was centered at this time. 
 
 Twice a week the advanced girls are given practical lessons in 
 domestic science. As a result, some of the girls have learned to 
 bake bread, cakes, and pies. Each girl participating made an 
 apron, two towels, several napkins and table mats to be used in 
 the cooking class ; while some of them were skillful in doing very 
 lovely embroidery that found a ready sale. 
 
 The craft and manual arts activities have brought great satis- 
 faction to the children. We are told that the accomplishments 
 have been markedly outstanding. The boys have shown improve- 
 ment in their rug weaving and woodwork ; however, the latter is 
 operated on a very small scale on account of inadequate room and 
 equipment. Some work has been done in clay modelling by boys 
 and girls. The girls have been given training in drawing, paint- 
 ing, embroidering, crocheting, basketry, appliqueing, rug weav- 
 ing, cut work, needle point, and all kinds of plain sewing. Some 
 of the youngest girls in the kindergarten group made aprons, 
 quilts, napkins, and table runners ; while "others were very happy 
 in the completion of simple gingham bags put together with 
 stitches made uneven because of lack of muscular control." 
 
 Music is happily participated in by all of the children. Some 
 of the activities enjoyed are: group singing, preparing and pre- 
 senting operettas, cantatas, and glee club programs, playing in- 
 strumental selections on the piano, and the like. 
 
The Present Situation 73 
 
 In addition to the time spent in school, all of the children who 
 are capable of having a share in the day's program are kept 
 employed in one of the different departments under the careful 
 supervision of the person in charge. The record shows that "the 
 children do all the sewing and mending — all garments are made 
 here except overalls. They do all the laundry, milking, some farm 
 and garden work, take care of the buildings, help prepare vege- 
 tables and wait on tables, work in the hospital as nurses' helpers, 
 and help take care of hogs, cows, mules, and chickens. The boys 
 help make the mattresses and help run the sterilizer where cloth- 
 ing, mattresses, and bed clothing are continually being sterilized." 
 The full-time services of a psychologist have contributed 
 vitally to the general program of work carried forward. The 
 following excerpts from the last Biennial Report are indicative 
 of the type activities engaged in by her in the interest of the 
 children's general welfare: 
 
 Examinations were given to institutional and extra- 
 mural cases. All those who were newly admitted were 
 thoroughly examined to determine their mental level, 
 special capacities, and personality make-up in order to 
 effect adequate building and school placement, and to 
 give the staff a better understanding of the type of 
 training to be given in each case. Re-examinations were 
 given to those not examined for a number of years, to 
 those who needed further study in order to help them 
 make a better adjustment in the institution, and to those 
 referred by the heads of the different departments be- 
 cause of various disciplinary and other problems. 
 * * * * 
 
 Case conferences were held once a week in the office of 
 the psychologist, where the psychological findings of the 
 newly admitted individuals to Caswell Training School 
 were discussed, the adjustment problems of others con- 
 sidered, and plans worked out toward more effective 
 ways of dealing with them .... At these conferences 
 the psychologist, on the basis of her psychological find- 
 ings, recommended ways of dealing with each particular 
 case including building and school placement for those 
 newly admitted. 
 
 Consultation service was also rendered to the heads of 
 individual departments and to other employees who 
 needed help in their work with the children .... 
 Regularly, one evening each month a talk was given to 
 the employees of this institution, followed by a round- 
 table discussion. These talks and discussions have been 
 intended to give the employees a better understanding 
 of the nature of mental deficiency and to aid them in 
 their contacts with the children in this institution. 
 
74 A Report on Special Education 
 
 CASES OF OTHER HANDICAPPED CHILDREN 
 
 According to the record set forth in the Biennial Report of the 
 North Carolina Tubercular Sanatorium, 150 children were en- 
 rolled for treatment during 1936-1938. However, no provision 
 was made for the educational training of these children while 
 they were being rehabilitated physically. 
 
 With the exception of a few individual classrooms here and 
 there, very little in the way of direct education is being done for 
 the child who has a serious speech defect. The same condition is 
 true for the epileptic child of school age. Most of them are 
 excluded or are withdrawn from school. Moreover, those who are 
 in attendance at the State Hospital do not have an opportunity to 
 receive the type schooling best suited to their particular diffi- 
 culties. 
 
 It stands to reason that North Carolina should extend such 
 privileges to these children and that a program should be worked 
 out cooperatively with the hospital authorities and the schools 
 to help serve their all-round needs. 
 
 General Comments 
 
 In each of the residential schools cited, it is evident from the 
 foregoing descriptions of the programs in progress that the 
 general pattern followed is similar in many respects. However, 
 there are distinctive variations occurring in practically all of 
 them. Some are significant and vital to the life of the program 
 itself; others are ear-marked by a left-over touch of the tradi- 
 tional that fails to identify the activity itself with meaning for 
 the individual child. These differences are not difficult to dis- 
 cover. As time passes, it is to be expected that more and more 
 the different schools will present democratic programs from every 
 standpoint and will thereby give boys and girls a better oppor- 
 tunity to make progress toward the desired goal of better living. 
 
 In order for these schools to meet the peculiar needs of the 
 children for whom they were established, it is apparent that the 
 educational program must be individual and flexible in character, 
 permitting day by day adjustments to changes in enrollment, to 
 the health requirements of the children, and to the process of 
 character development. Likewise, it must be administered with 
 a minimum of stress and a maximum of enjoyment. At all times 
 an effort should be made to preserve a wise balance in regard to 
 academic, recreational, and creative opportunities. These various 
 conditions require skillful planning in order that the proper 
 
The Present Situation 75 
 
 adaptation and orientation of the curriculum may be effected 
 profitably. 
 
 If, in turn, they seek to develop an integrated program on an 
 increasingly higher level that will give each individual child an 
 opportunity to participate in a variety of broad, balanced, edu- 
 cative experiences and activities of value to him for his fullest, 
 all-round growth, then it may be expected that the schools will 
 realize their prime objective in full measure. The development 
 of those activities that are closely related and interwoven with 
 the day's experiencing should furnish desirable outlets for 
 student interests and abilities, and also aid in the promotion of 
 their growth in character. A formal, academic education apart 
 from its use will not accomplish this. Each child should be helped 
 to develop maximally his abilities and then to make wise use of 
 them in his daily living practices. Thus by magnifying his assets 
 and minimizing his lacks will he become a better integrated and 
 adjusted individual to face life and its tasks. 
 
 When children live under the same consistent regime on a 
 24-hour basis, there are many opportunities available that can be 
 used to advantage for their right development along all lines of 
 their growth. The school should canvass the total immediate 
 environment for the educative possibilities, and then be on the 
 alert to capitalize upon the resources at hand and make every 
 experience engaged in count for education. Through their 
 meaningful participation in the necessary duties of school life, 
 children of different maturity and interest levels can be guided 
 so as to enrich their own lives in many ways and also to raise 
 their standards of living. However, there is a limit beyond which 
 it is dangerous to venture, if the possible values to be accrued 
 therefrom are negated by a lack of integration and proper 
 meaning. This is inevitably true when the school program is 
 separate and apart from the work activities participated in by 
 the group. Unless these can be made to function properly in their 
 daily living and contribute to their all-round growth, there is no 
 sound reason why they should be given an undue amount of em- 
 phasis in the day's experiencing. In fact, if such practice is 
 indulged in to excess, our residential schools will deserve the 
 criticism that will naturally follow as a result. 
 
 A recent report from the U. S. Office of Education regarding 
 this administrative problem gave expression to the belief that 
 "exploitation of the pupils to help support the institution should 
 not be permitted." It was further stated that "the use of certain 
 institutional activities to a limited extent, as a basis for the in- 
 
76 A Report on Special Education 
 
 struction of pupils, may be considered quite legitimate; but no 
 pupil should be allowed to continue regular work in a given pro- 
 cess beyond the point of its instructional value to himself." 
 After all is said and done, the schools exist for the children and 
 not the children for the schools. And so the welfare of youth 
 should become the pivot about which all efforts are centered. 
 Consequently, those in authority must view impartially all crucial 
 matters related thereto and then act upon them in good faith. 
 
 In varying degrees, all of the residential schools in the State 
 have followed rather closely the suggested course of study for 
 the public schools. Furthermore, it is obvious that the traditional 
 focus upon subject matter-accomplishment is considered of prime 
 importance. As is the case in any school situation, public or 
 residential, there is no justification for grinding all high school 
 students in a given group through the regularly prescribed re- 
 quirements for college entrance unless they expect to continue 
 their studies in an institution of higher learning. Nor should 
 each child in a so-called grade be expected to master the same 
 kind and amount of knowledge, if his needs and interests do not 
 warrant it at the time. The fact that a student is not concerned 
 about continuing his educational program after he reaches a cer- 
 tain age, or has completed the elementary school work, is no 
 legitimate reason for the school not providing appropriate edu- 
 cational opportunities to meet his needs. Such implications are 
 out of balance with the purpose for which the individual schools 
 were created. 
 
 According to the reports presented, there is no record of the 
 establishment of a vocational department as a part of the total 
 educational program in any of the schools listed, except the State 
 School for the Blind and Deaf, the North Carolina School for the 
 Deaf, and the State Home and Industrial School for Girls. With- 
 out doubt the boys at both the Eastern Carolina Training School 
 and the Stonewall Jackson Manual Training and Industrial School 
 would profit greatly from similar training. The vocational 
 offerings for the boys at Raleigh and at Morganton and for the 
 girls at Samarcand should be enlarged to include training in a 
 broader variety of different trade areas that are best suited to 
 the several types of exceptional children represented. A similar 
 program should be made available for the boys at Rocky Mount 
 and at Concord. This would not only furnish increased occu- 
 pational opportunities for some, but it would also introduce others 
 to different types of work that may hold unforeseen interest for 
 them on a creative basis. In this connection, the development of 
 
The Present Situation 77 
 
 desirable hobbies that can be continued later as leisure-time 
 activities would help many children discover and release their 
 hidden powers and then express in acceptable ways the "spirit 
 that is within." 
 
 If the entire program of a residential school is to be effective in 
 serving the needs and the possibilities of the individual children 
 maximally, educational guidance must be given the same place of 
 dominance that is being sought for it in the public elementary 
 schools. This will involve an intelligent study of each child. In 
 addition to other means used as an aid in this connection, the 
 clinical service needed in each situation should be made available 
 for every school. However, it must be remembered that the 
 "findings of such a comprehensive analysis of individual traits 
 are worth the time spent in securing them only if they are put 
 into usable form and if they actually contribute something in 
 planning the pupil's educational progress." 
 
 In addition to the training and guidance offered these students 
 while they are in school, special attention should also be given to 
 their proper placement into suitable positions and likewise to a 
 close follow-up of their careers in the field. Such a service would 
 be of inestimable value in helping them continue to attain success 
 and happiness in their new approach to a life undertaking. It 
 would also aid the school not only in avoiding pitfalls previously 
 encountered, but in making the necessary adjustments to their 
 own program. 
 
 To help prepare society to meet these boys and girls, particu- 
 larly the socially maladjusted, in an understanding way when 
 they leave the different institutions is another important function 
 of the school. A wisely guided transfer from a school that under- 
 stands and cares to an indifferent, unconcerned outside world 
 is essential if a continuation of their harmonized growth is more 
 or less assured. However, this cannot be effected satisfactorily 
 without the united effort of the different local religious, civic, 
 educational, and welfare agencies in the several communities 
 from which these young people come. 
 
 EDUCATIONAL IMPLICATIONS 
 
 In surveying the field briefly, it would appear that the future 
 of exceptional children in the State is more hopeful than it was a 
 short time ago. Although the progress made in research, in 
 legislation, in health and general welfare, in governmental 
 services, and in educational opportunities and facilities has not 
 been at an accelerated rate, it is evident that these factors to 
 
78 A Report on Special Education 
 
 date have all helped to lay a foundation for the further expansion 
 and development of a more adequate and educational program. 
 We should be ready to move forward to this end. 
 
 On the other hand, much of the time, effort, and money ex- 
 pended on the education of exceptional children at the present 
 time is not bringing maximum returns in desirable child growth. 
 It is unmistakably true that many of our schools unconsciously 
 are training these children to experience failure by expecting 
 them to attempt that which is beyond their capacity and present 
 achievement level, or outside of their field of interest, or both. 
 There are others who are unconsciously making behavior 
 problems of the slow-learning, the gifted, the physically handi- 
 capped, and the poorly adjusted cases by failing to take their 
 difficulties, as well as their interests, into account when planning 
 their program of work and when dealing with them. 
 
 Generally speaking, the public and the residential schools have 
 not quite kept the pace commensurate with that of other agencies 
 at work on this problem in the State. For example, the program 
 administered for crippled children presents a fair sample of this 
 lack of integration and cooperation. According to recent statis- 
 tics from the U. S. Office of Education regarding legislation 
 relating to orthopedic children alone, more than 100 laws were 
 passed between 1900 and 1929 which affect the welfare of this 
 group. The Social Security Act of 1935, a Federal law which 
 made provision for their medical care and welfare, is rendering 
 direct service in every State in the Union. Furthermore, a com- 
 prehensive vocational service is available throughout the country 
 for those sixteen years and older, as a result of the Federal pro- 
 visions for adult rehabilitation. Here again every State has taken 
 advantage of this opportunity and has developed a creditable 
 program. 
 
 Be that as it may, North Carolina delayed legislative action 
 until 1939 regarding special educational opportunities and facili- 
 ties for her crippled children who attend the Orthopedic Hospital 
 for treatment. The program underway has been in progress too 
 short a time for anyone to properly determine and analyze the 
 educational practices being projected thus far. However, it is an 
 assured fact that when these children are sufficiently rehabili- 
 tated to enable them to return home and continue their education 
 in the public schools, no special provision is made for their trans- 
 portation to school except in those cases when the school buses 
 pass the home on their regular school route. If they reach school 
 at all, they do not find the necessary curriculum adaptations, such 
 
The Present Situation 79 
 
 as corrective physical education and occupational therapy, in 
 keeping with their varying abilities, nor the subject-type equip- 
 ment particularly needed to aid them in becoming further 
 rehabilitated physically and socially, as well as intellectually. 
 There is no record of home instruction being offered for those so 
 handicapped that they must remain at home. 
 
 Apparently no coordinated follow-up work is maintained. All 
 of the different agencies responsible for and concerned with each 
 crippled child's general well-being should develop and promote 
 cooperatively with him a program of living and learning that is 
 best suited to him as a growing and functioning individual. Al- 
 though the nature and type of the physical defect will determine 
 the possibilities of all phases of development, the maturation and 
 the interests of the child should serve as guides in planning the 
 learning activities. Upon his return to the local school, recom- 
 mendations should be made by the hospital authorities in coop- 
 eration with the local doctor or the school physician regarding 
 exercise, rest periods, nutrition, therapy, and the amount of 
 school work advisable. A transfer report should also be sub- 
 mitted by the principal of the hospital school. Such a procedure 
 would contribute vitally to the continuity of the individual child's 
 educational program. In the case of a regular school entrant, he 
 should be examined carefully by the school physician and similar 
 information given. Thus when the teacher becomes aware of the 
 corrective physical program needed, she can better help in ad- 
 justing the educational work to aid in the corrective treatment. 
 It is evident, therefore, that an adequate program for physically 
 handicapped children must be individual and flexible in character 
 in order to permit the desirable adjustments necessary to their 
 specific health requirements, and subsequently, to their all-round 
 growth and development. 
 
 Similarly, this type of educational service prescribed for the 
 orthopedic crippled should be broadly and liberally interpreted 
 by school authorities to include the peculiar needs of those 
 atypical children who are handicapped or disabled in any manner, 
 and also those who are gifted. A commitment to the policy that 
 every child should have a chance to live the fullest life of which 
 he is capable makes it mandatory upon us to adapt the school 
 program to his specific difficulty or ability and then help him to 
 make the necessary adjustments directed toward complete living. 
 
 Upon close observation and further investigation of the special 
 class work carried forward last year in a number of school 
 systems in various sections of the State, it was found that, on the 
 
80 A Report on Special Education 
 
 whole, there was no fundamental basis used for making changes 
 (1) in the grouping of the children to be served; (2) in the 
 organization and conduct of the school; (3) in the methods and 
 procedures ; and (4) in the content and materials of instruction. 
 When such questions as the following were asked, the same lack 
 of consideration for pertinent information was also evident : 
 
 1. What specific individual pupil needs were to be met by the 
 program underway? 
 
 2. What standards were used to evaluate individual pupil 
 needs ? 
 
 3. What were the observable evidences of the productive 
 changes made in each child? 
 
 4. What means were used for recording changed pupil be- 
 havior ? 
 
 5. How was pupil progress evaluated? 
 
 For the most part, out-of-date methods for the selection of ex- 
 ceptional children for the special classes are still in use. Ap- 
 parently some of the schools are most concerned with conduct 
 and so are interested in that type of behavior which contributes 
 to smooth running-classrooms. As a result, teachers often 
 classify a child as a problem because he is disorderly, inattentive, 
 careless, disturbs the work of the class, does not participate in 
 school activities, is not interested in any of his school work, or 
 the like. On the whole, the majority of such cases focused upon 
 represent vio]ations of adult authority and the adult moral code. 
 Once a child is labelled a "problem case", the record shows that 
 he often continues to receive this behavior rating by all suc- 
 ceeding teachers and finally by the general public. It is even true 
 that he is sometimes so exploited that his picture, along with the 
 other members of his class, is photographed with high officials 
 in front of the State Capitol and then placed in the daily papers 
 under captions that brand the group for life. Thus a temporary 
 form of maladjustment can be so exaggerated that it becomes a 
 fixed part of the personality development. It is not surprising 
 that these children dislike school and drop out as soon as possible. 
 Such a situation is to be deplored. 
 
 It must be remembered that all children are problems at times. 
 Therefore, the chief concern of the school should be centered on 
 finding out the underlying cause of the difficulty and how to 
 eliminate it, rather than on the visible evidences of the malad- 
 justment. In other words, the child rather than the behavior 
 symptom should be made the point of departure in a compre- 
 
The Present Situation 81 
 
 hensive consideration of such problems. Making adequate pro- 
 vision for appropriate educational opportunities and facilities for 
 these children would greatly increase the holding power of the 
 school for this group as a whole and would likewise reduce the 
 number of potential dependents and delinquents. It is now 
 generally conceded that the habits and attitudes formed during 
 the early years of life determine future success or failure to a 
 much greater extent than was formerly thought to be the case. 
 Therefore, if the proper education of handicapped children par- 
 ticularly is neglected during this impressionistic period, the 
 community will pay a heavy toll in social and economic waste. 
 
 It is important that the academic attainment of every child in 
 the elementary school should be brought up to maximum ex- 
 pectancy in terms of his ability to make progress. Since a 
 variety of factors, such as health, emotional status, general en- 
 vironmental background, special reading strengths and weak- 
 nesses affect growth, it must be kept in mind that all children of 
 the same mental or chronological age are not expected to attain 
 the same accomplishment level in the different subject-matter 
 fields. However, it cannot be too strongly emphasized that those 
 children who continue to fall below the success level for them, all 
 things being equal, should be studied from every phase of their 
 growth in order that the specific causes of their difficulties may 
 be discovered and remedied, if possible. This would not only 
 focus attention on the proper procedures necessary to meet the 
 existing needs of the individual child, but would also help to 
 eliminate further disintegration and maladjustment by making it 
 possible for him to experience successful performance of his 
 responsibility along various lines. 
 
 Therefore, an effective program for this group would require 
 that the school re-examine its standards and expectations in 
 terms of the new goals discovered for them through the investi- 
 gation suggested above. Then, on the basis of new insights, the 
 school would provide experiences which would not be based on 
 traditional interests and demands, but on the genuine needs and 
 interests of those constituting the group. 
 
Chapter III: The New Program 
 
 Obviously in our American system of mass education, the needs 
 and interests of a host of children have not been met. The 
 general trend of society today shows that something should be 
 done to make the educational program meet more adequately the 
 demanding needs of a changing world. There are great gaps in 
 education which will prove fatal to our society if we cannot find 
 some way of combating them successfully. In the long run, it 
 will pay us unlimited dividends in human welfare if every child 
 is guaranteed an appropriate program of educational activities, 
 regardless of his residence or mobility, abilities or handicaps, 
 wealth or poverty, race, creed, or other similar differences. 
 
 One of the major persistent problems our country faces today 
 is the proper development of a program of education that will 
 enable "all the children of all the people" to burgeon out the best 
 that is within them — not all, as one of our great statesmen once 
 admonished us. According to the Constitution, "The people have 
 the right to the privilege of education and it is the duty of the 
 State to guard and maintain that right." To a degree, every 
 State recognizes the supreme importance of this obligation and 
 requires that certain school facilities must be provided for all the 
 children of school age within her borders. Not only the nature 
 and quality of the offerings presented, but also the extent to 
 which the children take advantage of the educational oppor- 
 tunities available are coming more and more to claim the intelli- 
 gent consideration of those who are charged with the leadership 
 of our school systems. 
 
 In this direct relationship one of North Carolina's most pressing 
 educational problems is to discover desirable ways and means of 
 meeting adequately the present and assured needs of the host of 
 unsuccessful children enrolled in our schools. The needs and 
 interests of this neglected group, involving as they do the welfare 
 of 31.4 per cent of all the children in the elementary grades alone 
 and an unknown number who are eligible to receive training in 
 residential schools, should challenge the best thinking and coop- 
 erative planning that our educational leadership and educational 
 statesmanship have to offer toward finding a proper solution to 
 the significant demands at hand. When the total situation is 
 viewed against the present status of educational opportunities 
 and facilities available for all exceptional children in the State, 
 the time for concerted action is past due. 
 
The New Program 83 
 
 When the spotlight is turned on the school and its offerings are 
 viewed in true perspective, those dealing with education are 
 forced to realize that, good as the schools are, they do not 
 measure up to their full obligations in assisting all pupils to 
 secure maximum growth and that something ought to be done. 
 The majority of us fail to comprehend the significant role edu- 
 cation has to play in this world drama and so we often exert a 
 complacent influence toward certain aspects of the total situa- 
 tion. The school is challenged now to institute changes — to pro- 
 vide a community wherein democratic practice will not lag behind 
 democratic theory. Unfortunately neither the school organi- 
 zation and administration nor the curriculum content and the 
 type pupil activities engaged in always square with a sometimes 
 excellent statement of philisophy subscribed to by the school. 
 Frequently there are outstanding inconsistencies between the 
 accepted objectives and the success in attaining them; however, 
 the relationship between actual school practice and fundamental 
 beliefs is much better geared than formerly. 
 
 It will take an honest facing of facts as they really exist to 
 shake some of us out of our smugness, and it may take even more 
 to force others to become active participants in a concerted at- 
 tempt to make the highest functions of the school serve the best 
 interests of each individual child for whom it exists. Probably 
 no fundamental changes will be made until first, we in education 
 fully appreciate the gravity of the situation and gain a more 
 thorough understanding of the fundamental problems of child 
 development; second, we take the initial step forward in adjust- 
 ing our program in consonance with the child's stage of growth 
 and development at the time; and third, we share with the 
 parents and the public generally the fundamental concepts un- 
 derlying such a program and then guide them into a full recog- 
 nition of the importance of their sharing actively in its promo- 
 tion and development. 
 
 It is generally conceded that our schools, both public and 
 residential, need a vital and dynamic program of education, 
 geared into the realities of democratic living and learning and 
 based upon the needs and interests, as well as abilities, of the 
 individual children. Then — and not until then — can we claim 
 that our schools are operating democratically on a functional 
 basis. However, in order to put this type of program into 
 operation, they need (1) a better trained personnel — both teach- 
 ing and administrative — free from the clutches of traditional 
 methods and goals to organize and conduct the school in terms 
 
84 A Report on Special Education 
 
 of more complete living for all children; (2) the necessary- 
 materials of instruction and a stimulating environment as aids 
 in carrying it forward; (3) also the wise guidance and service 
 of an understanding person whose responsibility it would be to 
 help teachers with such problems as evaluation, adjustment, 
 projection, and so forth — when such services are desired. Fur- 
 thermore, it seems that if the schools eventually are to effect 
 this change State-wide, rather than in isolated centers, our 
 teacher-training institutions, our State Department of Public 
 Instruction, our homes, our health and welfare agencies, and our 
 schools themselves mu?t become focal points of creative effort in 
 shared cooperative educational planning and direction. 
 
 Certainly our public schools should be the human engineering 
 laboratories in which our children can be afforded a fair chance 
 to develop fully their individual capacities and potentialities. 
 Herein lies our greatest opportunity for future service. The 
 coordinated efforts of all contributing groups will then be ex- 
 tended not only to eliminate, if possible, all physical handicaps 
 before a child enters school, but also to help other serious forms 
 of difficulties from developing either before or after school 
 entrance. This will involve early detection, treatment, and pre- 
 vention of such cases in their embryonic stage of development. 
 Disintegrating factors present in the home and likewise in the 
 community will be studied to determine the possibility of im- 
 proving such conditions through school activities and public 
 opinion. The opportunity for reducing mental and emotional 
 maladjustments by better handling of administrative and class- 
 room practices on a democratic basis is within the province of 
 every teacher. A systematic study and observation of each child 
 enrolled will also help teachers to deal intelligently with the 
 individual differences involved and thus prevent their working 
 at cross purposes in regard to the proper integration of pupil 
 personality. 
 
 In spite of the increased interest in the problem, as expressed 
 by various professional and lay group activities in several areas 
 in the State, legislative enactment to date has made no financial 
 provision for the State Department of Public Instruction to in- 
 crease State supervisory services to include a professional 
 assistant whose specific duties would be to help develop a more 
 satisfactory preventive and corrective program for children who 
 are needing special services from any of the standpoints previ- 
 ously cited. At the present time practically all efforts projected 
 
The New Program 85 
 
 along any of these particular lines have been or are being made 
 by teachers with a limited amount of special training, if any, 
 for the specific tasks involved and with very little, if any, profes- 
 sional assistance or guidance in solving the problems at hand. 
 
 A psycho-educational service should be made an integral part 
 of the expanding in-service teacher-training program as a 
 definite means toward helping those who are responsibly and 
 intimately concerned with the complex problems in the field of 
 child development. Such a service should be designed to assist 
 the teachers, administrators, parents, and other related groups 
 in developing a more thorough understanding of the needs of 
 children, in studying problems of curriculum adjustments and 
 school organization in relation to the individual pupil needs 
 cited, and finally, in developing an intelligently conceived pro- 
 gram in terms of each child's growth and development. However, 
 a program of this type will be successful to the degree that the 
 adults working with children can be guided to feel that those 
 factors determining growth and development are dynamic, never 
 static, and that all behavior is symptomatic and has real meaning 
 only in terms of the child's total growth and development. 
 
 The school should be the key agency in promoting constructive 
 child development programs and in enlisting and coordinating 
 the efforts of all forces at work in the interest of desirable child 
 growth. In light of the increasing demands made upon the 
 various groups in regard to remedial and preventive pupil activi- 
 ties, it becomes more and more important that representatives 
 of all child welfare agencies in a community should attempt to 
 interpret their basic problems and solutions to each other and 
 then to cooperate intelligently in the organization and promotion 
 of a unified program. Such an arrangement would better insure 
 the full service of each group without duplication of effort or 
 infringement of responsibilities. Likewise, the groups involved 
 would be better able to guide children in finding better ways, 
 more economical ways, more efficient ways, and more normal 
 ways of living the good life. Only when all of these agencies — 
 the school, the home, and the general public — are ready to work 
 together harmoniously as contributors in a cooperative enter- 
 prise will there be a sound basis for the harmonized development 
 of wholesome, well-balanced, integrated personalities in our 
 schools. 
 
 One of the most hopeful outcomes of an intensive, constructive 
 program with the exceptional child is the increased interest in 
 
86 A Report on Special Education 
 
 and sympathetic understanding of individual pupil problems 
 leading to a more intelligent expansion and direction of the 
 entire school program. As corrective and remedial work with 
 those who deviate from the so-called normal progresses, there 
 is coming gradually a widening of interest and breadth of scope 
 to include a preventive program for all children. Therefore, in 
 order to fit the exceptional child properly into the picture and 
 insure for him a more acceptable educational opportunity, the 
 school people themselves must become consciously aware of their 
 direct responsibility to each member of this group as an integral 
 part of the whole and then effect through various channels those 
 changes necessary to secure for him appropriate training. Mani- 
 festly, it is also reasonable to expect that the major consideration 
 should be given to both the remedial and the preventive aspects 
 of this problem of immediate concern. 
 
 As a beginning effort in this direction, following is an outline 
 of a new State program for the education of exceptional chil- 
 dren: 
 
 A Proposed State Program for the Education of 
 Exceptional Children 
 
 Generally speaking, an attempt to present a progress report 
 of what has been accomplished in any undertaking only serves 
 to determine with greater clarity what remains to be done. This 
 has been equally true of the general view that has been taken 
 of a few pertinent facts regarding the work projected to date 
 in both our public and our residential schools in the interest of 
 the State's exceptional children. Not only has it served to cite 
 the real advance that has been made along some lines toward 
 the development of a balanced program for each individual child ; 
 but it has also pointed out the shortages, the discrepancies, the 
 inequalities, and the lack of balance and coordination that exist 
 in regard to certain vital factors. Moreover, it has made us 
 aware of the way in which the very roots of the program itself 
 should reach back into the heart of the State-wide educational 
 system and tap sources vital to its effective functioning and its 
 future growth. In fact, all studies that have been made to date 
 constitute an index of the great seriousness of the need of educat- 
 ing exceptional children, as well as an undoubted challenge to 
 enlarge research, to refine methods of enumeration, to establish 
 findings, and to adjust the educational program in accordance 
 with the findings. 
 
The New Program 87 
 
 In recognition of these and other problems that have been 
 emphasized from time to time in the body of this report, the 
 program in the future must seek to expand and grow to the end 
 that each child, regardless of his physical, mental, and social 
 status, is given every opportunity to develop fully and live ex- 
 pansively as a contributing member of society. However, before 
 determining the kind or type of plan that is appropriate to offer, 
 it is necessary to have a clear comprehension of the purposes 
 which such programs are to serve. These general aims should 
 then be pursued in accordance with those guiding principles that 
 are formulated specifically for organizing and governing the 
 development of a unified State-wide plan for all types of excep- 
 tional children on a progressive and democratic basis. These 
 fundamental policies should influence the nature and the scope 
 of the activities engaged in, as well as those aspects of the work 
 relating to organization, administration, personnel, curriculum 
 offerings, materials of instruction, supervision of program, co- 
 ordination of related services, and other essential items. 
 Obviously, in this connection, attention should also be given to 
 finding out what specific educational facilities are available in 
 the State at the present time for atypical children and what addi- 
 tional State services will be needed for carrying out a worthy 
 program of special education. 
 
 Thus with the foundation laid upon which to build a con- 
 structive plan, it is reasonable to expect the logical next step to 
 result in the organization of a sane, progressive program. Such 
 a procedure carried to completion, however, precludes the fact 
 that the State Department of Public Instruction must accept the 
 definite responsibility for the stimulation, organization, promo- 
 tion, and supervision of the program in its entirety, as carried 
 out in both the public and the residential schools of the State. 
 This obligation will of necessity entail the services of a full-time 
 director for the education of all types of exceptional children, 
 and the aid of additional specialists as the developing program 
 demands from time to time Likewise, it will involve the active, 
 cooperative support of local educational authorities, leading to 
 the proper integration and coordination of those forces in the 
 State directly concerned with the education and general welfare 
 of all atypical children. Briefly stated, the general functions 
 to be served by this division should include: (1) stimulation of 
 effort in this field of service; (2) development of standards for 
 the program; (3) clinical service; (4) organization and admin- 
 
88 A Report on Special Education 
 
 istration of the State program; (5) supervision of instruction; 
 (6) coordination of related services; and (7) promotion of 
 progressive legislation and practice. 
 
 For our immediate consideration, a two-year program of 
 activities is herewith proposed as a tentative, initial guide in 
 promoting and projecting the work on a sound basis: 
 
 A FIRST-YEAR ORIENTATION AND EXPLORATION PROGRAM. 
 
 Outline of necessary steps to take in planning the program : 
 
 1. Establishing cooperative contacts with interested State and 
 local groups and interested individuals through group and 
 individual conferences. 
 
 2. Securing preliminary survey data from schools in counties 
 wishing to cooperate. 
 
 3. Administering a testing program in such centers (a) for 
 mental deviates and (b) for the physically handicapped. 
 
 4. Making an interpretative analysis of survey data, also infor- 
 mation gained from mental and physical tests given, and 
 using conclusions reached as a basis for planning the de- 
 velopment of the program to be projected in the school 
 centers selected. 
 
 Although the program should include broad considera- 
 tions of the total situation, special emphasis should be 
 placed on those particular phases needing immediate atten- 
 tion. This would involve: (a) making a list of the most 
 important needs and the most urgent problems as revealed 
 by the study; (b) selecting the most outstanding needs or 
 problems and stating them as definite objectives for the 
 year; (c) setting up a general plan for reaching each ob- 
 jective; and (d) determining desirable measures of evalu- 
 ation. 
 
 5. Making tentative plans for work with classroom teachers 
 on adjustment of individual problems, and for initial de- 
 velopment of a constructive program of in-service training 
 for teachers concerned. 
 
 A SECOND- YEAR PROGRAM. 
 
 This program will be based upon the accomplishments of the 
 previous year's work, defined in terms of and in direct relation 
 to the contribution made to individual child welfare, looking 
 toward an enlarged and an enriched service. All things being 
 equal, the following activities should prove helpful in taking 
 next steps successfully. 
 
The New Program 89 
 
 1. Making a comprehensive State survey regarding special 
 education. 
 
 In making tentative plans for projecting a long- view 
 program of special education, an accurate picture of the 
 total existing situation is the first prerequisite necessary 
 (a) in revealing the need for increased attention to educa- 
 tional adjustments for certain groups of unsuccessful chil- 
 dren in the State, and (b) in planning intelligently a State- 
 wide program that will better serve the needs and interests 
 of the individual children concerned. In order to compile 
 pertinent statistical data to be used as a basis for extending 
 the work over a broader area, a comprehensive State sur- 
 vey is needed. This will involve the thorough and accurate 
 assembling of such significant information regarding the 
 nature and extent of the problem as : 
 
 a. The number and geographical distribution of exceptional 
 children (1) enrolled in our public schools ; (2) enrolled 
 in our State residential schools; and (3) those of school 
 age not enrolled in any school. The age-grade distribu- 
 tion of each of the above groups according to rural and 
 urban areas. 
 
 This will require an all-inclusive official State-wide 
 census of exceptional children to be taken according to 
 each classification. To date no attempt has been made 
 to discover and enumerate all children in the State who 
 have special problems of one kind or another to be solved. 
 The present need for a complete roster, together with a 
 definite description of each case for basal use in formu- 
 lating plans for their right care and development, is 
 obvious. 
 
 b. The educational opportunities and facilities available to 
 meet special requirements of exceptional children. 
 
 c. The training and experience of present teaching person- 
 nel at work with unsuccessful children. 
 
 d. The curricula offered in teacher-training institutions for 
 the preparation of teachers of various types of excep- 
 tional children. 
 
 e. The professional guidance available for projection, pro- 
 motion, and integration of program. 
 
 f. The extent of State support — the provisions set up in 
 the School Code of North Carolina relative to State aid 
 for definitely locating and educating handicapped chil- 
 dren — and also the methods of apportionment of funds 
 to local communities. 
 
90 A Report on Special Education 
 
 2. Setting up a tentative long-view State-wide program in 
 terms of present needs as revealed by State survey. 
 
 On the basis of the composite findings set forth by the 
 general survey, a broad, constructive program that takes 
 into account the total picture as presented should be de- 
 cided upon and then set up in such a way as to stimulate 
 and promote the enlargement and proper integration of all 
 those contributing factors as they relate directly and in- 
 directly to child growth. This is, indeed, the pivot upon 
 which the continuing success of an ever-advancing State- 
 wide program of education revolves. In order to give the 
 desired point of direction to the plans in hand, it is as- 
 sumed that those in charge will project at the outset certain 
 major and minor guideposts by which to chart their course. 
 
 3. Developing plans and procedures for carrying out objectives 
 in certain selected areas. 
 
 Diagnosis and an intelligently planned program. After 
 locating the specific exceptional children in a given area, 
 the next step in any constructive remedial program is to' 
 make as accurate and as complete a diagnosis as possible 
 of the strengths and weaknesses of each child under con- 
 sideration and to interpret the findings in terms of educa- 
 tional outcomes. This will necessitate assembling the fol- 
 lowing distinct types of knowledge: 
 
 a. Scientific information regarding each child's present 
 equipment and needs as a means of determining the ex- 
 tent of his deviations as well as his abilities. 
 
 b. An intelligent understanding of the various types of 
 maladjustments and the functional details of the defects 
 discovered. 
 
 c. The direct and indirect causes of these specific difficul- 
 ties. 
 
 d. The type psychological adjustment necessary for each 
 individual case. 
 
 e. The vocational opportunities available for people with 
 different handicaps, and the vocational adjustments 
 necessary in each situation. 
 
 f. The follow-up service needed for further adjustment 
 after the child leaves school. 
 
 With this background of detailed information regarding 
 the personnel of the group and the pertinent educational 
 problems encountered in their connection, a definite but 
 
The New Program 91 
 
 tentative program of appropriate treatment and instruction 
 that is broad enough in scope and sufficiently intensive in 
 service to meet the general and specific needs of the indi- 
 vidual children involved should be planned cooperatively by 
 the participating groups. For example, one serious class- 
 room problem of today is the careless, defective speech of 
 many children. In order to solve this problem satisfac- 
 torily, teachers must be able to discover the exact speech 
 deviations used by the children and to plan an effective 
 speech program for the correction of them. However, in 
 this connection they are often confronted with such per- 
 plexing questions as: "What are the specific difficulties 
 my children are experiencing? How can I best set up a 
 program that will actually function satisfactorily in their 
 lives and supply the lacks expressed ? How shall I go about 
 it?" 
 
 Perhaps the most important aspect to be considered in 
 the development of a program based upon all-round child 
 growth for these children is that of prevention. In addition 
 to those broad basic considerations that have been referred 
 to elsewhere in this report, an intelligent approach to con- 
 structive amelioration would also include a study of preven- 
 tion with respect to those handicaps that are available, the 
 proper care and treatment for those handicaps which have 
 already appeared, those problems relating to techniques of 
 instruction and techniques of learning for the various 
 groups, larger aspects of curriculum work, and other re- 
 lated topics. 
 
 The conception of education as growth under guidance 
 assumes that education is a continuous, active process and 
 should go on as long as life lasts. If this viewpoint is 
 accepted, it follows that the children themselves, as grow- 
 ing individuals, are the starting point in building a socializ- 
 ing-integrating curriculum, their interests and needs in 
 relation to fruitful living being the center. Such a curricu- 
 lum should include the whole body of experiences which 
 condition and make up the total activities of the child for 
 which the school assumes responsibility, arranged in 
 sequences corresponding to pupil growth, needs, interests, 
 and abilities. 
 
 Record keeping. Increasing recognition of the wide 
 variations in child development and some knowledge of the 
 
92 A Report on Special Education 
 
 influence that the many environmental factors entering in 
 have upon child life have led to the distinct need for the 
 assembling of cumulative pupil-personnel records. There- 
 fore, the development of a well-planned and integrated 
 system of record keeping through the active participation 
 of all individuals involved should prove most profitable to 
 the school in helping (a) to discover and study the specific 
 needs and interests, also the abilities, of pupils in all 
 aspects of their growth; (b) to determine the causes of 
 behavior difficulties and failures; (c) to identify those chil- 
 dren who need special help because of their exceptional 
 problems, including the all-round gifted pupil and the pupil 
 with special abilities; and finally, (d) to project a well- 
 balanced educational program for each individual child on 
 the basis of the total findings to date. Such vital individual 
 pupil records should contain pertinent cumulative data con- 
 cerning the pupil's health, school performance and be- 
 havior, interests, personal difficulties and needs, particular 
 strengths, home environment and heritage, and other sig- 
 nificant facts. The information assembled should be made 
 available to all properly qualified persons engaged in or 
 concerned with rendering direct service to the particular 
 children considered. 
 
 Appraisal of program in progress. All educational prac- 
 tice needs to be constantly evaluated and revised in the 
 light of rapidly changing standards that are based on in- 
 creased knowledge of child development as an outgrowth of 
 the best developments in research and in practice. More- 
 over, all programs should be modified and enlarged from 
 time to time, if necessary, to administer to changing pupil 
 needs when they are discovered. Such direct questions as 
 those listed below may be of value in centering attention 
 upon important aspects of the program in operation: 
 
 a. How effectively is the work being done day by day? 
 
 b. Are the expenditures for special education producing 
 results in all-round pupil growth sufficiently satisfying 
 to warrant the continuance of the program on the 
 present basis? If not, what desirable changes should be 
 effected? 
 
 c. How adequate are the educational provisions that are 
 being made to meet the existing needs? 
 
The New Program 93 
 
 Training teachers to meet new problems. It is generally 
 conceded today by thoughtful educators that the efficient 
 administration of the education of exceptional children in 
 both residential and day schools requires the services of 
 highly qualified teachers. However, the vast majority of 
 our teaching personnel at work with the various types of 
 children represented in the different schools have had little 
 or no specialized training for the specific tasks involved, in 
 addition to the regular preparation required for the teach- 
 ing of average children. Nor have they had the equivalent 
 in a program of in-service training and experience under 
 professional guidance. 
 
 Among the significant investigations undertaken by the 
 U. S. Office of Education during 1936-1937 under the Pro- 
 ject in Research in Universities was the study made in 
 regard to opportunities for the preparation of teachers of 
 exceptional children in the United States. According to 
 the findings presented in Bulletin 1937, No. 17, North Caro- 
 lina listed only one institution in which a unit of courses 
 was offered for at least one of the eight types of excep- 
 tional children. The North Carolina School for the Deaf at 
 Morganton makes available a special 1-year curriculum for 
 teachers who hold a degree from a 4-year college of A- 
 rating, followed by a second year of teaching under super- 
 vision at minimum salary. Satisfactory completion of the 
 work leads to a special diploma for teaching the deaf. To 
 say the least, the opportunities available in North Carolina 
 for specialized training in this whole field are limited. As 
 a result, it is necessary at the present time for those 
 teachers who are interested in certain types of special edu- 
 cation to seek their specific professional training elsewhere 
 rather than in our own teacher-training institutions in the 
 State. This educational lack should be viewed in relation 
 to the total existing problem, and then plans should be 
 made to remedy the situation in the most opportune way 
 possible. 
 
 Moreover, the satisfactory promotion of a democratic 
 program of living and learning for all children is depen- 
 dent, more or less, upon a teaching personnel who has 
 developed not only a broader educational outlook, but also 
 an ability to translate it into practice. It is the professional 
 group that must produce the expert services that are de- 
 
94 A Report on Special Education 
 
 signed to guide and assist children in experiencing, in 
 learning, and in living happily and successfully. It is this 
 group that must study continuously and experiment to the 
 end that the concepts and practices of education are im- 
 proved each year and kept up to date to meet the persistent 
 demands of economic and social change. To find the means 
 and to develop the techniques that will make it possible to 
 realize the ideals set up for the right development of chil- 
 dren become a challenge to us to explore new fields of 
 educational thought and activity. 
 
 As a means to this end, it is necessary for all concerned 
 to understand the basic developmental levels, the processes 
 of growth, the varieties of behavior that can be expected 
 of children as they grow from year to year, and as much 
 as possible about the mechanics of human behavior. It is 
 an assured fact that all teachers need to make a continuous 
 study of children. A well-rounded plan to follow in this 
 connection should include opportunities for intelligent child 
 study and discussion under guidance, continuous observa- 
 tion of child life in relation to their environment, individual 
 conferences with parents and children, investigation and 
 analysis of children's problems, needs, and interests, and 
 other pertinent activities. It should be the function of 
 such a study to help teachers and administrators working 
 cooperatively together to see the child as a whole organism 
 in continuous process of change. Futhermore, they should 
 come to realize that it is impossible to check the child from 
 day to day in terms of completed character, since the child 
 is daily in the course of becoming and acquiring. Life situ- 
 ations can be set up in such an appropriate way that 
 through group cooperation, guidance, and leadership all are 
 helped to understand the significance of new problems en- 
 countered, changing methods, and the basic philosophy on 
 which they are founded. 
 
 Thus by pooling experiences, by reading with the same 
 end in view, by thinking in harmony, there should be 
 created an attitude, a feeling of mental unity that will 
 foster the cause of maximum child growth. Out of this 
 study should develop a desirable philosophy of education 
 as a basis for the making of a socializing-integrating cur- 
 riculum that will serve each child wisely and well. 
 
 In light of new needs and new demands, the time is at 
 hand when our present teacher-training plans and pro- 
 
The New Program 95 
 
 cedures on both in-service and pre-service levels should be 
 examined critically and the findings evaluated carefully. 
 Then a new-type program, involving a corresponding varia- 
 tion in the offerings to both groups, should be projected 
 that will prepare teachers to fulfill their changing func- 
 tions. The following suggestive questions should prove 
 helpful in analyzing the situation : 
 
 a. What new demands are being made upon the teacher of 
 elementary children? 
 
 b. What then is her function in meeting present-day needs ? 
 
 c. What type of teacher-training program on both levels 
 is needed to serve a teacher more adequately in meeting 
 her new obligations? 
 
 d. What professional services and experiences should be 
 provided that will aid the in-service teacher in a demo- 
 cratic way to fulfill her changing function? 
 
 4. Making a directory of cooperating public agencies and their 
 corresponding types of services, looking to the organization 
 of a coordinating council for work on special education. 
 
 There is an increasing awareness of a direct need to 
 coordinate and integrate further the ideas and efforts of the 
 various educational agencies and institutions in the State 
 interested in the welfare of our in-school youths, and thus 
 to promote and advance the activities that are being carried 
 forward in their behalf. Increased cooperation with these 
 allied groups working in related fields, and with other 
 organizations likewise concerned about these boys and girls 
 and their problems, should produce valuable aid in helping 
 both the public and the residential schools serve childhood 
 more effectively and more intelligently. Therefore, the 
 organization of these forces into a coordinating council not 
 only would facilitate matters for all concerned, but it would 
 also tend to prevent lost motion and wasted effort on the 
 part of any group. 
 
 The making of a comprehensive State directory of all 
 groups that have some contribution to make to the physical, 
 mental, social, and spiritual well-being of children should 
 be the initial step in the right direction. Therefore, each 
 county and city administrative unit should set up, first of 
 all, a brief schedule which would yield a reasonably accurate 
 picture of the various public agencies available in the State, 
 county, and local community to promote child welfare, to- 
 
96 A Report on Special Education 
 
 gether with their corresponding types of services, and the 
 mechanics for bringing these services in contact with the 
 schools. The next important function of those at work on 
 this problem should be to assist, as far as possible, in effect- 
 ing an interchange of services and a close articulation of 
 purpose among those particular groups listed. 
 
 Although it will require constant experimentation and 
 adjustment to facilities, environment, and individuals them- 
 selves, various ways and means can be employed success- 
 fully to establish fine relationships and to bring about a 
 mutuality of aim and solidarity of effort among the dif- 
 ferent participating units. An alert school official will 
 depend upon a variety of methods to knit and weld them 
 strongly into a cooperative and public-spirited organiza- 
 tion, studying each individual situation to determine the 
 most effective line of approach. The bonds will be 
 strengthened gradually, as those working together for a 
 common cause learn through education and experience the 
 value of cooperative activity. Thus it may be seen that in 
 time the isolated contributions of separate individual 
 groups may be slowly woven into a unified, coherent whole 
 of distinct worth to childhood. 
 
 The North Carolina Council of Youth-Serving Agencies, 
 organized chiefly in the interest of out-of-school youths, 
 may be regarded as an excellent working plan to follow 
 in the development and promotion of a similar organiza- 
 tion for boys and girls in school. It is a cooperative under- 
 taking that the State may well point to with pride and 
 satisfaction. 
 
 5. Helping to promote and establish educational clinics at 
 strategic points throughout the State that ivill be properly 
 staffed and equipped to serve the varying needs of the dif- 
 ferent groups of handicapped children. 
 
 It is a recognized fact that the determination of each 
 child's specific needs for special education requires careful 
 scientific investigation. Therefore, a suitable clinical pro- 
 gram should be set up that will make available competent 
 psychiatric, psychological, educational, social, and medical 
 services and facilities for those cases who would profit by 
 them. The kind and extent of the clinical aid to be pro- 
 vided will depend, of course, upon the particular situation 
 to be served and the related contributing services of dif- 
 
The New Program 97 
 
 ferent agencies that can be furnished with reference to the 
 total program. Thus the type of organization to be effected 
 will vary according to the size of the local community, the 
 needs involved, the present child guidance program in 
 operation, if any, the coordinating services rendered by the 
 participating agencies in relation to all-round child growth, 
 and other significant problems. All in all, such clinics not 
 only should be staffed and equipped to serve the varying 
 needs of the children, but should also be located in places 
 accessible to the different groups involved. 
 
 In the light of scientific truth and of the changing ob- 
 jectives of education, a bureau of child guidance should 
 constantly redetermine its own purposes and evaluate its 
 outcomes in terms of desirable child growth. It should 
 serve as a challenge to the administrator and to the teacher 
 "to make the educational program function as a continuous 
 process which will develop boys and girls into thinking 
 participants in a democracy." 
 
 Our school organizations face the task of finding satis- 
 factory means of intensifying all efforts toward a correct 
 interpretation and application of the principles of our 
 modern philosophy of education. When this is done, a posi- 
 tive approach to the problem will be made. Coupled with 
 an awareness of the situation will be the desire to find the 
 right solution and then to put it into effect. As a result, 
 there will be in operation a broader and a deeper preventive 
 and constructive program of physical, mental, and social 
 health for all children in our schools. 
 
 Promoting progressive legislation and an adequate financial 
 program. 
 
 The public schools of North Carolina are responsible by 
 law for the education of all children entrusted to their care. 
 Moreover, this public function is financed out of State 
 funds for a minimum period of eight months each year. 
 However, sufficient State aid has not been provided as yet 
 for the special educational services needed to develop an 
 adequate program for all those children who present excep- 
 tional problems of one type or another. For example, 
 there is a great need for assembling accurate data regard- 
 ing the total existing situation and for developing ways and 
 means to satisfy the demands as discovered. Such an 
 
98 A Report on Special Education 
 
 activity cannot be effected satisfactorily without financial 
 support. 
 
 The time is at hand when we should focus our attention 
 upon an appropriate constructive program that will func- 
 tion in terms of life and the things that make for useful 
 and worthy living for all children eligible to attend our 
 schools. Coupled with this should be an adequate school 
 finance program. They go hand in hand. In this connec- 
 tion, the promotion of State legislation that will increase 
 the facilities of special education and will provide sufficient 
 funds to administer it is one of our most pertinent admin- 
 istrative problems at the present time. This shortage 
 should not be overlooked any longer. Not until equality of 
 educational opportunity has been provided for all types of 
 exceptional children can the State claim to have in opera- 
 tion an adequate educational program for all her children. 
 With the beginning that has already been made, North 
 Carolina can now use more advantageously her resources 
 and facilities. 
 
 The Task Before Us 
 
 As the tempo of technological change increases, the problems 
 of intelligent social control that confront the world today become 
 more critical. These can be solved only by mastering the tech- 
 nique of living and working together in such a way as to permit 
 the all-round development of the individual and the enrichment 
 of the group. In a democracy the creative thinking necessary 
 for intelligently controlling social change should be the responsi- 
 bility of the many rather than the privilege of the few. It follows 
 then that our American youth should be guided in the proper 
 development of their individual potentialities so that they can 
 think creatively and act cooperatively in helping to attack our 
 social problems in an intelligent manner. "The democratic faith 
 in human equality," says the eminent John Dewey, "is the belief 
 that every human being, independent of the quantity or range 
 of his personal endowment, has the right to equal opportunity 
 with every other person for development of whatever gifts he 
 
 has. Democracy is a way of personal life controlled 
 
 by faith in the capacity of human beings for intelligent judgment 
 and action if proper conditions are furnished." This is a 
 familiar article in the democratic creed. It is a fundamental 
 truth that we need to capitalize upon for the good of all. 
 
The New Program 99 
 
 Even in this modern era, it is an avowed fact that our society 
 has not yet placed an adequate and an approved value upon its 
 human resources. This position will maintain as long as certain 
 strategic groups continue to hold widely divergent viewpoints 
 regarding the issues involved and fail to consider each child as 
 a potentially valuable contributor to the social group. There 
 are those who regard the exceptional child as a neglected re- 
 source, whose inherent possibilities for expanding growth should 
 be given an opportunity to blossom and fruit to the maximum 
 degree in order that he can make his unique contribution to the 
 general welfare of all. By others, he is considered as a misfit, 
 a discard, a failure, or what not — in general, a liability to 
 society. In this large group of human dynamos lie much poten- 
 tial ability and power which the world needs. Failure to dis- 
 cover and to use the best possibilities of these unusual individuals 
 is one of our major sources of waste today. Both the educa- 
 tional system and the social order should endeavor to salvage 
 their latent powers and then to help these deviates, however 
 talented or handicapped they may be, to develop into desirable 
 producers as well as consumers. 
 
 There is no virtue in "faith without works," nor in activity 
 without meaning. It is agreed that our schools have a basic 
 responsibility to aid in the elimination of the confusions and the 
 turmoil which beset our society. This profound duty has been 
 clearly defined and interpreted. Time has been given for reflec- 
 tion. Now it needs to be translated into immediate, constructive 
 action. Organized education must become more sensitive to the 
 demands at hand and build vital programs that are rooted and 
 grounded in the democratic way of life. If children are to grow 
 up as responsible citizens in a democratic society, they must be 
 given opportunities from the very beginning of their school life 
 to think critically and act on their thinking, to make wise choices, 
 to meet situations involving alternatives, and to participate 
 actively in both group and individual activities — always, of 
 course, on their own level of development and under the skillful 
 guidance of an understanding teacher. 
 
 Public education is a recognized right and privilege of "all the 
 children of all the people." It is to be hoped that a State pro- 
 gram may be made effective whereby no child in North Carolina 
 of school age may be prevented from utilizing his full capacity 
 for education and life adjustment and from exercising his powers 
 to the maximum level in the interest of the common good. Mani- 
 
100 A Report on Special Education 
 
 festly, the special education of all exceptional children must 
 constitute a very definite and indispensable part of the total 
 plan that is designed to serve the school population. Thus in 
 the process of helping to build a better social order, the schools 
 must play a vital role in helping young people to find meaning 
 and significance in life. This crystallizes our supreme objective. 
 
 We all are blind until we see 
 
 That, in the human plan, 
 Nothing is worth the making if 
 
 It does not make the man. 
 
 Why build these cities glorious 
 
 If man unbuilded goes? 
 In vain we build the world unless 
 
 The builder also grows. 
 

UNIVERSITY OF N.C. AT CHAPEL HILL 
 
 00034021736 
 
 n 
 
 FOR USE ONLY IN 
 THE NORTH CAROLINA COLLECTION 
 
 Form No. A-368, Rev. 8/95