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The Board of Education
of the City of Chicago
The Education Division
The Office of the Superintendent of Schools
Departmentof Educational StandardsandStatistics
Ambrose B. Wight, Assistant Superintendent in Charge
English in the Elementary
Schools
Bulletin No. 21
SEPTEMBER
1923
Peter A. Mortenson, SuperintendentCHICAGO BOARD OF EDUCATION
J. Lewis CoaTH
W. K. FELLows
Epcar N. GREENEBAUM
Mrs. JOHANNA GREGG
Hart Hanson
Mrs. W. S. HEFFERAN
Cuartes M. MopERWELL
JAMES MULLENBACH
Dr. JoHN D. ROBERTSON
Jutius F. SMIETANKA
Miss Grace L, TEMPLEThe Board of Education
of the City of Chicago
The Education Division
The Office of the Superintendent of Schools
Department of Educational Standards andStatistics
Ambrose B. Wight, Assistant Superintendent in Charge
English in the Elementary
Schools
Bulletin No. 21
SEPTEMBER
IZ
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Peter A. Mortenson, SuperintendentBOARD OF EDUCATION
GiTyY OF CHICAGO
ADMINISTRATION BUILDING
650 South Clark Street
Telephone Wabash 2
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
PETER A. MORTENSON,
Superintendent of Schools
To The Teachers:
The following Monograph was prepared by the
Course of Study Committee of the Chicago Principals’ Club,
and is an outgrowth of the three years’ special work carried
on in the thirteen elementary school centers for experi-
mental investigation in English, under the direction of Dr.
James E. Hosic, head of the Department of English in the
Chicago Normal School.
It is an authoritative interpretation of the Course
of Study in English and it is hoped that the teachers will
find it helpful in making their work more effective.
PETER A. MORTENSON,
Superintendent of Schools.
October 3, 1921.
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Wale ot Contente
PART I.
Page
Guiding Pringiples 2 cashes) ae 4-16
pie, Poin at We as 4
BSR eS ere 6 66S pe ws el ee
RRR GD ore SSS erates 5 is eta tern wa sea cee 5
ae ee a0 eo Oe OPO 0 eG od oh 626 G4 8 a sal A
ee ee aad ee OO OO Gen ee cy A A Gs
4. Composition and spelling Scales. ....2.. 9.5 2
B. Heide) eae ee) 10
Ve Beginnings—Primary Sige . 6). eee 10
2 EMOMeS 2.5, jo. | eZ
3; Study Neadine, “0.8 12
C. GHiterotule ck 14
i ThromshwReading 23 4.6... ae 14
@ Presented’ Orally =... 4, 15
D7 Wibtary Reading... 16
PARKA it.
mre Counse by Cycles and Grades......1....... .... ee 17
Binst Cycle—-Grades 1:11I.. |). 2 17-21
Cpe. i ug SU ae 22-28
Geade Bees. ee 29-36
pe ies ee se 37-47
pccoud (Cycle—Grades' TV2VL. 42... 3 48-49
Grade: IV oo. 50-55
Grade Ve eget et ne duce tes 56-62
Grade Vl AP Aes usin oan) eee 63-76
hind Cycle—-Grade VII-VIIl;.- 3... 3 77-79
GradesVIlo. Ue eeu oc. dead eli sda ee ee 80-85
Grade VIM Sh. oo: ia ee 86-96
PART fr
} Appendix.
m standards in Oral Composition by, Giades3) 2 2 97-107
. Wlechanics of Written Composition by Grades... 910) 108-111
C.. ssentials of (Grammar by Grades (9.6.07 ee 112-114
Dy spelling List by Grades. .0y, 2 tO Gos des eee 115-124
B Siibrary List-by Grades. i). 2% yo pee ee ee 125-146
Be Collections of Stortes and Collections of Verse... 9.2! 147
1
oe : i >COURSE OF STUDY IN ENGLISH
PART II.
First Cycle—Grade I to III
OUTLINE OF THE
fr A. Spealane.
1. Aims.
2. Materials.
3. Achievement.
bie 4. Suggestions.
I. Composition ....+.-+> ‘ B. Won
1. Aims, etc.
©. Spelling:
L., Aims;-ete:
A. Silent, Reading, Study.
1. Aims: etc,
B. Reading Aloud.
ih WReaGine Gece ee i ae oe
GC. Phonics.
i, Aims, etc.
A. Presented Orally.
fie Literature... <<. <.- 1. Aims, etc.
B. Through Reading.
i. »Aims; ‘ete:
PV Library Keadine:
Second Cycle—Grades IV-VI
XN. specs.
1. Aims, etc.
ie Bo Writine:
LOM. © oe ees ee 2
I. Compositio : 1, Aims, ete.
C. Spellume,
L 1 (Aims, etc,
(A. intormational.
= ZNintis, etc,
(ie ReadinGe sce ce hee | p ims, etc
Literary.
1. Aims, ete:
III. General Reading.
Third Cycle—Grades VII-VIII
, A. Composition
1. Speaking and Writing.
a. Aims, etc.
2. Mechanics.
a. Aims. etc
Grammar.
a. Aims. etc
4. Spelling.
a. dims. (ete:
Bb. Weadine:
L 1. Current Magazines, etc.
Is Practical Aspects. <=. a
{ A. Class Studies.
1: -Aams; ete:
| B. Individual and General Reading.
ie ateraty ASpects .....ne - m* aa Se : - e a = ee — : : ue 1. ee — ity r pe aw r
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PREFACE
PRINTED COURSE of study is valuable to the extent that it aids
supervisors and teachers to do the best work with the least waste.
Unless a better and richer educative experience accrues to the
children from the influence of the document, there has been useless spilling
of printer’s ink,
The actual writing of an effective course is a problem of English
composition. If you say too much or say it too abstractly, the course
will not be read. If you condense too much or resort to mere outlines,
you are not understood. The present course has sought to avoid both
these extremes, with what success time must tell.
There is a tradition that a course of study must not deal with method.
As a thing apart, method should of course be excluded. But since in fact
the course the pupils pursue is, in large measure, that which the teacher
determines by the situations which she organizes or selects, method is
an integral part of the total process and must be dealt with. This can
best be done, not chiefly by suggesting what the teacher should do but
by suggesting what the pupils should be doing. The course should leave
no doubt as to the character of the experience in which the pupils are
to participate.
The main features of this course are (1) aims and principles, (2)
materials and activities, (3) standards of achievement, (4) sources of help
and guidance. The part devoted to Guiding Principles is general and
deserves study by the teachers of each school under the leadership of
the principal. The books and articles named and others like them should
be collected into a teachers’ professional library for the school.
Ihe Syllabus of the Course is arranged by cycles as well as by grades.
This was done in order that what is common to several years of the
child’s school life might be seen as a whole. The setting up of aims,
ostensibly to be accomplished in a given grade, but really general, is stulti-
fying. The achievements possible at a given stage are here as definitely
set up as was possible but with due regard to the range of individual
differences and the insufficiency of present knowledge.
At least a part of the indispensable subject matter necessary for an
implied growth is also concretely set down. The suggestions offered in
Part II are not mere repetitions of the general principles announced in
Part I but have specific reference to the age and limitations of the children
of the cycle or grade.
For convenience, certain lists and summaries have been gathered in
Part III, but these are not to be taken as justifying formal and unrelated
treatment. This material is supposed to be digested or dissolved, as it
were, into the living, vital experiences and situations of the classroom
and of the school ensemble.
English deserves a large place in the school but, like so many other
phases of organized education, it is often a futile and ineffective study
and provides too little growth or happiness for the children to justify the
time they spend upon it. The present course calls for less rather than
more of the time on the weekly schedule. By eliminating the less needful,
by suggesting more efficient procedure, and by emphasizing activities which
bear more broadly on the whole of the children’s lives, both in school and
out, it seeks real economy—more and better results with less waste of
time and energy and greater satisfaction to all concerned
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Guiding Principles
I. THE POINT OF VIEW
1. The school is a place in which children may grow and enjoy life.
Zit undertakes, in company with the home and other institutions,
to enable each child to gain such control of the social inheritance through
direct and indirect experience as his native ability and stage of development
make possible.
3. School life prepares for mature life by offering opportunity for
participation in such socialized group activities as characterize democracy.
In various ways the school should enable children to learn how to play
a part in the home, in vocations, in citizenship, in philanthropy, and in
the enjoyment of leisure.
4. The course of study is best thought of, therefore, as a series of
selected and related experiences by which children gradually progress
toward the mastery of themselves and their world. Subject matter is
then looked upon as made up of ways of thinking, feeling and acting
and the method of the teacher as stimulation and guidance of individual
and group activities.
5. The social nature and value of each subject should constantly
determine the general character of the aims and activities of both pupils
and teachers, and an effort should be made to discover just what abilities
—knowledges, skills, habits, interests, and ideals—are to be cultivated
or controlled, in order that economy of time and energy may be secured
through definiteness of aim and soundness of method. We must first
asie therefore, what Hnolish’ is.
Il. WHAT IS ENGLISH?
1. English, as a part of life, is a form of human behavior. We use
our language in listening, speaking, reading, and writing, with their con-
comitants, associating, thinking, feeling, remembering, and imagining.
Z. The common purpose of these activities is to share experience,
to communicate.
3. This we do in both work and play.
4. In order to give children the joy of experience and develop the
various abilities which the use of the vernacular involves the school
organizes a group of studies, each with its specific objective, as displayed
in the following table:
THE ENGLISH STUDIES
A. Composition
1. Aims at greater effectiveness in the communication of ideas
To various audiences,
For various purposes, ;
Through use of various forms of expression, os
By drawing upon experience, (1) direct and (2) indirect;
ao me2 Proceeds toward its goal by means of
a. Abundant opportunity tor actual communication, guided by
(1) Ideals of excellence,
(2) Helpful direction and criticism, and
(3) Accompanying lessons in
(a) Grammar and
(b) Usage in speech and writing, including
(c) Spelling;
Affords numerous by-products, as
a. Training in participation in group activity,
b. Enlargement of knowledge,
c. Entertainment, and
d. Ability to think connectedly.
B. Reading
1. Aims at effective interpretation of ideas embodied in written or
printed symbols, addressed
a. To various readers,
b. For various purposes,
c. In various forms of expression,
d. In terms of various aspects of experience
Proceeds toward its goal by means of
a. Abundant opportunity for actual interpretation of various
forms of expression, for various purposes, guided toward
improvement by
(1) Ideals of excellence,
(2) Helpful direction and criticism, and
(3) Accompanying lessons in
(a) Phonics and
(b) Outlining.
Ca. aterature
1. Aims at the sincere enjoyment of idealized experience, embodied
in appropriate language, including experience with
a. iaiman: aiiairs,
b. Physical nature and
c. The supernatural ;
Proceeds toward its goal by means of
a. Reading (as above) and
b. Oral expression, including
(1) Hearing, telling, and dramatizing stories,
(2) Hearing, memorizing, and reciting poems,
(3) Making and acting plays.
III. PHASES OF ENGLISH STUDY: PROBLEMS AND
POLICIES
A. COMPOSITION
1, SPEAKING
WwW
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a. The Chiet Objectives.—The principal aim of the course in oral
English is to increase the children’s ability to speak clearly alagbau® “inte
point, and to foster the habit of doing so. This implies the growth of
ideals of form and method, knowledge of standards of Taos and th
attainment of readiness, poise, and tact. The children should learn ac
eee to find something worth saying and how to appreciate what others
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_ b. The Problem of Subject Matter—Opportunities for speaking
arise constantly throughout the day’s work; the pupils should be encouraged
to rise to their best whenever they occur. Any field of interest not already
sufficiently exploited in recitations devoted to it may furnish topics for
composition. Examples of the more commonly acceptable fields are the
following:
(1) Personal experience, ready to hand.
(a) Home and community.
(b) 7 Pravel:
(c) World of work.
(d) Dreamland.
(2) Investigation or Study.
(a) Individuals and public health.
(Db). Social order—citizenship.
(c) Science and invention.
(d) Natural surroundings.
(e) Reading and art.
Whatever the field, it should be regarded both as the source of ideas
already familiar—or to become so through investigation—and ideas to be
worked over, enlarged, reorganized, and made more useful. Composition
should be valuable for content as well as for form. Hence, in general,
hit and miss selection of topics is to be avoided.
c. Conditions Favorable to Expression — Youthful speakers, except
in the give and take of conversation, should face the class. They deserve
the stimulus of a real audience. They should speak to a very definite
and specific purpose which they have already in mind—one small aspect
of a subject. They should early learn how to organize their ideas into
definite sequence and they should proceed in the light of a few funda-
mental ideals, such as those of (1) sticking to the point, (2) being clear,
(3) leaving out the unnecessary, (4) supplying concrete details, (5)
beginning and ending strongly, and (6) being courteous in manner and
correct in speech.
d. Criticism.—These ideals make effective self-criticism possible,
both in planning and in considering the performance afterward. They
also enable the classmates to act as helpers, directing their efforts first
of all to suggestions bearing upon the speech as a whole in the light of
its purpose and general effect. The main principle which is being developed
or applied should first be attended to. Afterward polite corrections of
usage may be offered. The teacher as leader and chairman must establish
a genial atmosphere and call out those reactions from the class likely to
be most useful. She will do well to concentrate on one thing at a time,
often permitting the speaker to repeat his effort while the suggestions
he has received are fresh in his mind.
e. Formal Instruction—The facts and principles of correctness and
effectiveness (grammar and rhetoric) which are of real advantage to
children who are learning to speak, are few in number but not unimportant.
Much depends upon how they are arrived at and how they are brought
to bear. For the most part they should come to notice as occasion arises,
the teacher using the standard terms to designate them. In this way
children will learn to speak of sentences, capitals for proper nouns, clauses
and their connectives, etc., etc., just as they do of automobiles or new
breakfast foods. Occasional development or drill lessons will be necessary.
The policy of this course in that respect may be traced through the out-
lines for the successive grades.
6f. Gradation and Standards of Achievement.—Definite eae
of achievement are provided in this course. These were set ‘2 in the
first instance by several schools working independently but with common
aims and methods. In general, each teacher selected five ee Sa
narratives from experience, to represent poor, airs eee ieee ot
superior work at the end of the gerade. Fair was ee to te oe
a composition as at least 75% of the pupils could equal or excel a ee
time indicated. A committee of five teachers then selected grade standards
from these offerings. Finally the medium judgment of over two hundred
teachers in these schools (the English Centers) was obtained as to which
of the compositions marked fair in the various schools would best serve
as the standard. These compositions will be found in the appropriate
crade outlines and they are shown in comparison with higher and lower
standards selected in the same manner. They may serve to guide each
school in selecting its own standards in the manner indicated.
A considerable range of abilities in composition is to be expected
‘1 anv class, as the standards show. | The teacher must act accordingly,
trying to help each reach the level he is capable of. The rate of improve-
ment. too, will vary, both as between individuals and as between classes.
Gach class must be carefully observed and individual and group instruc-
tion given as the teacher’s skill and strength will permit.
s The Teacher’s Personal Attainment.—All this will be very easy
“t the teacher is herself well trained, that 1s, has good standards and can
lead others. This means not only a kindly spirit and an inspiring manner
but also really expert knowledge of the qualities of good composition and
of the actual processes by which trained and competent speakers get
results. In any case, she will familiarize herself with the best recent books
and articles on the subject. A selection of the best of these may be found
on pagé 9.
2. WRITING
a. Object——The main object of the work in written composition is
to develop accuracy and economy in putting speech on paper. The term
written composition is indeed almost*a misnomer in the case of children.
They really compose orally—in terms of spoken words.
b. Activities Preceding Writing—It is wise to give the pupils
opportunity to think out, frequently to speak, what they have to say
before permitting them to make a written record. This is especially true
of beginners. The difficulty of attaining correctness in the mechanics
of written form is so great that the younger pupils ought to have nothing
else to think of when attempting it. Correct writing comes with surprising
ease, however, when the pupils have first spoken what they write, “bliis
will surely be so if the teacher takes care to anticipate the mechanical
difficulties, especially those of spelling.
c. Criticism—Children should be habituated to self-criticism of
their written work. They should learn, for example, to go over a com-
position once to see whether they have said what they meant to say and
once to discover any lapses from correctness. In a given lesson the new
point which is being emphasized should first be considered and afterward
all the points taught in the course thus far which are germane. As in the
oral work the other members of the class should be taught to be definitely
helpful. The teacher should, however, attend to the spelling and should
use good judgment in knowing when to decide a moot point without
permitting useless debate. Obviously most will be gained from theeae of compositions on the blackboard; a few should appear there
aily.
d. Formal Instruction.
o Except as to mechanics formal instruction
In writing differs only in emphasis from that appropriate to speaking,
More can be done to improve the choice of words in writing. Remarks on
spelling appear below. Arrangement of manuscript, capitalization, and
punctuation are to be taught as needed and not till then. One thing at
a time, and that thoroughly, should be the rule. A definite scheme of
points to be covered is distributed through the grade outlines, according
to a consensus of the English Centers, checked by other investigators as
to where each point should first appear. If individual pupils need the
facts earlier, give them, but defer the class attack until the time set.
Nothing is to be gained by imtroducing formal instruction in mechanics
before continued use will be made OF th.
e. Gradation—For practical purposes the oral standards already
referred to will generally prove sufficient. If written standards are wanted,
they may be set up in the same way. The distinction between spoken
style and written style, aside from technical writing, 1s now, in the world
of affairs, slight. Elaborate written composition is not contemplated in
this course.
{. The Teacher’s Personal Attainment.—It should go without saying
that the teacher must be able to judge written composition in terms of
structure and style, not merely in terms of grammar, spelling, and other
mechanics. She should supplement her training in rhetoric with careful
reading of good current periodicals,
oS. SPELLING
a. Objective-——Much confusion of ideas seems to exist as to the
purpose of a school course in spelling. The object is to give each pupil
ihe “ability to spell correctly all the words he has occasion ito write.
Enlargement of vocabulary, clearing up of meaning, etc., are purely inci-
dental. To realize this objective pupils must learn how to memorize the
spelling of common words; they must develop a keen consciousness as to
whether they can or can not spell a given word; and they must form the
ideal and the habit of making sure in case of doubt.
b. Words to Select and Their Difficulty——The words to teach to a
given class or pupil are those which they or he will otherwise misspell in
the daily written work. Investigation by Jones and others has partly
shown what these words are. Each teacher in each school should supple-
ment this knowledge with notes and inventories of her own. This must
be done yearly. There can be no fixed and final list of words for spelling
lessons in any school. Beginning with the general list included in this
course, each teacher should make up her class list by checking against
her own notes, a school list compiled by a committee. The list in this
course represents the combined results of the work of the English Center
committees, revised and supplemented by the investigations of Ayers,
O’Shea, and others. It includes probably all of the words elementary
pupils will ordinarily have occasion to write. It should, however, be used
with discrimination. Standard lists, school lists, and individual lists are
all necessary. Discover what words your pupils do write and make sure
that they can spell them.
c. Conditions Favorable to Progress.—The pupils will advance most
rapidly if they are animated with the ideal of a perfect performance—
“no misspelling in our class.’ They should help to keep a record of their
8
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progress. They should try out different methods of ee eo hae
learn for themselves how best to get results. They S ce rea a
good spelling is a mark of courtesy and consideration, the absence Or which
is resented as evidence of ill-breeding.
d. Procedure.—Have a tryout of twenty words, more or less, on
Friday or Monday to determine their relative difficulty —who misspells
them, in sentences or in lists. Take up a very few difficult words—two
or five—at a lesson (reviewing others ). Teach each carefully—lead the
class to pronounce, spell orally, examine, compare, use, write, every pupil
concentrating on each step. Repeat to secure permanent retention. ‘Test.
Test later. Cause the individual to keep a list of his personal demons and
master them. Such heroic measures applied to the few common words
that require them will solve the spelling problem.
e Some Other Matters—‘Subject” or technical words should be
handled where they are used. Generally speaking such words need not
be made a part of the children’s permanent automatic spelling repertoire.
Let the pupils learn how to consult the dictionary for spelling division
into syllables, and, in the higher grades for composition and derivation.
Grammatical inflections, as the spelling of plurals, may well be taught in
the composition hour. ‘The use of capitals should be taught there likewise.
4. COMPOSITION AND SPELLING SCALES
A number of so-called standard scales in composition and spelling are
now in print. Those in composition all have the defect of including
mechanical errors and some of them, various types of discourse. The
parent scale, the Hillegas-Thorndike Composition Scale, has both of these.
The Trabue and the Hudelson scales, both based on Hillegas, are homo-
geneous as to type but include mechanical errors. So do the Harvard-
Newton and Willing scales. The composition standards set up in this
course lack the mathematical precision in their derivation which Hillegas
attained, but they are homogeneous—narrative from experience—and
they are free from mechanical errors. They represent, moreover, a con-
sensus of judgments by teachers as to what the pupils of the given grades
can do. (See p. 7 for an account of how these standards were derived.)
The Ayres Spelling Scale is made up of common words evaluated
by grades as to their difficulty. This grading has been found to be only
approximate, and of course when the scale is used for drill, its value as
a general test disappears. The real test is what the pupils do day by day,
provided systematic work in composition is carried on.
All teachers of English should know what scales are available, but
they should also know exactly what merits and limitations they have.
Experiments in their use will be found interesting and valuable.
REFERENCES
1. Sheridan, Speaking and Writing English—Sanborn & Co.
A practical discussion of aims and principles, with a course of
study and samples of children’s work—something to start from.
2. Mahoney, Standards in English—World Book Co.
Explains how a course like Sheridan’s was worked out.
3. Leonard, English Composition as a Social Problem—Houghton, Mif-
flin> Co.
A good point of view and many suggestions.pad en IE SES A a ci Dy yi yo
4. Hosic, Composition (in Rapeer’s Teaching the Elementary School
Subject ).—Chas. Scribners Sons.
A summary of principles.
9. Hosic and Hooper.) AnChild’shCorh
Grammar—Rand McNally Co,
Suggestive as to the essentials both in matter and in method (for
grades 4 to 8).
6. McKinney, Grammar (in Rapeer as above)—Chas. Scribners Sons.
Suggestive, especially as to formal lessons.
2 Wrap Supplementing the Hillegas Scale—Teachers College Pub-
lication.
Probably the most useful scale now available.
8. Tidyman, the Leaching of Spelling—World Book Co.
Sums up our present knowledge—indispensable.
9. Horn and Ashbaugh, Spelling Book—J. B. Lippincott.
A very good desk book.
position Book; A Composition-
B. READING
ip BEGIN NINGS—PRIMARY GRADES
a. Fundamental Process.—:-The primary stage of school reading is
characterized by the acquirement of the abilities that are common to all
reading. Chief among these are: (1) a sense of the value of reading as
a social acquirement—interest in reading; (2) control of the physical co-
ordinations required, viz., holding the book, keeping the place, rhythmic
movements of the eyes, keeping the lips still (in “silent” reading or
“study”’) ; pronouncing the words clearly (in oral reading) ; (3) skill in
the mental activities required, viz., “recognition” of common words, asso-
ciating ideas in groups, carrying meanings forward, reasoning or weighing
the meaning of each sentence as a whole in the light of the purpose which
has been perceived, being conscious that meaning is or is not being derived
—knowing when one is really reading; judging that the oral rendering
either does or does not express a certain meaning.
These processes are complex and difficult, There is great likelihood
that wrong or inadequate habits and co-ordinations will be formed. Yet
it is to be feared that too often the teacher of reading has made no serious
attempt to analyze the problem into its elements. This is the least that
any conscientious person can do. So much depends upon efficiency in the
use of books in the school as it is now conducted that the teaching of
reading deserves to have all of the scientific knowledge back of it that
is obtainable. The books named at the end of this section will help in
this connection and should be accessible to every teacher of reading.
b. Materials.—Because there is most likely to be experience embodied
in the words and because the vocabulary and sentence forms may be
so readily adapted to the advancement of the pupils, some favor the
exclusive use of blackboard lessons, based upon the children’s contribuy-
tions in the course of familiar talk, in the first steps of primary reading.
Certainly such lessons should play a prominent part in the early months
and should be resorted to even in the second and third years when occa-
sion demands. Books should be easy and interesting. The content should
be drawn about equally from matter of fact narrative and from literature,
the choice falling at first upon accounts and stories in which there jis
10
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natural repetition of common words. ““bhe Little Red Hem ots a good
example.
»—Reading involves a severe strain upon the eyes of
children; everything possible should be done to reduce it, Good, ieont,
7 and the right distance should be insisted upon. Books
correct position, ; oi
should fo! be allowed to lie flat on the desk before the reader. The pupils
should not be asked to read any but large plain writing on the board and
that from such an angle that there 1s no glare. Other things being equal,
those books should have pr
c. Hygiene.
eference which contain egg-shell paper, plain
type, and regular lines. (For specifications see Huey and Klapper. )
d. Favorable Conditions—The importance of attitude must not be
overlooked. Interest in reading, interest in learning to read, ideals of
how to study and to read aloud, consciousness of definite achievement,
satisfaction with the use to which the new tool is put will all help exceed-
ingly. Habits, it will be remembered, are best formed consciously. Teach
etl Continuity of subject matter which 1s made up of com-
methods of work. |
plete and significant units 1s essential. Use several books in order to
Bare it «et the period om silent study be free from distraction from
the first, but let the teacher be on the alert to discover and minister to
individual needs.
e. Expression—The entire reading exercise should be regarded as
primarily the exchange and enlargement of experiences. Pupils should
clarify and multiply their ideas; they should organize what is said and
thought into useful wholes centered around significant purposes, questions,
and problems; reading aloud should come only after adequate study and
preparation and should be given as natural a motive and setting as possible.
“Now let us enjoy the piece together,” says the wise teacher, and the pupil
reads to the class. Graphic illustration is legitimate when there are physi-
cal relations to be made clear or choice pictures to visualize. Literature
will often profit from dramatization.
f. Gradation.—Nothing is more certain than that a given class will
include a considerable range of abilities. The exigencies of childhood
will cause this to vary constantly. The pupils must not be treated en masse.
There should be frequent re-grouping. Often the majority should be
permitted to read freely for themselves while the teacher gives remedial
instruction to a few. No adequate standards for measuring reading
ability yet exist. This course, however, provides definite aid in this regard.
A consensus as to the relative difficulty of typical selections from the basic
readers has been made and also an analysis of achievement, in terms of
what the pupils should be able to do with a piece while and after studying
it. (See the grade outlines of the First Cycle.)
g. The Day’s Work—The daily program should include a variety
of work. That anyone should ask little children to read and re-read any
primer two or three times a day for a whole semester seems hardly pos-
sible. A blackboard lesson, a lesson from the pupils’ own books, a lesson
from a supplementary book—these with phonics, literature, composition,
and spelling make monotony unnecessary and indeed inexcusable.
Nor should reading be isolated from the remainder of the day’s work.
Let it be used as a tool in all subjects and in general exercises. Teach
the pupils to employ it freely in solving their problems. Especially intro-
duce very early the free or library reading period, at which each child
reads a book for himself.
11h. Scientific Investigation—Reference is made again to the data
on the reading process as carried on by beginners and by trained readers
which every teacher should have contact with. Most of this material is
new. Those who have not examined it are doing business on limited
capital and need to expand.
2. PHONICS
a. Purpose.—Children study the sounds of the letters in order to
recognize words for themselves. Important by-products are better pro-
nunciation and spelling. The work insures to many a power which they
would otherwise attain too slowly, if at all.
b. Materials—Patent charts and accessories are like other ready-
made school stuff; they may save labor but they are often ill-adapted to
the actual needs. With proper utensils teachers may easily make most
or all of the charts, cards, etc. that they require. Let the children help.
A good reference table should be at hand. The unabridged dictionary
is the authority to be consulted on pronunciation. Divided usage should
be permitted.
c. Principles of Procedure——Many little children do not distinguish
spoken sounds as distinct units at all. They must first have ear training.
The facts as to what sounds the letters in their usual combinations stand
for should then be learned by observation and analysis, not by mere
imitation. There is plenty of room for the exercise of intelligence even
in the class in phonics. Lively games will provide the necessary drill.
d. Grade Requirements.——The first work in pronics should be based
upon the pupils’ reading vocabulary of common words. To some extent
the books in use may help to decide what combinations to attack. More
important criteria, however, are, first, degree of difficulty and, second,
extent of usefulness. Of course many words must be learned as “sight”
words (words as wholes) no matter how much work in phonics has been
done. Grade standards in this course are set up in accordance with inves-
tigation and are understood to be only approximate. Remedial measures
are certain to be necessary in this subject, even beyond the primary grades,
certainly in them. ,
e. Standard Practices—There is a literature of phonics, but it
requires a discriminating judgment to make use of it. Each doctor has
his own treatment.
3. STUDY-READING
a. Objective-—Study-reading as training aims at habitual methods
of effective use of printed matter consciously attained. Most reading in
life is silent reading and the chief need of reading in school is in order
to perform serious mental work tending to the solution of the problem or
the consummation of a project. What the lower grades have begun the
middle and upper grades should carry on, namely, train pupils how to
study. The more complex organization and fuller context of the books
read provide these grades with an abundant task.
b. Materials—The books in common use in schools are none too
well adapted to the purpose. The textbooks are too scanty and the
reading books too scrappy. The pupils should have opportunity to deal
with larger wholes, better organized and more detailed than is now com-
mon. A list of such books is included in this course. Each school
should build up a library of them, and should have a supply of current
periodicals as well. ‘Too often we are at present trying to teach the
children to swim in a wash basin.
12> pores 1 pn EE TEA eS
A great variety of work is possible—class work, group work, indi-
vidual work; school work and home work. Use the public library (the
branch), Teach the children to notice all the editorial helps in their books
—title page, publisher, preface, chapter headings, section headings, outlines,
summaries, index. Observe the technique of scientific as contrasted with
literary writing. More is said about the matter below.
c. Favorable conditions——People study when they must. So long
as habitual reactions satisfy, why exert oneself? Hence training in study
presupposes specific needs and purposes to be served, Flere the project
point of view is invaluable. It assumes that the pupils will read with a
definite goal in view—and with a definite method in mind as well, for
ideals of procedure are as important as ideals of attainment, and nothing
stronger could be said than that. To the extent also that the pupil can
actually trace his own progress to that extent will he be stimulated and
eulded.
Study of discourse, moreover, is the reciprocal of making it. All
that has been learned in composition about sticking to the point should be
utilized in helping William and Mary learn to find the point of what
they read. They should expect such help. They should understand in
both reading and composition how these respective activities are similar
and how they help each other. In other words, “transfer” should be
provided for.
Probably definite provision in the program should be made for study-
reading, certainly in the middle grades. And in order that general reading
of an informational character may be properly stressed, both as training
and as opportunity for the development of intelligence, two periods a
week in grades 4, 5 and 6 should be set aside for it and material obtained
for the purpose. This will correlate helpfully with other subjects but
should be something more than a mere extension of any or all of them.
Consider what the ordinary citizen should be reading and act accordingly.
d. Progress of the Work.—The level of study attempted in any
grade should be determined primarily by the degree of expansion which
the pupils’ intellectual life has attained. Organization into sections, for
example, appears first in the third grade; the dictionary is useful only for
spelling and pronunciation below the seventh and so on.
e. Classroom Procedures.—The technique of study and of teaching
how to study is new to the schools. Yet substantial progress has been
made. Certainly the pupil may decide what he is attempting to learn and
what he must do in order to learn it—according to Dewey a very important
step. He can learn how to analyze, organize, weigh, and consider. He
can outline, summarize, supplement, fix main points in mind. All this he
will do best when it serves some real purpose.
f. First of all the teacher must know how.
REFERENCES :
1. Briggs and Coffman, Reading in the Public Schools. Row Peterson
& Co. Perhaps the best general treatment.
2. Goldwasser, Method and Methods in the Teaching of English. D. C.
Heath & Co. This contains useful tables of phonics.
§. Haliburton, Phonics in Reading. B. F. Johnson Pub. Co. A good
deskbook.
4. Jenkins, Reading in the Primary Grades (In Rapeer’s Teaching the
Elementary School Subjects).—Chas. Scribner’s Sons. A good
summary of the modern point of view.Due Judd, Reading : Its Nature and Development. Univ. of Chicago
Press. Scientific studies of the processes involved.
6. Klapper, Teaching Children to Read. D. Appleton & Co. A brief
formal compilation of facts as to the psychology of reading and
as to various “methods” of teaching reading.
Huey, Psychology and Pedagogy of Reading. Macmillan Co.
McMurry, Teaching Pupils How to Study. Houghton, Mifflin Co.
A basis for developing instruction in study-reading (cf. Lyman
in School Review for October, ToZ0
9. Thorndike, Reading as Reasoning. Journal of Educational Psychol-
ogy, June, 1917. Lays bare the causes of thoughtless reading.
10. Monroe, Measuring the Work of the Public Schools, Houghton,
Mifflin Co. An introductory account of reading tests, though not
up to date.
-C. LITERATURE
1. THROUGH READING
a. Objective.-—The study of literature in school should assist growth
in the ability and desire to enjoy idealized experience communicated
through language—of course through doing it. (There are important
by-products: familiarity with pieces every child should know; a taste
for the best and willingness to concentrate upon it; ideals of method in
study of story, poem and play; heightened sense of adequate expression
and actual increase of power; broadening of knowledge, refinement of
feeling, quickening of imagination and sympathy; building up of social
ideals; means to the profitable enjoyment of leisure; habit of reading ;
knowledge of how to find something to read.) From any standpoint litera-
ture deserves an honored place in the school program, but it is enough
that it is probably on the whole the most available and most inexhaustible
means to the wholesome enjoyment of leisure time.
b. Materials——Unceasing efforts by many hands for a generation
have made a wealth of material known and available. A good deal of it
will be found in the various school reading books. There are various
collections and “classics.” By supplementing with the class library, the
school library, and the public library the books which the children buy—
especially if the school is reasonably enterprising in the matter—a sur-
prisingly large amount of what the world recognizes as worth reading
and reading again may be made “real, familiar, and agreeable.” Choice
is fairly difficult; it’s a matter of taste, but certainly it ought to be a matter
of a reasonably catholic and cultivated taste. Ignorance may be a reason
but it is no excuse.. There should be variety and a balanced ration. Above
all there should be something to interpret America to young Americans.
This course endeavors to reserve to each teacher some of the pieces which
every American child should know.
c. The Teacher’s Role-—The part of the teacher of literature is a
grateful one. It is that of introducer, guide, and sharer with young friends
the wonders and joys already experienced. In some sense it is the applica-
tion of study-reading to belles lettres, though very often study-listening
is better, especially for a first impression, ‘The teacher should often create
expectancy, recall experience, and warm the sympathy. He should so point
the attention that the theme or main idea of the piece shall presently become
clear. He should develop the associations, clear up the pictures, organize
the sequence, lead to adequate and enjoyable expressions, and connect
this with new enterprises.
14d. The Program.—Literature which children can i. is not oe
to minute grading. Some of it will retain an active hold for several years,
some of it for a life time. All of it should be worth ae
and pieces literally. But maturity ot content and difficulty o ee
may be regarded. Certain pieces may be reserved. Continuity has value.
Occasion has even more. The anniversaries prepare the way for many
good readings and provide a use for them. Current events, the passing
seasons, and the changing life of the school give the setting for many
more. Some are good at almost any time.
2. PRESENTED ORALLY
a. Much of the literature taught in school need not be read by the
pupils themselves at all, at least not at first. The art of listening is not
vet a lost art with children, and their ability to grasp and enjoy exceeds
their ability to deal with the printed symbols.
b. Materials —Much literature lends itself to the voice. Literature
orginates as oral tradition and never wholly loses its appeal to the ear.
Poetry depends upon this. In the literature of tradition will be found a
large part of what we should like to read or tell to the children. Simplicity,
sincerity, directness—these are the essential qualities. The modern writer
is almost sure to be too sophisticated, especially for the younger ones.
Special care must be exercised to choose good versions and adaptations
—for literature for children has come to mean, in large measure, an
amazing welter of trash by ill-advised and uninspired hack writers and
editors.
c. The Pupils’ Activities—The nature of the selection should deter-
mine what the pupils do with it. Poems are to be recited, stories to be
told, plays to be acted—it is their genius. Conversation will bring out
the associations and occasion thinking; telling incidents will make them
vivid; dramatizing will tend to deepen the emotional effect; drawing,
memorizing, outlining, summarizing, reciting, composing, copying, illus-
trating—all have their proper place and function.
d. Memorizing—sSo much is made—and badly—of committing to
memory, that a special word about it is necessary. When a selection is
properly studied, memorizing almost takes place of itself. Once the
purpose of the whole is clear, the steps in the development have been
mastered, the suggestive details and pictures have been brought out, and
the whole has been heard two or three times as a part of the process, all
but the dullest will be able to repeat a short poem nearly without error
and, of course, with a degree of expression. This has been known to
happen in twelve or fifteen minutes. Parrot repetition of a line or two
and then another before the poem has been studied is the worst possible
practice. ‘Those who have tried the true or psychological method will
never fall into this error.
e. Dramatization—Dramatizing stories should be a creative exer-
cise, paving the way for some making of plays in school and discrimination
in the enjoyment of plays outside of school. The pupils should feel that
what to do and how te do it is their problem to solve—with the teacher’s
help. First of all each child should be clear as to what happened in the
story, should recognize the sequence of incidents leading to the outcome.
Then each can contribute to the decision as to what scenes shall be enacted
by what characters saying and doing what appropriate things. The process
then becomes one of evolving the performance step by step from pre-
liminary pantomime and trial speeches to completed form, a form not so
complete that it represents the teacher rather than the children.
15
eae TE PELE CPR Le eae ASf. Reading Aloud.—Oral reading of literature is a fine art, com-
| parable to singing. Few attain to the power of solo performance in it. But
| teachers should attain to a higher standard of both performance and of
guidance in it if their conceptions were higher. Beginning with clear,
| pleasant tones and distinct (not exaggerated) enunciation, the teacher
should lead on to discriminating emphasis through rate, pause, inflection,
# and stress, and to force appropriate to the message. Her main dependence
| must be, of course, upon adequate realization of the meaning and purpose
of what is being read. The use of the technique of oral expression will
be exactly comparable to that made of it in teaching oral composition. Did
the reader say well what he meant—or should have meant—to say? Why
or why not? How could he improve the performance? Let him try.
The teacher should be able and willing to show the pupils how to read
| by reading for them, not to give them details to imitate but a general idea
of good oral reading. Children are a thousand times more likely to have
_ heard good singing than to have heard good reading. The school should
supply this deficiency.
REFERENCES
Colby, Literature and Life in School. Houghton, Mifflin Co.
MacClintock, Literature in the Elementary School. Univ. of Chicago
Press. These two present a general theory of literature as a sub-
ject of study by children.
3. Hosic, the Elementary Course in English. Univ. of Chicago Press.
An outline of principles with extensive lists of stories and poems
by grades.
4. Bryant, How to Tell Stories to Children. Houghton, Mifflin Co.
Definite theory and numerous examples.
Johnson, The Oak Tree Fairy Book. Little, Brown & Co:
_6. Wiggin and Smith, the Posy Ring; Golden Numbers. Houghton,
Mifflin Co.
nN
Sal
D. LIBRARY READING
More than a passing reference to library reading is due. This is not
a mere accessory or luxury but an indispensable part of the child’s ex-
perience in school days. Without it few ever really learn to read. Without
it the joys of reading are decidedly limited.
The school must make provision for it. Cooperation with the public
library helps and is useful in setting up the right habits of using the facil-
ities provided by the community. But there is no substitute for books
_ always at hand. Hence schools should take steps to build up collections,
by classes and grades, and in the general reading room some definite
' care of the books and guidance in the use of the books should be provided.
In class the treatment of the books should be generally informal. In
' the first three grades the reading will be done in school. It is a profitable
form of seat work and should be scheduled. Occasionally some of the
' pupils may read or tell to the others something of what has been read.
| The teacher should make sure that there is no mere dawdling. At the
same time she should avoid anything like a “recitation.” In middle and
higher grades book talks, being exchange of impressions, should take
_ place. Let each pupil learn how to speak three minutes, saying only what
- those who have not yet read the book wish to hear. Others may supple-
_ ment and ask questions. In the hands of the informed and skillful such
' book hours are immeasurably interesting and profitable.
16x
peg pp oo
PART II.
THE COURSE BY CYCLES AND BY GRADES
INTRODUCTION
A general discussion of English study can make clear the kinds of
activities to be carried on, but it is inadequate as to details and as to when
and how much. Hence it is necessary to outline the work of each school
year. This may be done by laying out a surplus of possibilities and
leaving the teacher to decide upon essentials or by stating definitely that
certain things are basic and to be included, no matter how much more is
added. The present manual course aims to be clear as to basic material.
It prescribes a certain minimum for all schools. But it also provides the
indispensable margin.
The arrangement by cycles is intended to unify the work and enable
a better organization of it. The dominant interests of the pupils are
recognized and given play. It has also the advantage of giving time for
certain abilities to develop and of providing a distinct change of program
often enough to give the pupils a sense of conquest.
Whatever is common to the cycle is stated in the introduction to it.
Every teacher concerned should therefore examine carefully the intro-
duction as well as the several grade outlines.
Cycle I: Grades 1 to 3
The first cycle or stage of the English work may, for convenience,
be bounded by the entrance to school and the completion of the third grade.
This will include the kindergarten for such pupils as attend it. The
third grade marks approximately the conclusion of the primary steps
in reading, mastery of the processes common to all reading, and the
control of a working vocabulary of common words. The next cycle brings
the pupil at once into the realm of textbooks and demands a more technical
training in the use of books. |
Other characteristic features of the first cycle are (1) the emphasis
to be placed upon oral composition and the subordination of written
composition to it, and upon oral presentation of literature, (2) the treat-
ment of spelling and phonics so as to give the mastery of the forms of
the most commonly used words, and (3) the flexible handling of subjects
so as to avoid hard and fast lines of demarcation and enable the children
to enjoy many-sided experiences in which constructive and expressional
activities go hand in hand with studies in community life and natural
phenomena.
1. COMPOSITION
Ihe composition work of the cycle is mainly oral. It aims (1) to
give play to the children’s desire to communicate their experiences to
others and to train their judgments as to what is best to say, (2) to accus-
tom them to speaking distinctly and clearly to their class, and (3)! to
17
aa a ean as ¥ .
= FETE DAT EY ST Ce ate eee eeena Lh Maa eae eh aE Ae a oe ct DN gf
speaking in sentences. Many pupils will easily attain other desirable
qualities, such as (4) sticking to the point, (5) good sequence, and (6)
the,tise,.of strkine, details... the workiof such pupils will be considered,
however, as better than merely passing. The written composition should
be judged by similar standards. The mechanics to be learned are just
those required to write what the pupils speak and may have need to record.
(See Section d under Writing in Part I of this manual course, p. 8.)
Story telling will accustom the pupils to more mature sentence forms
and enlarge their vocabularies. The organization of the stories should
be made to stand out. For example, help the children to divide the story
of the Three Bears into its five steps or incidents, name each—While the
bears walk, the little girl comes; she eats the porridge; she sits in the
chairs; she lies in the beds; when the bears return, she runs away—and
let one child tell a simple complete incident and no more. This will lay
the foundation for the study-reading of the next cycle and for the more
mature composition of the higher grades.
The spelling battle is lost or won in the first three years. More than
half of all the words which the pupils will actually write in their school
course they already use in this cycle. Most of the “demons” are in this
list.
2. READING
Phonics, if taught through analysis, will help spelling. The study
of phonics is necessary to economy in learning to read. The work should
be so laid out that all the pupils of each grade get similar work and so
that one grade carries forward what the one before has begun. Good
committee work will easily accomplish this.
Reading should begin, however, before phonics in order that mere
sounding of meaningless symbols may not result. Sight words (words
unphonetic, at least as yet) should be taught in context through conversa-
tion and accompanying blackboard and card work. The pupils should be
permitted to study the lesson as a whole. The discussion following will
clear up obscure points and often call for oral reading to support a pupil’s
contention. Expression of the lesson by the pupils as a whole should come
only when it is thoroughly understood.
The stages of a typical lesson whole in the primary grades may be
distinguished as follows:
Stages in a Reading Class
I. PREPARATION
A. Necessary Experience
1. With the content. The teacher should make sure that the pupils
have freshly in mind a sufficient body of experience to enable them to
build up by imagination and thinking the experience they are to share.
Conversation, pictures, objects may all be necessary.
2. With language. The teacher must also make sure that the words,
in the case of beginners, are in the speaking vocabulary and are either
known at sight or contain familiar phonetic characters. During the
preliminary conversation introduce new words in script or in print or
in both.
18B. Attitude One
1. Toward the subject. There should be pleasurable anticipation,
the expectation that a question will be answered, an interesting experience
shared. Develop consciousness of a problem as the basis for reflective
thinking. : |
2 Toward the activity of reading. ihe children should be inter-
ested in good methods of procedure, physical and mental. For example,
set up the ideal of reasonable speed and alertness, of looking ahead, and
of accepting only reasonable meanings.
II, SILENT READING (STUDY)
A. The Units. The pupils should deal with significant wholes—
usually more than the single sentence. They should be in 2 position to
build up a related, organized body of ideas in the light of a dominating
idea or purpose.
B. The Process. Self-help should be the watchword. The teacher
should work with individuals.
III. EXPRESSION
A. Possibilities. Warious activities are in place—discussion, answers
to questions, telling experience, reproduction, reciting from memory, read-
ing aloud, dramatization, graphic art, industrial art.
Be Choice.
1. The nature of the selection will often determine.
2. The many-sided development of the class should be provided
for.
C. The Audience Situation. The pupil should read to the class.
Whether the other pupils should follow in their own books is a moot
question. If they are actively participating mentally in the reading there
is undoubtedly both pleasure and profit in their doing so.
D. Roles of the Teacher. The teacher must be versatile—question-
ing, suggesting, relating experience, reading to the class, telling stories,
emphasizing something to be remembered are some of her duties.
iv. THE FOLLOW-UP
A. Of the Subject. If a topic is worth while for one lesson it is
probably worth while for several. Deepen the interest and enlarge and
establish the knowledge by presenting a wealth of material.
B. Of the Activity of Reading. Give natural healthy exercise to the
abilities which the first lesson called out—do the same thing again with
new interest in the subject matter, but with repetition of words and
sentence forms and practice in handling them.
C. Of Details. Drill on words and expressions which are important
but elusive. Provide for repetition—with interest.
A Reading Repertoire
A balanced program in reading requires a “repertoire ;” no single book
will provide it. The titles suggested in the grade outlines in this course
were drawn from indexes which several schools have made. The lessons
were chosen from books in common use, each for a specific purpose, a
definite value. A 4x6 library card was used, the two faces of which were
printed as follows:
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READING REPERTOIRE (obverse)
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Key other side (over )
KEY (Reverse)
Grading: = Easy M=Medium D = Difficult
Classification
ne hewn: il Prose 2. « POetY 3. Drama
B. Subject-Matter :
1. -Adventure 7. Humaneness
Zt &. imumor
3. Biography 9. Ideals
A Child lite 10. Nature—out-of-doors
5, laney. if Patrionsm
6, History 12. Travel—life in other lands
Comment: Reason for teaching.
20ae oe on +" Sey fk RO
pe Ge ee ee ee
It is suggested that all schools build up classified indexes of best
reading lessons in the same manner.
3° LITERATURE
ter to reserve to each grade certain selections not to be taught
before and in order to give the children the benefit of expert selection of
pieces most valuable to them, a short list of poems and stories has been
made out. Teachers will add to this as they can. The poems which
should be learned by heart and the stories which should become so familiar
as to be easily told or acted out are starred as preferred selections. A
few pieces to be read to the children by the teacher are also indicated.
The teacher should, of course, not need the text in presenting the others
but should prepare as well as in the case of her music lessons. (See the
section on Literature, p. 14.)
In orc
4. LIBRARY READING
Most children, before the end of their first semester, can profitably
employ twenty minutes or more each day in reading at their seats books
of their own choice. Suggestive lists of suitable books appear in Part
Ill. The teacher should observe what is going on and tactfully put on
the track the pupils who fail to get started. If a pupil continues to leaf
his book through, settling down to no attentive reading, give him a cue
and encourage him to finish something.
21ae ae 3 CLL ieee ee Oe ee ie
eS ncaa Pty ee Be at ere Bak ioe
The First Grade
lt COMPOSITION
A. Speaking.—This constitutes nearly all of the language work of
this grade.
1. Aims: Readiness and the sentence sense; clear tones and distinct
utterance; the joy and profit of sharing experience.
Zz Materials: Actual experience; topics of conversation in all classes:
stories. (See outline of literature on page Al.)
By Achievement: Ability to make a speech of three or four sentences and
to tell a single complete incident from a simple story so as to be
heard distinctly by all of the group. Approximate standards are
as follows
STANDARDS OF ORAL COMPOSITION
Fair.
I have a cat. I pulled my cat’s tail. My cat scratched me.
(This composition has the merit of correct sequence in clearly defined
sentences, but is ordinary, i.e., has nothing to indicate that the cat is
different from any other cat.)
Good.
The Play-Ground.
I like the ladders. I can climb up them. I turn somersaults all the
way down.
(The theme is more mature than the Fair composition. The sentences
are closely related in thought. There is an expression of preference. )
Excellent.
We had a little yellow bird. One day my mother took me down-
town, and when we came home our bird was dead. We forgot to turn
off the gas heater and it killed the bird.
(The telling of a complete incident with the explanation involved
places this composition in the excellent group.)
Superior.
Yesterday I picked up my cat and held him on my lap. I saw some-
thing sticking on his paw. It was a grasshopper’s foot. He must have
had a fight with a grasshopper.
(This is interesting because of the suspense. The inference expressed
in the last sentence is unusual for first grade.)
(See page 7 for an account of how these standards were derived.)
4. Suggestions: Begin by calling for one statement, one sentence, one
thing the pupil has done. Select a center of interest for the day’s
“Note.—These examples are not intended to be used as models for the
children to imitate.
22
— TE Py SE Ne
REET ee ee ee ee
; >talk—-How I help mother, What my pet does. Do not tempt the
speaker to ramble on. Supply correct forms or missing words
politely when the speaker needs them. Set up the conditions for the
tse of sentences in various lessons by saying, Tell us so and SO,
instead of merely putting a question. (For suggestive list of topics
see p. 45.)
B. Writing—On the blackboard only.
1. Aims: To satisfy the children’s desire to do what they see others
doing.
2. Materials: Only what is supplied by the teacher or has previously
been spoken by the pupil.
3. Achievement: Ability to write the pupil’s name correctly.
4. Suggestions: Good images of the forms to be written and of the
movements necessary must be developed. Approve only large,
firm characters. The teacher’s example is the important thing,
at this stage, but analysis of letters 1s used by some success-
fully. Do not force the work in this grade.
C. Spelling—Mainly incidental and connected with phonics and
writing. In many schools at least three-fourths of the class will
know the following perfectly: Formal oral drills, however, are not
meant to be implied by this list.
a baby can dog girl
all ball cat doll give
am be come go
an bed for good
and big day fun
are bird did had
at boy do get hat
by
man Bp
has I may play us
have in me
he fs men ne
hen It my red was
her - Pon we
him e will
hic little a4 see
home lock ane yes
SO
of sun Ie
old
on the
one this
out to
(See p. 8 for an account of the derivation of this list.)
i READING
A. Silent Reading-Study.—This is the chief phase of reading and
should almost always precede any attempt on the part of children at
reading a passage aloud.
1. Aims: To form good habits from the beginning; to arouse, if
Ni necessary, interest in reading; to develop ideals of how to read; to re-
| organize important parts of the children’s experience and add to their stock
of information; to lead on to literature; to place an indispensable tool in
the children’s hands and put them in the way of using it effectively.
23
Sy cre EET ET Ee TRA ERE {CPSC Ribs Seees ee ee
= mest aE sei er ae aa Se Pi 84
bg
2. Materials: (a) Blackboard lessons made up of contributions
trom the pupils, reworded if necessary by the teacher. The following are
suggestive examples:
I have some roller skates.
I skate to school.
I can skate fast.
I don’t fall down.
We had a party.
It was my birthday.
Six little children came.
The little girls had their dolls.
The little boys had wagons.
They gave the dolls a ride.
They played games.
Mike has a dog.
His father brought him home.
The dog followed his father,
They think his name is Spot.
He has a black spot on his nose.
Mike’s father is going to make a house for him.
My mother cooks the grapes.
She puts them in the squeezer.
She squeezes out the juice.
Then she cooks it some more.
She cooks it until it turns to jelly.
Then she pours it into glasses.
She pours paraffin on top.
It is snowing.
The snow is coming down fast.
We are glad to see the snow.
We have no school this afternoon.
We will have some fun.
We can play horse with our sleds.
We can tie our dogs to our sleds.
We can make a snow hill.
We will have a good time.
The postman comes to our house.
He brings the mail.
He gets it from the postoffice.
The people put their letters in the mail box.
Then the collector comes in his machine.
He takes it to the postoffice.
Mildred’s father is a postman.
Leslie saw a moth in our room.
The moth came out of the cocoon.
We had the cocoon all winter.
The moth was sleeping in the cocoon all winter.
He is a beautiful moth.
He has pretty spots on his wings.
He spread his wings but he did not fly.
His wings were not very strong.
24
ET EERE EE eae ey Eg se
eer ee FT ee ee ee ee a ie(b) ;
a variety of fields of interest.
eest a scheme of selection.
Selected lessons from books grouped in sequence and covering
The following brief “repertoire” will sug-
With beginners cumulative folk stories may be used to good advant-
age.
vocabulary, the rhythm of the repeated
make the reading easy and attractive.
eye span, the ability to read by phrases
habit. Their content is of real value.
suggested.
Cumulative Stories:
The Little Red Hen
The Three Billy Goats Gruff
The Hen who Went to High Dover
Lambikin
The Old Woman and Her Pig
The Johnnycake
Ned Visits Grandmother
Child Life:
Playing Fire Engine and Railroad
The Greedy Boy
Nellie’s Present
Story of the Peas
The Fourth of July
The Circus
Humor:
Hi, Diddle, Diddle
Old Mother Hubbard
The Three Kittens
The Dog and the Cock
Chicken Little
The Little Porridge Pot
Amy’s Grapes and the Turkey
3. Achievement:
Others may be found in the usual grade readers.
The simple
phrases, the humor of the story
Their use tends to increase the
and to fix early a rapid reading
Other centers of interest are
Free & Treadwell Primer
Elson First
Elson First
Winston Primer
Free & Treadwell Primer
Elson First
Elson Primer
Elson-Runkel
Merrill First
Merrill First
Howe First
Howe First
Wideawake First
Wideawake First
Merrill First
Merrill First
Art-Literature
Winston First
Free & Treadwell
Winston First
Howe First
Book One
Ability on the part of at least three-fourths of the
children to read a selection like the following so as to be able to make such
explanations as (a) Why Tom played with the grasshopper, (b) Why
the grasshopper went to the ants’ house, (c) Why the ants did not give
him food, (d) How many children will be necessary to play the story.
Children should be able to play the game themselves.
May; Come and. play, Jom:
Let us play the ant and the grasshopper.
Tom: I will, if you will let me be the grasshopper.
May: Yes, Tom. You make big hops.
Tom: Well, call the ants,
May: Come, Alice and Grace. Bring Kate and Ella with you.
ae We are going to play the ant and the grasshopper.
Girls: Good! Good! Here we are. Where shall we have our ant-hill?
Tom: Over in the sand pile.
That makes a good ant-hill.
29we a
ath a fas BS ine
May: Well, we are ready now.
We are hard at work.
Come on, grasshopper.
Grasshopper: Knock, knock, knock!
Ants: Who is there?
Grasshopper: It is I, the grasshopper.
Ants: What do you want?
Grasshopper: I want something to eat.
It is very chilly out here.
ihe grass is all gone and I can not find any food.
Ants: We have no food for you.
Grasshopper: You have food now. You worked all summer.
Ants: What did you do all summer?
Grasshopper: Oh, I danced and hopped and played.
Ants: Why didn’t you work?
Grasshopper: I had no time for work.
Ants: Well, go dance now. Go play. He who will not work, can
not eat.
Howe First Reader, p. 90.
4. Suggestions: Go over the procedure on page 18 and apply the
spirit of it. While the new and unfamiliar written or printed characters
will inevitably receive much of the children’s attention, the experience
embodied in the piece must be kept steadily in mind.. Growth of power
to read is best attained by reading which provides the satisfaction of
rich and stimulating experience. To get as much at a glance as possible
and to accept only clear and reasonable meanings should be the conscious
ideal of the pupils.
B. Reading Aloud.—This is not to be confused with mere pro-
nouncing or “Studying out loud.” It should be regarded as one of the
means of giving expression to what has been read and read as a whole.
(See procedure on ppcobb) 16.)
l. Aims; .To.provide’ thé opportunity for saying, 11 which fhe
children crave; to show what meaning the pupil gets; to give practice in
pleasing and appropriate vocal expression; to assist the memory of printed
words; to clarify and deepen the impression of the passages read, both
for the reader himself and for those who follow.
2. Materials: All the reading material used in this grade.
3. Achievement: To read fluently (as opposed to stumblingly, halt-
ingly, word by word) and with inflections according to the sense, with
distinct enunciation, 1n a clear but not harsh or high-pitched voice, pieces
of the difficulty of the example given under Silent Reading above.
4. Suggestions: Build the ideal of reading aloud so that the reading
sounds much like talking. By questions, suggestions, illustrations, etc.,
increase the vividness with which the reader realizes the meaning of what
he is reading. Simple dramatization often helps.
C. Phonics.—By phonics is meant the study of the sounds of the
letters as they appear in common words.
1. Aims: To enable children unassisted to recognize in print or
script familiar words and thus to get on more rapidly in learning to read ;
to improve pronunciation; to assist spelling.
2. Materials: Words contatning sounds most commonly met with,
particularly consonants and the so-called “short” and “long” sounds of the
C4
ZO
ad FRET EE ae Ma ae ees ee eee ee rey Fel E Sae Uae ig he eee 4 a ad Lfee eee cal ulnnt SA assu ae
vowels as usually represented.
2 Achievement: The habit of self-help, the pupil calling for help
only when he really needs it; ability to make out the Ps of
words or parts of words whose phonic characters are included in the scope
of work outlined above.
4. Suggestions: Apply the principles stated in the section on phonics
in Part 1, page 12. Avoid extremes. Too much phonics makes slow and
formal readers; too little phonics throws too great a burden on the teacher
and leaves many pupils without the keys to reading. Don’t stop to teach
phonics when the time for the recitation in reading has come. Whatever
method or system is used, put life and zest in it, the spirit of the game or
contest, and let the pupils feel the joy of achievement.
i., LITER Oi
PRESENTED ORALLY.—Many stories and poems which the children
can not yet read are easily understood when heard and are best received
in this way.
1. Aims: To give familiarity with some of the best pieces; to build
up esthetic and moral ideals; to develop power in language, both as to
organization and as to vocabulary; to assist the reading.
2. Materials: Mainly folk tales and simple poems. The following
are reserved for this grade, the pieces deemed most worthy of permanent
familiarity being starred:
Stories.
ety cihe Flare and-the Vortoise: .. 0). Jacobs.
m2, slarce Billy Goats! Gium.......) 128: Dasent.
- 2. 2antvand the Grasshopper... 4. 1.5 Jacobs.
or Old \Woman and EHer Pig... 2.8 Jacobs.
pes Onickem leittle, oe Jacobs.
mao) GinSeronead: Boy. 7... (220.2. 4s. Howe Second Reader.
i (ite Ned Ridine blood. ........... Joseph Baldwin.
fee Whee Fis. ee Jacobs.
ie Abnee beans a eee Jacobs.
Oe eimlegived Pleny <4. 5. ae Johnson.
ol Whew Vind andthe Sun. 25 2020 Jacobs.
iz ie) Crow, and the Pitcher: ...-..... Jacobs.
toe tra: (Coal and the, Bean. 99. ea. Grimm’s Tales.
i Guerbreman Lown Minsicians.... Grimm’s Tales.
Non Miewllice VWisheses 3 6... Grimm’s Tales.
Hone ton, Whiutab. oo. 3 ee. Grimm’s Tales.
Wee decile’ Brown Seed. 6, Cat Tails and Other Tales.
ios) Ge lion and the Wiouse.-..° | Jacobs.
19. The Wolf and the Seven Goslings...Grimm’s Tales.
20. One Eye, Two Eyes, Three Byes... (Grimin’s Vales.
Poems
pal ed ane Simmer. 7 3 ee R. L. Stevenson.
pane Py Son Shi ee Oe R. L. Stevenson.
eo. Who Has Seen the Wind?.... =~ Rossetti.
fog. itee Birdie Serie tetas a dete Tennyson.
ey Gomme Witte Teaves.el 6.) Cooper.Te et” ag im Lee eS Le
paeaae gait es
— cS PPR aS PIG eS OS Fer a
: 6: “he Cow SuSiGe cise cos: Seon os eee R. L. Stevenson.
7 The Swing. ee A a ee R. L. Stevenson.
78. Uwinklewinkle, late Sry) Jane Taylor.
Oo) The Wand ]
Pee, ele ee R. L. Stevenson.
OU, Little Blane ee uo: Lara Papeete
12. Little Brown Brother
13. I Love You, Mother
it Christmas Sone
Pee ee eee The Posy King.
Hor. Cradice somaya ge A. ls ee. Tennyson.
HO ain Don, Matgles 65 * ii. «ie ao) Seleatens: for Memorizing.
iol Saugas SuipeNcatine: 6.8 one Charles Welch.
Me. Lhe ealsemaahite Wyse. 00 cpg ne Phoebe Cary.
Me fe UTES MeN te eo ccs A kk R. L. Stevenson.
20. Daisies
ye ee ee R. L. Stevenson.
3. Achievement: Sufficient acquaintance with at least ten poems
and ten stories to make possible intelligent preference among them; ability
to recite five of the starred poems from memory ; ability to tell what any
of the preferred stories is about and to tell any single incident from it.
4. Suggestions: Point the attention toward the main story-idea as
set forth in the outcome of the series of pictures or happenings. For
example, in presenting the “Three Bears” arouse expectancy as to the
coming of something to disturb them and curiosity as to what they did
about it. Develop the pictures and the suggestions. Make the pupils aware
of the principal steps or stages in the treatment. Apply the principles
stated in Part | under Literature, pp. 14, 15.
THRouGH Rerapinc.—Many lessons in modern first books retain
literary qualities in spite of simplification. Treat literature as literature
and information as information.
ly. THE LIBRARY HOUR
Arouse a desire to read at will and assist selection. Give sympathetic
but not meddlesome oversight. Give also opportunity from time to time
for the pupils to exchange impressions through conversation, relating
incidents, or reading to each other. A suggestive list of suitable books will
be found in the appendix.
28
ie ee Child’s Own Book of Verse.
¢
ae i
cor atl ace)“ ge DEY 3 %
: Se ak Bec © eee, ee “Roa San
a aad WE ga ie a ae ey cdl oak eae bee haelle ai ie
Py
The Second Grade
i. *COMPOSHION
A. Speaking.—This is far the most important part of the language
work of the grade.
1. Aims: Readiness, interest, sticking to the point, and the sentence
sense; the habit of regarding the audience by speaking clearly and dis-
tinctly: entertainment and enlargement of experience.
2 Materials: Observation and personal experience; topics of con-
versation in all classes; stories (see the outline on literature, p. 35, ff).
3. Achievement: Ability to make a short speech and to select and
tell one or more units of a simple story so as to be heard by all of the group.
Approximate standards of oral composition are as follows:
STANDARDS OF ORAL COMPOS] TiOx)
Far.
Saturday morning my brother and I made a snowhouse. Then we
were sitting in it. Then someone broke it and it fell on top of us.
(This is a little more complex in thought than grade one and has
more interest. The repetition of “then” and the use of the expression
“were sitting” in place of “sat” prevent its being classed as a good com-
position. )
Good.
Yesterday afternoon I saw an aeroplane. I followed it until it looked
like a speck. Then the bell rang.
(A picture is presented. The use of the comparison marks a step in
advance. )
Excellent.
Our canary was eating sugar very fast. I think he was very hungry.
When I looked at him he stopped eating it. He was afraid of me.
(This is better than Good because of the inference drawn from the
actions of the canary. )
(A statement is made; the inference follows. A second statement is
followed by still another inference. The inference in each case is true
and interesting. )
Superior.
How I Was Fooled.
Yesterday my sister went to her cooking lesson. When I finished
supper I looked in her pail to see what she had cooked. It looked like
candy. I took a bite. It was soap.
(This composition keeps to the point. There is variety in beginning
the sentences. The point is withheld until the last sentence, which is very
effective. )
See p. 7 for an account of how these standards were derived.
‘These examples are not intended to be used by the children as models
to imitate.
29Pe ae ag nn ee Lie ee
ates ae ies,
_ 4. Suggestions: Hold the pupil to a single phase of the subject and
rain him to decide beforehand just what things he wishes to say, Select
center of interest and encourage class interchange both as to ideas and
s to expression. Make the necessary corrections in grammar and pro-
‘unciation yourself. Supply the conditions for full sentences by making
equests instead of asking questions which call merely for yes or no. (For
uggestive list of topics see p. 45.)
3. Writing—Mainly on the blackboard.
1. Aims: To enlarge the facilities for communication in the class.
2. Materials: Principally the pupils’ oral compositions. They must
ie able when they write to give their attention to the mechanics,
3. Achievement:
Capitalization
Names of persons.
First word in a sentence.
Punctuation
Period at the end of a sentence.
Straight lines; spaces between words.
4. Suggestions: Write for the pupils. Give each pupil at least a
rard of space at the blackboard. The lines should not be much above the
evel of the pupil’s eyes. Insist on large and firm characters. Show how
o leave spaces between words. Point out the mechanical errors, particu-
arly spelling, yourself, and cause the correct form to be inserted. Let the
lass help to improve the thought and composition.
-. Spelling.—A large proportion of all the common words the pupils
/will ever write they begin to use in this grade. The following is a minimal
ist. At least three-fourths of the pupils should be able to spell all the
words in it by the end of the grade.
about dare head nest soap
add dark held never soft
after dead hello new some
ago dear help next song
air deep here nice soon
alike desk hide nine soup
any die hill noon spell
apple dinner himself nose spring
arm dirt hit now stand
as dish hold nut star
ask does horse still
asleep done hot oh stone
ate door house once store
aunt down how only story
away draw hungry open stove
; dress hunt or street
back drink hurt other Sunday
bad drop our sweet
band dry if over sewing
bank dust ill .
barn into paint table
basket each its papa tail
bear ear paper take
30been
before
begin
begun
bell
belong
best
bill
bite
black
blue
boat
body
boil
book
box
bread
brick
bright
brother
brown
bug
buggy
bush
but
cake
call
came
candy
cap
Car
card
care
careful
cart
catch
Cent
chair
chicken
child
chop
city
class
clean
clock
coat
cold
comb
cook
cost
could
COW
cross
eat
egs
ever
every
eye
face
fall
far
fast
father
fed
feed
feet
fill
find
fine
fire
first
fish
five
fx
floor
flower
fly
foot
found
four
free
freeze
fresh
from
full
game
garden
gave
glad
God
goes
going
gold
gone
got
erass
great
ereen
ground
grow
eun
hair
half
hand
hang
jump
keep
key
kall
kind
king
kiss
kitten
knife
laid
lake
land
large
last
late
lay
lazy
leat
leaves
led
left
leg
letter
life
live
long
lost
lot
loud
love
low
like
made
make
making
march
meat
meet
mice
milk
miss
Miss
moon
Monday
more
mother
mouse
mouth
move
much
must
31
Trey
park
party
pass
pay
peanuts
pen
pencil
pet
pick
pie
pin
pink
plant
pole
poor
pull
put
pond
rain
read
real
ride
ring
road
rock
rode
roll
room
rose
rug
said
sat
saw
say
school
seat
seed
sell
shall
shirt
shoe
shop
show
sick
sing
sister
sit
S1X
skate
sky
sleep
small
tall
teeth
tell
ten
than
them
there
these
they
thing
three
till
time
today
told
took
top
three
two
under
very
wagon
walk
wall
wash
water
way
week
well
went
were
west
wet
what
when
white
who
why
wind
window
winter
with
word
work
write
writing
wrote
yard
year
yellowNE ia ee ae
cry happy smile yet
cup hard name smoke your
cut having neck snow f
(See p. 8 for an account of the derivation of this list. )
j Follow fe suggestions on p. 9 for the teaching and testing of spelling.
.eep a notebook in which to record the words which give the class trouble
nd let each pupil make a little dictionary of his own.
Il. READING
4. Silent Reading—Study.—This is the chief phase of reading and
hould almost always precede any attempt on the part of children at reading
passage aloud. ,
i dims: To develop and strengthen good habits and ideals of
eading ; to enlarge the reading vocabulary and the experience of dealing
vith sentences and paragraphs of various lengths and types; to widen
perience of life and thought and give familiarity with literature worth
mowing.
m iWVaterials:
Lessons in books, on the blackboard, or printed on
he school press, arranged in sequence according to such centers of interest
is are suggested in the following sample repertoire:
Adventure:
The Sister of the Sun
The Goiden Blackbird
How the Pony Was Won
The Bremen Band of Musicians
Five in One Pod
deeynard the Fox
The Indian Story
How Grandpa Was Lost in the
Forest
Indiana
Tid Life:
Wora and the Light
iiiie Circus in the Barn
The Land of Counterpane
The Land of Story Books
Wynken, Blynken and Nod
A Child’s Garden of Verses
Sone, Lwo, Three’
Little Goody Two Shoes
Missak (In Armenia)
Jacob and Katrina (In Holland )
Patriotism:
The Flag
The Fourth of July
Our Flag
The Baker Boys of Andernach
and the Bees
The Dolls’ Thanksgiving Dinner
The Boy Washington
Free & Treadwell
Reading Literature
Winston II
Story Hour TI
Free & Treadwell I]
Winston II
Reynard the Fox
Beacon II
Blodgett II
Around the World II
Howe II
Howe II
Art—Literature II
Ant—lAteratune 11
William’s Choice Literature
Brooks II
William’s Choice Literature
Beacon II
Child Life in Other Lands
Child Life in @©ther Cands
Bisom Tf
Howe II
Howe II
Beacon II
Bison i
Brooks IIThe Little Cook (A Washington
Story )
The Boy Columbus
Memorial Day
Thanksgiving Day
Abraham Lincoln
Nature:
The Wind
The Voice of Spring
The Hill Pasture
Laura and the Birds
The Little Brook
Mother Frost
Two Little Crickets
The Magpie’s Lesson
Story of Seed Down
The Falling Snow
Funny Little Tadpoles
The Robin s Secret
Ideals: a
[ Didn't Think
The Discontented Pine Tree
The Stone in the Road
The Christmas Bells
Discontent
The Silver Shilling
Bruce and the Spider
Hindu Sykes and the Quails
Story of Peter Kabbit
The Pot of Gold
3. Achievement:
Elson II
Brooks Il
Brooks II
William’s Choice Literature
Blodgett II
Howe II
Wide Awake II
Wide Awake II
Brooks II
Aldine II
Beacon II
Blodgett II
Aldine II
Wide Awake II
Beacon II
Blodgett II
Elson II
Beacon II
Reading—Literature I]
Winston II
Brooks II
William’s Choice Literature
Aldine II
Beacon II
Story Hour
Howe II
Wide Awake II
Ability on the part of at least three-fourths of
the children to read a selection like the following so as to be able to
make such explanations as (a) How Peter differed from his brothers,
(b) What shows that Peter was naughty, (c) What shows that he was
clever, (d) How Peter had a joke played on him, (e) Whether Peter’s
mother discovered that he had been naughty.
THe STORY OF PETER RABBIT
I
Flopsy, Mopsy, Cottontail and Peter were four little rabbits. They
lived with their good mother in a sand-bank near a big fir tree.
One day Mrs. Rabbit had to go to the store. ‘Come, children,” she
said, “let me tell you what to do while I am away. You may play in the
field where the blackberries grow, but you must not go into Mr. McGregor’s
garden. I shall bring you some buns from the baker’s, if you are good.
Now run along.”
“We will be good, mother,” they cried, and off they went.
Flopsy, Mopsy and Cottontail went to the field to look for black-
berries, but what do you suppose naughty Peter did?
He ran straight to Mr. McGregor’s garden. He squeezed himself
under the gate, and was soon having a fine time in Mr. McGregor’s
lettuce bed.
When he had eaten all the lettuce he wanted, off he started to the
parsley bed, but just as he turned the corner, he had a great fright.
33° ° °
| eo McGregor, who was planting cabbages in the garden, suddenly
ooked up at him. Peter was so frightened that he forgot where the garden
gate was, but he started to run. i
Mr. McGregor picked up his rake and ran after him. He called,
Sop, tmich! Stop, thiet!’ until Peter became more frightened than
ever. ;
Flis shoe came off, but he could not stop to find it. And then! What
do you think? He fell into a net. There he was, caught fast, and Mr.
McGregor was very close to him now.
_ How Peter wished that he had gone to the blackberry field with
his brothers!
Poor Peter was sure that Mr. McGregor would soon catch him, when
a thought came to him. Guess what he did!
He found that the buttons of his jacket held him fast to the net. So
he slipped out of the jacket, left it in the net and ran off like the wind.
He made straight for the tool house. There he saw a watering-can.
“What a fine place to hide!” he said, and in he jumped.
“Oh! Oh!” Peter had jumped into a can of water. It was cold
and wet, but there he had to stay, for he heard Mr. McGregor coming.
I think Mr. McGregor would never have found him if Peter had not
sneezed. “Kerchoo!” went Peter. Then Mr. McGregor was after him
again.
Out of the window dashed Peter.
Mr. McGregor was tired of chasing Peter by this time. “Let him
go,” he said, “I’ll catch him one of these days.”
Il.
It was a long time before Peter stopped running. He looked behind
him.
No one was coming, so he sat down to rest and to find some way to
get out of the garden.
In front of him was a big, stone wall, without even a tiny, little hole.
A wee mouse ran by, but did not stop to listen when Peter cried,
“Little mouse, please show me the way out.” But the mouse only shook
her head and ran on.
Peter could not find the gate, so he thought he would go back to the
too] house. On the way he saw a wheelbarrow and climbed upon it
to look around. He saw Mr. McGregor, but his back was turned.
Near Mr. McGregor was the gate. Peter jumped down and ran to it
as fast as he could. Mr. McGregor saw him, but Peter ran so fast that
he could not catch him.
He slipped under the gate and was safe in the wood at last. He did
not stop running until he reached his home near the big tree. He was so
tired that he lay down on the soft sand, and was soon fast asleep.
His mother, who was busy cooking, came out. “Where are Peter’s coat
and shoes?” she thought. ‘“This is the second coat he has lost this month.”
Peter did not feel very well that evening. So his mother put him to bed
without any supper. But Flopsy, Mopsy and Cottontail had bread and
milk and blackberries for their supper.
4. Suggestions: Apply the spirit of the procedure outlined on p. 18.
Study the individual and help him to remedy any faulty habits he may
have acquired. For example, discourage movements of the lips in study-
ing, cause the book to be held hygienically, speed up the loiterers. Enforce
34the ideal of getting as much at a glance as possible and of accepting only
reasonable meanings.
B. Reading Aloud.—This should be regarded as one of the
appropriate means for expressing what has been already studied. (See
pa tt, 16.)
1. Aims: To enable the children to share each other’s impressions ;
to improve vocal utterance and stabilize the vocabulary; to enable the
teacher to discover and clear up difficulties.
2. Materials: Any of the reading matter used for class work in
this grade.
3. Achievement: To read fluently (as opposed to stumblingly, halt-
ingly, word by word) and with inflections and emphasis according to the
sense, with distinct enunciation, in a clear but not harsh or high-pitched
voice, pieces of the difficulty of the example given under Silent Reading
above.
4. Suggestions: Cultivate the desire to make reading aloud sound
much like talking; develop a vivid realization of the meaning; let the
reader try to make his hearers get each picture by proper phrasing.
Wramatizaion oltem telps, (See p. 15.)
C. Phonics.—Regular study of the sounds of letters and syllables
is usually desirable throughout this year.
1. Aims: Increased power to pronounce new words without help.
2. Materials: Additional sounds of consonants and of vowels, par-
ticularly double consonants and vowels represented by more than one letter.
3. Achievement: Ability to make out the sounds of phonetic words
as met with in study except in case of the less usual combinations.
4. Suggestions: See the section on Phonics on p. 12. Seek to avoid
inducing or permitting wrong sounds or exaggerated utterance. Avoid
the extremes of no phonics or all phonics. Let the pupils realize how the
work increases their power.
i Ee RAR
A. Presented Orally—Many stories and poems should first be
presented in this way.
1. Aims: To give familiarity with more of the best pieces; to build
up ideals; to develop power in language, both of organization and vocabu-
lary; to assist the reading.
Zz Materials: Mainly legends, folk tales, and simple poems; also a
longer piece like “Hiawatha.” The following are reserved’ for this grade,
the pieces deemed most worthy of permanent familiarity being starred:
Stories.
Pep epatmmondacts. i CS ye a ee Bryant
ue: lackrand the Bean Stalk. ws Shs. 82 Jacobs
poy Oeln Wicklmocs crs ee, ee. | Andersen
sie Doe and bis dinages).. 4. ee ee. Jacobs
Po ncter Rapin et a ee Burgess
po hie BoyvinoGried Voli (ft Jacobs
we Micherman and ‘eis Witte...) Baldwin Fairy Stories
‘They should be used for reference and comparison in later grades.
39RS Dick Wingtote ge. ue Beacon Second Reader
oo Why the@eaiwe that ls Short... Beacon Second Reader
*10. Elves and the Shoemaker
: PUG SLOG ONT, es cin i Grimm
al, Golden Touch Re re Mawes crea ly eee Beacon Second Reader
oi, Vom: Diao ee a Be Grimm
IO. Buss in wou eee se ces ee Grimm
I+, Elow the ilephant Got His Trunk........ Just So Stories
I>, Why the Moraine Glory.@€limbs....,. . Bailey
Wome Witt, Vee Gate fs oe ae Story Teller’s Book
17. The Little Match Girl
18. Lad Who Went to the North Wind—East
o the Sun and West o’ the Moon...... Thorn-Thompson
IRS). Etre iGtay Womye so. ko ok es o. Maud Lindsay
Ze aCe es ee a Fk Merry Animal Tales
Poems.
moles Wie Wiel eid eg ek ape Eugene Field
gee SOven Mime One oe a ae, Jean Ingelow
po Maueelliehhe Hanm.......3..... 4. R. L. Stevenson
me Catan Countenpane..... 70. sc.a.. 3. R. L. Stevenson
moe Good lay... st. 2. Le ee ee R. L. Stevenson
poe \WWyaken, lymken and Nod.......... 2. Eugene Field
7 tomnMiges. 6.) se ee Rk. L. Stevenson
Boe anGnOn Sto BOOKS....... 0.20. 8 R. L. Stevenson
oe isin hime. 3 40. ee Rossetti
10) Eether io Heaven We Thank Uiee...... Emerson
ie rlom tie Weaves Came Down......... 74 Susan Coolidge
ie beseaminltohter: 1.0.06. ee RK: L. Stevenson
Se Omerone Clamlken ok. 6. eg eae ee Kk. Ly Stevenson
Mee GU IMISIC BOX Fe oases oe, oh oe od ee Ae ee mona
ieee Me dNockeasaye lady. 9.00... 4.0. Eugene Field
HO Whe esrole tac bard's Nest.. 0:2... 3. . Lydia M. Child
We sinomsetyvine Daye oe ela oe Lydia M. Child
NS eee et ea a ee Acones Collier Gon
Ie Wine iwammdromsSs ss). 2k eee Howe First Reader
ZO AC ies caves 4 5 a ee ee Howe Second Reader
3. Achievement: Sufficient acquaintance with at least ten poems
and ten stories to make possible intelligent preference among them; ability
to recite five of the starred poems from memory; ability to tell what any of
the preferred stories is about and to tell one or more incidents from it.
4. Suggestions: Prepare the way for grasping the meaning of the
story as a whole and the happenings in their relation to the outcome, by rais-
ing appropriate questions in advance or as the story proceeds. The pupils
should be made aware of the main steps or stages in both stories and poemis.
(See the section on memorizing, p. 15.)
B. Through Reading.—Literature simple enough to be read by
the pupils should be treated in accordance with the methods outlined above.
IV. THE MIBRAR MY El@iin
Cultivate a desire to read at will and encourage selection. Super-
vise but do not permit the reading to seem like formal study or recita-
tion. Let the class exchange impressions; provide stimulus and guidance
as to what one should. get from a book. A suggestive list of books for
this grade will be found in the Appendix.
36ope coset
The Third Grade
fi. COMPOSITION
A. Speaking.—Still the most important part of the language
work of the grade.
1. Aims: Readiness and pose, interest, a good title, sticking to the
point, good sentences ; a firmer habit of regarding the audience by speaking
clearly and distinctly ; entertainment and the enlargement of experience:
2 Materials: Observation and personal experience; imaginative
situations; topics of conversation in all classes; stories. (See the outline
on literature, pp. 43, 44.)
2 Achievement: Ability to make a short speech, mecimig aie
approximate standards which appear below ; also ability to name the prin-
cipal steps or incidents in stories such as those listed and to tell one or
more incidents with good effect.
STANDARDS OF ORAL COMPOSITION.’
Farr.
My Doll.
Yesterday when I came home from school I played with my doll. I
made a nightgown for my doll. I put it on the doll and put her in bed.
Then I knit a cover and put it over her.
(This has more individuality than the fair compositions of the first
two grades, but it is only Fair because it is a bare recounting of actions
without any personal comment. )
Excellent.
My Dog and I.
Yesterday I had to stay in. My dog and I were playing hunters.. He
was the lion and I was the hunter. I hada pole for my gun. I would say
“Bang!” and he would fall down. We had lots of fun.
(This shows that the child has “thought through” the incident. He
has included the necessary situation and characters and has omitted unnec-
essary details. The element of imagination is new. )
Superior.
My Old Doll.
_ Last Christmas my mother did not buy a new doll for my little sister.
She dressed the old doll over. Mother was sure sister would not know
:
_ The examples are not intended to be used by the children as models
to imitate.
tree are - - Rrra oT -
: LL ea ea ee TR1t. Christmas day came. When my sister saw the newly dressed doll on
the table she cried, ‘Hello, there, Annie.”
| (This shows a very good grasp of what the writer has to say. The
clement of suspense and the subtle expression of the joke distinguish
It aS a superior composition for this erade. )
(See p. 7 for account of how these standards were derived. )
ee Suggestions: Train the pupils to hold to single phases of a sub-
ject and to decide just what they wish to say. Let the class help to select
centers of interest and encourage interchange of ideas and of helpful sug-
gestions as to expression. Deal with large matters first. emphasizing the
particular principle of good composition that is being learned. After-
ward pupils may help to correct errors. Supply the conditions for full
sentences in the various recitations by making requests instead of merely
asking questions. (For a suggestive list of topics, see p. 45 ff.)
B. Writing-—Mainly on the blackboard.
1. Aims: To give the pupils larger facilities of communication, both
in school and out.
2. Materials: Principally the pupils’ oral compositions. The increased
maturity of these demands additional technique.
3. Achievement:
Capitalization
Names of months
Names of days of the week
Names of special holidays, as Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Year,
Master
Titles of Compositions
Punctuation
Period in following abbreviations: Mr., Mrs., Dr., St., Av.
Comma after salutation in the simple, friendly letter, thus:
Dear Alice,
Anna Brown.
Manuscript
Letter as above
Letter and other composition must have margin of one inch at left
edge and indention (half-inch) of first line.
4. Suggestions: Give each pupil at least a yard of space at the
blackboard. Insist on large and firm characters and proper spaces between
words. Correct errors in spelling yourself. Do not expect more than
limited help from the pupils in other mechanical matters. Focus the
attention of the class first upon the composition,
C. Spelling.—This is one of the two grades in which the largest
number of new words appear in the written composition of the pupils.
38The following 1s a minimal list.
spell all the words 1n
be able to
above
across
act
afraid
afternoon
again
age
alley
almost
lone
lc
lso
jab)
alo Ng
als
always
among
ankle
another
anything
anyway
apiece
April
around
ashes
autumn
awake
baloon
banana
bath
became
because
become
beg
began
Rebiad
below
beneath
berry
besides
better
between
biggest
birthday
blew
block
blossom
blow
board
bone
born
both
bottle
bottom
aN Be tay 8 oeogs
at i ‘ety ahh. hha ws
bought
bowl
branch
brave
break
breath
breakfast
bridge
broke
broom
brought
build
built
bundle
burn
bury
busy
butter
buy
carried
carry
case
caught
chalk
change
chase
children
choose
Christmas
church
circle
circus
clear
climb
close
cloth
clothes
clothing
cloud
color
coming
cool
copy
corn
corner
cough
count
country
cousin
cover
cream
At least three-fourths of the pupils should
it by the end of the grade.
dance
danger
date
died
doctor
dollar
don’t
dozen
dream
drive
drove
early
earn
earth
east
easy
eight
elephant
else
empty
end
enough
even
excuse
Exper
Pal
fair
fairy
family
farm
fell
feel
felt
fence
few
fight
finish
flour
follow
fond
food
forget
forgot
Friday
friend
front
fruit
funny
e1ft
glass
39
grandmother
cTay
erew
grocery
guess
o
hall
happen
hear
heard
heavy
herself
high
hole
holiday
honey
hope
hour
hundred
hurry
inside
iron
invite
July
June
just
kitchen
knew
knee
knock
know
lady
laugh
law
leave
lemon
lesson
light
line
listen
loaf
lose
lunch
mail
manypumas cea ete eases
mark place ship thought
March plain should throw
May please shoot threw
maybe point short Thursday
mean porch shut tie
met pound sir tonight
might pretty side town
mile prize sight train
mill push since tried
mind son trip
mine quart sorry try
money quarter south Tuesday
month quick speak turn
morning quite spend twelve
most stairs twice
Mr. start
music race stamp facie
myself reach stay el
ready steal upon
ECEESS steep
naughty Pent ee use
near rest stockings vacation
need ribbon stood vere
nickel Poh stop
night right straw wait
Norse river struck wake
ae roof string want
nok rope study warm
north round such watch
note rubber sugar wear
nothing running ih ae
number summer where
salt supper which
obey ene sure while
off Saturday sweep whisper
often aie swim whistle
orange says spent whole
outside aa wish
own ae fate without
ee are wood
ae eed beach world
* teacher would
paid a Wednesday
parlor set their
part seven think
peach Sew third yesterday
pear shake through young
people shed those
piece sheep thread
(See p. 8 for an account of the derivation of this list.)
Follow suggestions on page 9 for the teaching and testing of spelling.
Keep a notebook in which to record the words which give the class trouble
and require each pupil to keep a similar record of the words which trouble
him individually.
40Te READING
A. Silent Reading or Study.—This is the chief phase of reading and
should almost always precede any attempt on the part of the children
at reading the passage aloud.
1. Aims: To develop and strengthen good habits and ideals of reading ;
to enlarge the reading vocabulary and the experience of dealing with
sentences and paragraphs of various lengths and types; to widen ex-
perience of life and thought and give familiarity with literature worth
knowing.
2 Materials: Lessons in books, on blackboard, or printed on the school
press, arranged in sequence according to such centers of interest as
are suggested in the following:
Ideals:
Blunder (at Wishing Gate)
Grumble and Cheery
Little Brown Hands
The Broken Flower Pot
The Merchant of Ser
The Boasting Bamboo
Children’s Activities:
Candlemaking at the Collidges
Games of the Dutch Children
Child Classies 117
Beacon III
Child Glassics Tt
Child Classics Mi
Winston III
Winston III]
Everyday Life in the Colonies
Around the World with the Children
Betty’s Guest
The Plant School
Katrina’s Home
Boys and Girls of Colonial Days
Stories of Luther Burbank
Trading and Exploring
Flistory:
The Master of the Land of
the Nile
The Shepherd Boy Who
Became King
, How a Thistle Saved Scotland
Daniel Boone and His Grape-
vine Swing
The Star Spangled Banner
The Last Lesson in French
Old Stories of the East
Old Stories of the East
Winston III
Stories of Great Americans
Stories of Great Americans
Chitd’ Classics ET
3. Achievement: Ability on the part of at least three-fourths of the
b children to read a selection like the following so as to be able to (1)
| give the story another name; (2) show that the jackal was selfish;
oe (3) give a reason why the jackal made so much noise; (4) explain
how the camel punished the jackal.
THE JACK AI. AND. Vee @ Avie
Howe Third Reader p. 9.
A jackal and a camel were good friends. One day when the jackal
was hungry, he went to the camel and said, “Cousin Camel, I know where
there is a fine field of sugar-cane for you, and where there are some crabs
i P es ) 66 ° “
and small fish for me. Let us go and eat.” “All right!” said the camel.
kG
Show me the place.”| “It is on the other side of the river,” said the little jackal. “I wish
I knew how to get across.”
“I can swim,” said the camel, “so you may ride over on my back.”
So the jackal jumped on the camel’s back, and they were soon on
the other side of the river. |
Ihe camel ate very slowly, but the jackal soon ate all the crabs and
fish he could find. Then he ran up and down the bank, screaming and
shouting.
Ihe noise awoke the people, who ran down to save their sugar-cane.
They beat the camel and threw stones at the jackal.
the jackal and the camel ran down to the river.
“Jump on my back,” said the camel.
When they were half way over, the camel asked. “Why did you make
such a noise and spoil my dinner ?”
ae I don’t know,” said the jackal, “I always sing after dinner, just
or fun.
“Well,” said the camel. “I always like to stretch myself and roll over,
alter dinner, just for fun.”
Then the camel stretched himself and rolled over in the water, and
shook the little jackal off his back.
“Oh, oh!” gasped the jackal, as he swallowed and splashed. “Save me!
Save me!”
But the camel only laughed, and the jackal almost died for his selfish-
ness.
But he reached the shore in safety at last.
4. Suggestions: Apply the spirit of the procedure outlined on pe
Study the individual and help him to remedy any faulty habits he
may have acquired; for example, discourage movements of the lips
in studying, cause the book to be held hygienically, speed up the
loiterers by means of timed exercises. Enforce the ideal of getting
as much at a glance as possible and of accepting only reasonable mean-
ings. The Ayers Silent Reading Test, published by the Russell Sage
Foundation, will be found useful in determining the relative ability
of the pupils.
B. Reading Aloud.—This should be regarded as one of the appro-
priate means for expressing what has been already studied.
1. Aims: To enable the children to share each other’s impressions; to
improve vocal utterance and stabilize the vocabulary; to enable the
teacher to discover and clear up difficulties.
2. Materials: Any ot the reading matter used for class work in this
grade.
3. Achievement: ‘To read fluently (as opposed to stumblingly, halt-
ingly, word by word) and with inflections and emphasis according
to the sense, with distinct enunciation, in a clear but not harsh or high-
pitched voice, pieces of the difficulty of the example given under
silent reading above. Dramatic selections are specially valuable for
reading aloud. Each “part” should of course be taken by a different
pupil.
4. Suggestions: Cultivate the desire to make reading aloud sound much
like good talking; develop a vivid realization of the meaning; let
the leader try to make his hearers get each picture by suitable phrasing ;
42IS
WW
Mv.
ww
Av
n
%
a ao
Ci >) GO)
16.
TA
pen
SS
18.
Wo,
20.
% * % %
pm pen
GG OO ST Gy G1 G WN)
)
—"
No
t
helps to develop the meaning. Ask, “Is that what
dramatization orten
he meant to say
Phonics.—Regular study of the sounds of letters and syllables is
usually desirable throughout this year.
Aims: Increased power to pronounce new words without help;
training as needed by the individual.
Materials: Additional sounds of consonants and of vowels, parti-
cularly the less usual sounds.
Achievement: Ability to make out the sounds of almost all phonetic
words as met with in study.
Suggestions: See the section on Phonics on p. 12. Seek to avoid
inducing or permitting wrong sounds or exaggerated utterance.
Avoid the extremes of no phonics or all. phonics. Let the pupils
realize how the work increases their power. Find out what is needed
and give tt.
i Se RAT
Presented Orally.—Many stories and poems should first be pre-
sented in this way.
Aims: To give familiarity with more of the best pieces; to build
up ideals; to develop power in language, both of organization and of
vocabulary; to assist the reading.
Materials: Fairy tales, myths, legends, modern stories, and_ simple
poems, one or more longer pieces like “Robinson Crusoe.” The fol-
lowing are reserved for this grade, the pieces deemed most worthy
of permanent familiarity being starred :
Stories.
Third Grade.
ithe Picd Wiper ot Hamlin, 2.5... .. Browning
iG@necor tie Golden Kiver ...-. 7.2. 40:2... Ruskin
ACO VA (le fo clde cae te ke yas ies George Cox |
eaiby ane We HoCaSts 00. es eo Johnson |
viiivemm elle ere oes ee ee eis Ramee
ivi whe, SearmishOalbie Wi. 2 ate we Dasent
Siow, Ouecms M20: oe i ee Andersen
ar iiletesayl i cui gle okt agree Tete Kipling
Ginderellaes sve ee ee Johnson
Beales wie Wyk: yon oa ae ea . Searson & Martin III
SM RIGhINe WV 5 ch Bo a ae ee Art Witeratune Il
HMC AECASING (ome ao cg ee Studies in Reading II
CUM O NIG tg ee ee. So ean Longfellow
Dravic Moll SOCK ick. otha ee Hans Andersen
ive Warne Needle: 362i eee Hans Andersen
lack inedtinye,(MniCGeds) 18 2... a ee Anna Sewell
eka amduiie: AON eee. i he Sara Cone Bryant
How’ the Jack o’Lantern Frightened the
UG ATISE ee ce SE eke cs ee Stories of Colonial Chil-
dren—Pratt
Aladdin and His Wonderful Lamp...... Bi Seudder
lice NitimmbersSlOvel we: 2 fale ee. RameePoems
“1s Whete Go the oats)... Ri E. Stevenson
Soe. Sweet aageleow (0 et Tennyson
“3. Boys Senewwes 7s te 8 ee Howe Third Reader
* 4. Little Bean SATIS). "5 sth aed ee ee ie Howe Third Reader
~ 5. The Lite eose Dollies 5. Kingsley
© 6. . The (Biucbindies |. ee ee, EK. Huntington Miller
P71. HOrel erimeleaiaGlsign | Sa Gat ee ae oe R. L. Stevenson
7 8, My Bedgista Boats. ae.) ecru | R, L. Stevenson
# OO. Norse: Maliainge he ho ee ey Eugene Field
AO. “The Nagi Wynd. Ale ass Seca Wugene Field
Ie Chihicy Wilds en. G5 eee ee, Att. fit. Reader ait
i. TheBuildine oi tie Nestee. 6... Josephine PP, Peabody
IS: Youm Mlac ands Wy Klas 460). oes. N: Dv Nesbit
i. A. Mlowtitisyimen Miistake. 7458 Gh es Anna M. Pratt
Pe Bays en: ee ee George McDonnell
NG: Ameer to;a, Childis @iestione, 4.4.6. 4 Coleridge
7 Vine @wl-and the Prissy @at. .6.0).4.6 ear
FS. Why Do Bells for Christmas Rime... 4: Posy Ring
no. ie Goldenuod) a i ee ee Sherman
20. Younes WNieht 4 houghts. -" 94.5. 994.) 4. R. LE Stevenson
3. Achievement: Sufficient acquaintance with at least ten poems and
ten stories to make possible intelligent preference among them; ability
to recite five of the starred poems from memory ; ability to tell what
any of the preferred stories is about and to tell one or more incidents
feo mae te.
4. Suggestions: Prepare the way for grasping the meaning of the
story as a whole, the happenings in their relation to the outcome, and
what is left to inference by raising appropriate questions in advance
Or as the story proceeds. The pupils should be helped to make out
the main steps or stages in the treatment of both stories and poems.
(See the section on Memorizing, p. 15; see also the suggestions on
dramatization, p. 15.)
B. Through Reading.—Literature simple enough to be read by the
pupils should be treated in accordance with the methods outlined
above.
IVe -LI BINARY Re DiING
Cultivate a desire to read at will and encourage selection. Supervise
but do not permit the reading to seem like formal study or recitation. Let
the class exchange impressions, provide stimulus and guidance as to what
one should get from a book. A suggestive list of books for this grade will
be found in the Appendix.
ORAL COMPOSITION TOPICS
Cycle I—Grades 1 to 3
Centers of Interest
I telioiie 4 rips 7. NaAcanions
Zn bets 5. Special Days &. Street Mxpemenec
3. Toys and Games 6. school o. Nature
44o~
eee
pad peek
Sy
19
fond
Wh
2 Ao
=
LG.
18.
20.
a
a
1.0 NI GX G1 ES Go NE
Home.
i
Our baby.
Amusing my baby brother.
A birthday surprise for mother.
Helping my mother on Saturday.
How my best dress is made.
What I do ona rainy day.
How I got the money for the Thanksgiving collection.
A baby I know.
Washing the supper dishes.
A story grandma told.
Afraid of a mouse.
When mother goes away.
When company comes.
When father comes home from work.
When I was sick.
How we spend our evenings.
How I earn money.
When mother says “get up.”
Our Victrola.
When bed time comes.
Getting ready for school.
What happened when I disobeyed mother.
a
lies Pets
A trick my dog does.
How I taught my dog to beg.
Feeding our rabbit.
When the dog catchers caught my dog.
When we sold our dog.
My cat’s trick.
How our bird takes a bath.
How I play with my dog.
The mischief maker.
A trick I taught my dog.
When my dog followed me to school.
How our kitty plays with his tail.
III. Toys and Games
How I won the prize at a bubble party.
My first baloon.
My happy surprise.
Learning to roller skate.
Making a snow man.
Playing house.
How to make a mud pie.
Playing school.
My new toy.
Learning to ride a bicycle.
A funny race.
Making a dress for my doll.
Making a playhouse.
Making a kite.
Playing store.16.
Ze
18.
19.
Bl
ONOWMBWN-E
pam peek
ao
O ON AMURWNHE
+ OOONAWARWN
Sat ae ee es ae ge
My first party.
How f broke my doll.
The game I like best.
Playing ghost.
How we played Indian.
How to play “Blind Man’s Buff.”
IV. Trips
Our picnic at the park.
Coming home on the train.
Gathering wild flowers.
Lunch in the woods.
When mother took me shopping.
My first auto ride.
Visiting my playmate.
My first ride on a train.
V. Special Days
Getting ready for Santa’ Claus.
My birthday.
The valentine I like best.
How I entertained, at my birthday party.
Finding my Easter bunny.
How I was fooled on April Fool’s Day.
Our Christmas present.
My best Christmas present.
What the clown did.
Christmas at our house.
When I went to see Santa Claus.
What I did Hallowe’en.
The happiest day of my life.
My friend’s birthday.
Our Thanksgiving party.
Making a Jack O’Lantern.
Vin Sehool
Keeping our school room neat.
Why I like to go to school.
How the ink was spilled.
lf © were teacher.
The lesson I like best.
How I help my teacher.
When teacher is away.
When I was tardy for school.
Why I come to school.
A. visit to the office.
Why I had to remain after school.
VII. Vacations
Learning to swim.
Taking care of the chickens.
A. fishing trip.
When I caught a big fish.
Picking berries.
46
Bat id vores to Be tad sc6. Our camping trip:
7. Driving home the cows.
8. Nutting.
9. Getting the eggs.
10. The best time I ever had.
1d. Why first fide im a canoe.
12. In the haylott.
VIII. Street Experiences
A funny accident.
Going to the store.
Our peddler:
A lost child.
A lucky moment.
A narrow escape.
A false alarm.
viva tre:
Taking a chance.
OANA UBWN HE
IX. Nature
What the wind did to me.
How I know that spfing 1s coming.
Watching a bird build a nest.
Feeding the birds.
Why I like winter best.
6. An awful storm.
on Oo
47FA
ef sisi — oe
fas BUN a Ma Re Oe Bi tiki ni pau to ;
Cycle II—Grades 4 to 6
The work of the intermediate grades should }
aated from what has preceded that children will
ceeding to new conquests.
ve sufficiently differen-
feel that they are pro-
1. COMPOSITION
Oral composition should still lead, but topics involving investigation
and imagination should supplement narrative from personal experience.
Such narrative 1s, however, a good exercise to begin with. If it is neces-
sary in order to insure a good foundation for other types of work, it
. ‘ & i ’
should be emphasized at the opening of any
—.. grade or term or with any
individual. -
Pupils will have more need for expression in writing and hence it
should occupy a relatively larger place than in Cycle I. Letters should be
given special stress.
With the maturing of the pupils’ sentence form and vocabulary,
grammatical and rhetorical principles will play a larger part in the criticism
of composition, both in planning and in revision. The principles which
are useiul should be developed informally in direct connection with their
appheation. Drills in mechanics will sometimes be necessary but should
not be allowed to become formal and isolated. :
The end of the period should mark the completion, for most pupils,
of their effort to learn to spell the common words that demand extraordi-
nary attention. This will require careful inventory and checking up and
well directed teaching. Apply the methods suggested by Tidyman and
others. Study individual difficulties and treat each on its merits.
Z. READING
Two branches of the work should be provided for, (1) informational
reading and training in how to study, and (2) literary reading. The class,
working as a whole or in small groups, should do each year several volumes
contributing to general intelligence and so written as to provide adequate
opportunity for learning how to use books. Ordinary school textbooks
are not, as a rule, adequate. Such books are generally intended as outlines
Or summaries. They may suggest the field and movement and set the
problems, but they fail to provide the elaboration of a topic which general
informational reading requires. In the orderly progress of a subject
problems are attacked and material for its solution sought in various
quarters. But in the study-reading, or careful reading for general
information, here referred to, a book is taken up because it promises to
be interesting in itself, not because it fits into a subject of the school course,
like geography, history, or science.
Pupils should be taught to examine a book as a whole; to note how
it is organized; to observe what editorial helps it has and what the reader
must do for himself; to decide what question the book as a whole and
each section or chapter answers or why certain paragraphs are included,
to outline or summarize the contents; to say how the account matches
experience, where more may be learned about the topic, why the book
is valuable and may be recommended, etc. The teacher should regard
the reading of the books as a project and should help the children to plan
the procedure, carry it out, and organize the results. Apply Thorndike’s
doctrine of “Reading as Reasoning” to the whole process.
48MR tn ce
Remedial instruction in reading should be provided for many pupils
who have found their way into the middle grades. Stock should be carefully
taken of the pupils’ abilities when they begin each year’s work and the
shortcomings of each individual noted. Then, as far as possible, individual
and group work should be arranged to suit the actual needs. If vocabulary
‘s limited, converse and present words; if phonics 1s at fault, give phonics ;
if phrasing or looking ahead, give practice in it; if failure to think, set
questions and teach the pupil how to use his mind.
See the summary of principles in Part I, p. 1O¢f.
a)
oO. LULItERATURE
The literature work should show the good effects of the training in
how to study. But the difference in the character and purpose of the
material should never be lost sight of. Not information but a lively sense
of the experience depicted is now the end to be reached. The treatment
must be more suggestive; the imagination must be appealed to and the
emotional effect secured. Emotion is based on ideas, however, and senti-
mentalizing must not be substituted for thinking. (For suggestions of
method see Literature in Part I.)
The material chosen is believed to be worthy of careful thought and
of permanent value to American children. The age of the pupils is the
hero-worshipping age and emphasis has been given to heroes—not, how-
ever, soldiers merely but others no less admirable.
To do this, much outside the ordinary school reader must be brought
into play. It is doubtful whether a textbook, filled with short pieces and
excerpts deserves the place it now occupies in these grades. Certainly
some long selections should be read by each class each year and groups
of selections with a common interest or view point. To insure a minimum
of the best for all pupils, lists have been included in the grade outlines
in which the pieces most worthy of permanent familiarity have been
marked as preferred. (See the suggestions on memorizing, dramatizing,
and reading aloud in Part I of this course. )
4. LIBRARY READING
Both the informational and the literary reading of Cycle II should
be made to suggest wider reading of books obtained from the schools, the
home, or the public library. This may mow be done mainly outside of
school hours but should be planned for and reported in the free and easy
social intercourse of the fortnightly library hour. Thinking and clean-cut
expression should be called out and stilted and formal recitation avoided.
Let each pupil seek to improve both his repertoire of familiar books and
his methods of dealing with them. The classification provided in the
Reading Index on p. 20 has been used by some groups of pupils with
telling effect.’
‘see article in the Elementary School Journal for January, 1921.The Fourth Grade
Examine carefully the outlines for ¢]
1e first three grades. Discover
whether the pupils of the fourth grade have the abilities indicated. Develop
or redevelop them as necessary
y. Consider the aims of the cycle as a
whole.
E> COMPOSITION
A. Speaking.—This takes precedence over writing, both in time and in
importance. If speaking is properly taught, mechanics of writing will
be very easily mastered.
1. Aims: Readiness and poise, interest, a good title, sticking to the
point, good sentences; a firmer habit of regarding the audience by
speaking clearly and distinctly; entertainment and the enlargement
of experience; good sequence; habit of speaking connectedly in sen-
tences whenever the occasion demands; definite enlargement of
knowledge in the fields indicated by the centers of interest on pp.
68-73.
2. Materials: Personal experience and reading (see the topics suggested
on p. 68 if). Literary themes in connection with reading.
3. Achievement: Ability to make complete speeches of the kind indi-
cated by the standards which appear below; ability to finish, compose,
or reproduce stories like the simpler narratives found in the books
of the grade.
SlaANDARDS OF ORAL COMPOSITION.
Far.
A Day in the Playground.
One day my sister and I went to the playground. Just as we were
going to get on the swing a little girl fell out. Then she began to cry.
Then my sister said, “She is just scared; she is not hurt.”
“The examples are not intended to be used by the children as models
to imitate.
(This 1s an advance over Grade III because of the element of suspense
and relief. The use of direct discourse marks a step in advance. There
is an attempt at subordination but the repetition of the “then” puts it in
the Fair class for this grade.) 7
Good.
Ni Bet
My pet was a little puppy. He was about six months of age. I
liked him because he was smart and did not bite anybody. When I came
home from school he used to jump upon me and lick my face. I used to
feed him three times a day. I raised him until he was about four years
of age. Then he was run over by an automobile. . |
(This is a good composition for grade 4 because the pupil has told
what made his pet different from other dogs. It 1s not excellent because
‘The examples are not intended to be used by the children as models
to imitate.
50hich seem to have occurred to the child
of the stilted succession of facts w
one at a time rather than as a whole. )
Excellent.
How I Played Tom Sawyer.
One day a lady asked me to take some rocks out of her yard She
was going to make a garden. She told me that she would give me two
dollars if 1 would. 1 wanted to go to the lake that day, so I stood and
looked at the big job. Pretty soon a crowd of boys came along. ‘They
said to me, “Charles, are you going to the laker” I said, No, t am having
a good time playing cowboy.” They said, “How do you play? All you
have to do is to knock that can off the pole.” They began to throw. Pretty
soon all the rocks were out of the yard. The boys went home and I got the
money for what they had done. .
(This is more mature than the Good composition for this grade
because it follows a plan through to a successful completion. ie. direct
discourse is used naturally and effectively. )
Superior.
When I Had My Picture Taken.
Coming home from Sunday School one bright summer day, my
mother said, “You must have your picture taken, for you look so nice.”
She was very proud of me with my white linen dress on, with blue ribbon
in the holes of lace around the cuffs and collar. My hair was curled and
one curl at the top was tied with a pretty blue ribbon. I was very happy
when I got the pictures. They were very good.
(The merit of this composition is the use of descriptive detail. The
writer has observed very closely and has presented a picture clear enough
to be painted. A higher grade superior pupil would probably have begun
with the quotation and would probably have been more subjective. )
(See p. 7 for an account of how these standards were derived. )
4. Suggestions: Let pupils narrow their topics by the selection of specific
titles. WVeach them to plan. Aiter a pupil has spoken, let tae (class
make suggestions as to how he may better carry out his purpose. If
possibilities appear, let him try again while the suggestions are fresh
in mind. Let the class decide whether he has made improvement.
Avoid stereotyped and perfunctory comment.
B. Writing.—On blackboard or on paper as circumstances determine.
1. Aims: Mastery of mechanics needed for expression.
2. Materials: The same as for oral composition.
3. Achievement:
Capitalization
ee prefixed to proper names, as Aunt Jane, Cousin John, King
Midas.
Geographical names.
Names of people, as Indians, French.
Proper adjectives, as British, Swedish.
Punctuation
Period in abbreviations as used by the pupils of the grade.
Interrogation point.
Apostrophe in contractions, as doesn’t, haven't.
olApostrophe in those possessives which usually occur in children’s
compositions.
Comma in the courteous close of a letter as shown below.
Manuscript form
Title of composition in center of line.
Margin at the left edge of the paper; no crowding of words at
the right; no words broken at the end of a line in this grade.
Letter form extended to include the courteous close.
Dear Charles,
Your friend,
John Weaver.
4. Suggestions: Make sure at the outset that each pupil has a well
established ideal of good form, both on the blackboard and on paper.
Set the example. Teach the pupils how to make helpful criticisms,
beginning first with the larger matters of composition.
C. Spelling.—Determine the spelling ability of each class in terms of
the lists provided for the first three grades. Give preliminary tests
trom the lists of this grade. (See p. 9 for method in spelling.) Three-
fourths of the pupils should be able to spell all the words in this list
by the end of the grade.
able ditch kept post-office strong
aboard divide knot potato subtract
absent division pour surprise
ache double lawn power
addition drowned lead present taught
ahead dying learn president team
already level price tenth
angel eleven lie print themselves
animal engine lightning prison thick
answer enjoy list prove thief
anty: evening lonesome public | though
attend everybody lumber pumpkin throat
August everything lying thumb
author explain quarrel thunder
automobile express market question tight
master quiet too
beauty farther match tomorrow
beef fasten matter remember touch
behave fear meal report toward
believe feather merry roar track
bicycle fellow middle rough travel
biscuit field mischief row trouble
blanket fifteen monkey rule true
blind finger motor truly
bushel forest minute safe trunk
button form saucer twenty
inning fort navy Scissors
ae cciuith nearly second ugly
52senate
cabbage
camp
cannot
capital
capture
carpet
carriage
cast
cattle
center
chain
cheap
cheese
chiet
clerk
cloak
club
CC al
coffee
collar
company
cottage
cotton
crawl
crowd
dash
December
deer
dentist
depot
desert
discover
dismiss
ie
Be)
2
furnace
furniture
further
February
gas
gather
geese
geography
getting
goose
grain
grand
erandfather
groceries
guard
guide
hammer
hate
healthy
heat
history
honest
hoping
idle
inch
indeed
Indian
island
itself
January
jewel
needle
neither
news
niece
noisy,
notice
November
o’clock
October
oil
onion
orchard
order
ought
pair
palace
parade
past
peace
penny
perfect
piano
picture
pigeon
plan
pleasure
plenty
pocket
poem
poison
police
post
sentence
September
shadow
shape
shine
shining
shore
shoulder
shout
silk
Size
skill
slept
sleigh
slipped
soldier
somebody
sound
sour
spread
spoke
spot
square
slide
speech
spoil
state
station
steam
steamer
stole
straight
stream
strike
unless
village
visitor
vote
waist
war
wave
weather
wheat
whose
wide
wite
win
woman
women
wonder
worn
worth
wrapped
wraps
written
wrong
oe |
yourself
(See p. 8 for an account of the derivation of this list. Have each
pupil keep a list of the words he needs to learn.
of the words which the class as a whole has trouble with.)
READING
Keep careful account
A. Informational Reading.—Half the time set aside for reading in
this grade should be devoted to training the pupils in methods of
reading and study of informational material.
books at the end of this cycle.)
(See list of suitable
1. Aims: To train. pupils in definite methods of dealing with books of
informational character; to make substantial addition to their general
knowledge and permanent interests.
2. Materials: Well written accounts in the fields of nature, science, and
invention, travel, industry, exploration, and the like.
Ordinary text-
books should be left to the recitations in which they are required.
3. Achievement: Ability to find and state the purpose of a book or any
part of it—of the degree of difficulty indicated by the suggestive lists
53Home Life Around the World.—Mirick and Hol
at the end of this cycle; to give the substance of important parts of it.
lhe following is illustrative:
mes. Houghton Mifflin.
1. What is the book about?
2. How is it different from “The Dutch Twins ?”
3. Is each chapter ‘a story in itself or is the book one long story?
4. Chapter IV can be divided into four parts.
1. The Coming of the Ship.
2. The Journey to Norway.
3. -The Sail from Norway.
4. The Finding of the South Pole.
One child may tell the story of the first part, another of the second, etc.
5. What chapters tell about life in the cold parts of the earth?
6. If you want to learn about lands where cocoanuts grow and
monkeys live, which chapters will you select?
Ee
PAG,
ely,
a
£3.
NID BOON
Where will you find all the chapters listed ?
8. I find in the Index, “Lion of Lucerne, 39.” What does that mean?
Suggestions: let the pupils appreciate the two-fold purpose, namely,
to learn what the book contains and to learn how to get the content
of such a book most economically. Time the pupils and compare
records from day to day. Let the pupils determine what questions
the reader of the book should be able to answer. The study of
reading should assist the composition.
Literary Reading.—Literary selections may be presented both
orally and through silent reading.
Aims: To give familiarity with more of the best pieces; to build up
ideals of life and of method in dealing with literature; to develop
power in language, both of organization and of vocabulary; to assist
the library reading.
Materials: Stories, poems, dramatization, and miscellaneous prose as
indicated by the following suggestive lists. The pieces deemed most
worthy of permanent familiarity are starred.
Stories
Pingeemo 22 45. DA oes ce a ee Collodi
oC) HOOKS) 66s. eee OK. Abbou
WwteGe Ot (O47. ce ee L. Frank Baum
Inobinsom Crusoe... ... 5...) ... 15... Damen Weme
Slecmmo meaty... 022) ee ee Grimm’s Tales
mine Vales atid the Carpemer. 42 3. = Dodgeon
iit Baba and the Forty Robbers. 7... 5cudder
Lhe Goose that Laid the Golden Egg... Jacobs
Why Mr. Billy Goat’s Tail Is Short... .Harris
The Fairy, the Lark, the Grasshopper. . Ingiow
ite ludenient of Midas... 1.5.72. Sara Cone Bryant
‘he Camel. and His Master... 2... 2.) Baldwin
Aaventures OL a Brownle,: ..%. 25.4: ~MulochBe)
20.
in BO DOr
peep ps sp
ers: GD) IND ke GS
16.
17.
18.
19.
20):
y \@ CO NTO)
nee :
Alice in Wonderland Pelee ee Carroll ae
Joyous Story ot MeOtO. fo ee hee Laura H. Rachar@s
The Princess on the Glass Hill........-4 Adapted by Dyer & Brady
Mee tome Prumce..........--.+-.--Muloch
The Great W hite StOVess oo ats Bo Adapted by Muloch
Dien SHOES... ne Gt oss htc i eae ee
Little itty dow FUIEN, Seg es ee Hawthorne
Poems
Whe Capris Daushter....-....--»-:- ‘ield
Hie Ow ee ee Tennyson
Rrinen tm Vial 22s oa ee Se Wordsworth
October s Breht Blue Weather....-... daly jackson
tie Woillece Blackomith ..-25.5-.-... Longfellow
AO IsemteMe et oe eee eS Sama ©. jeweer
I) DOUG) ease ee 4}: 2... emnysou
Windy Nights ee ee ea IR, Stevenson
ie Biocon Doves © 0s: @ecelia, Uhascter
The Children’s ore ON ea ee. ae Longfellow
Pitelhe SOliee ri, re. accu aene. is sen) Shakespeare
Mountain and the Sutinnehy ss ks Emerson
atier iis Comins. 02 ee ss oe aL Tewitt
SURI a ee Thomas Nache
Sepiempce an tee 6 eel, Jackson
Ngaures (GOO¢oNtomt Ft. le
ite Shien aud Wie a Pe ee, wk. Stevenson
Somcwoleiune brook | 2.128.840... L. Tennyson
HACC eG seer es pee es cu gas unies Cary
ihe Bit ond the Wormouse,. 6. ..... Hereford
Achievement: Sufficient acquaintance with at least ten poems and
ten stories to make possible intelligent preference among them; ability
to recite five of the starred poems from memory ; ability to tell what
any of the preferred stories 1s about and to tell one or more incidents
from it.
Suggestions: Vary the attack, letting the pupils assist. Develop the
pictures, build up the associations, challenge the thought, and lead the
pupil to the point where the selection becomes the expression of his
experience, as it was that of the author.
General Reading.—Probably thee pupils may now read library
books at home. Encourage a varied ‘sel@étion. Make use of the public
library, especially the branch. Lét the class meeting stimulate the
pupils to thoughtful rea iding. Avoid formality. Suggestive lists will
be found in the Appendix. :
oD
nn Apa ee EEE ES a0 ESBy
Fab i ct ha oat Rae Cie eae
id Ne 2 a re (es esos iss Be S53
The Fifth Grade
Note carefully the suggestions for the entire cycle. Discover whethe:
the pupils of the fifth grade have the abilities indicated. Develop or
te-develop them as necessary.
1. COMPOSITION
A. Speaking.—This takes precedence over writing, both in time and
in Importance. If speaking is properly taught, mechanics of writing
will be very easily mastered.
Aims: A good title and nothing in the composition irrelevant to it:
good sentences, with something of smoothness; good beginning and
ending sentences ; good sequence leading to the outcome; choice of
interesting details; definite enlargement of knowledge in the fields
indicated by the centers of interest in the list of topics on page 68ff.
Z. Materials : Reading, investigation, observation, experience, amd
Imagination. Literary themes in connection with reading.
3. Achievement: Ability to make complete speeches of the kind indi-
cated by the standards which appear below; ability to finish, compose,
reproduce, or dramatize stories like the simpler narratives found
in the books of the grade.
STANDARDS OF ORAL COMPOSITION?
Fair
Never Again
One day I went to the show and stayed till night. My father came
after me. When I saw him, I went out the other side. I went home and
told my mother to tell my father not to whip me. After awhile father
came. Mother said, “Don’t whip him this time.’ Father called me and I
told him I shall not do it, never again.
(This is in advance over the fair composition of fourth grade because
of the variety in sentence structure. It is only Fair because it ends
ineffectively. The English of the last sentence is uncertain. )
Good
A Trick on Myself
One day when I was playing with my friend, I thought I would play a
trick on him. Just then his mother called him. When he had gone, I
dug a hole and put a paper over it. Then I put dirt over to cover it.
After a while he came out and said he had to go to the store. I went
with him and forgot about the hole. When we came back we started to play
again. We went over by the hole and I fell in. You can imagine how
my friend laughed when he saw I had been caught in my own trap.
‘The examples are not intended to be used by the children as models
to imitate.
56as the merit of clearness and directness. It moves
The last sentence rounds out the narrative effec-
in ce 9
ture is in advance of grade 4. The “one day
(This composition h
definitely toward its goal.
tively. The sentence struc : ad : ;
1e repetition of “play” in the first sentence keep this from
A higher grade pupil would probably have combined
the third and fourth sentences 1n some way. )
beginning and tl
being called excellent.
Excellent
Lucky for Me
When I tell you this story, you will think it was lucky for me. When
I had to stay after school one night, I stayed in till four o clock, ~My
mother had told me I had better be home before then. When I got there
[ was singing a song. All of a sudden I heard my cousin say, “That
strap’s going to play music on you.” I began to cry but suddenly I began
to laugh. Can you guess what I saw: It was the key. Then I knew
that mv mother was not home. Do you think I was sorry? I will tell
vou I was not.. I ran all around the house and over to my cousin’s scream-
ing, “Lucky, lucky for me!” ee
~ (There is a rapidity of movement and a variety of feeling which is
above the average for this grade. The intimate relation between the
speaker and the audience gives the composition a certain charm. ‘The
touch of sarcasm is good. The first sentence gives a good preparation
and is a step in advance of the “One day” type. The last sentence
“clinches.” The composition cannot be called superior because of the
monotony in the sentence structure and a lack of clearness about the
cousin’s part in the story. )
Superior
A Fishing Trip
All of a sudden I felt a terrible jerk on my rod. I saw flopping along-
side of the boat a great big Black Bass. ‘Hey Dad,” I yelled, “Help me,
help!” My father got up to get my rod, but the oar of the boat hit him
in the chest. My fish got away. That was the end of my fishing for the
rest of the week.
(This composition is superior for the fifth grade because of the
prompt beginning. The narrative is vivid and shows a power of selection
of important detail. The words “jerk,” “flopping” and “yelled” are well
chosen. The implication in the last sentence is a clever touch.)
(See p. 7 for an account of how these standards were derived. )
4. Suggestions: Let pupils narrow their topics by the selection of spe-
cine titles. Teach them to plan. Atter a pupil has spoken, leq mic
class make suggestions as to how he may better carry out his purpose.
If possibilities appear, let him try again while the suggestions are
fresh in mind. Let the class decide whether he has made improve-
ment. Avoid stereotyped and petty, perfunctory comment.
3. Grammar: Use grammatical terms freely in discussing composition
but do not require definitions nor formal pointing out of parts of
speech by the pupils. The term verb will come into play in correct-
ing such forms as “I seen” for “I saw.” Both “verb” and “adjective”
will be used in assisting the pupils to select more lively words, as for
example, to say dashed, crept, sneaked or wobbled in place of merely,
“went across the street.” The correct policy may be summed up by
saying “Call a spade a spade when the spade is there.” .
57Writing.—On blackboard or on paper as circumstances determine.
Aims: Mastery of mechanics needed for expression.
Materials: The same as for oral composition.
Achievement:
WN — td
Capitalization
First word in a direct question.
Important words in titles of story or book.
Punctuation
Quotation marks in unbroken quotation.
Comma
Before direct quotation.
Set off noun in direct address.
After yes and no.
Apostrophe in plural possessive as need arises.
(No formal teaching of columns of singuar and plural
possessives, )
* Manuscript form.
Nothing new in composition form.
Letter introducing heading,
465 Webster Avenue
Chicago, Illinois
Aprl ia, 92
Dear Amy,
Wee eee hee RS BIO l OEE Se ee eee oie fee le vate ie 0 6666 al 6 6 ce wm alw e)"ateneel ole celnatte seca eee
Te See RAYS SBN SEARO Or ec Ae Serle. ow WW eye: ee ese) ae e616 te 0 ee 6 mi 1 w (6, aijacet(aheerin te icticti eat ate ee
Sh ESR Or ORR eRe 8 SOO Serie eek cele Ke 6) 6 el eo: piel len 6: .s, 6 sa «aie 6) 6) 6 hers eile sn ane
De iat ae as es
Woys: “bo tram pupils In effective methods of dealing with beoks
of an informational character ; to make substantial additions to their
| knowledge and permanent interests.
-itten accounts in the fields of nature, science, and
stry, exploration, and the like. Ordinary text-
ations in which they are required. (See
| informational reading and
genera
Materials: Well-w
‘nvention, travel, indu
books should be left to the recit
p. 48 for the distinction between genera
topical study. )
Achievement: Ability to find and state the purpose Of a book—or
any part of it—of the degree of difficulty indicated by the suggestive
lists at the end of this cycle; to give the substance of important parts
of it; to do this with reasonable speed and judgment; to grasp the
order and arrangement of the author’s ideas and judge their relative
importance; to read between the lines, supplementing what 1s said
with inferences and suggestions; where possible to make practical
applications.
Suggestions: Let the pupils appreciate the two-fold purpose, namely,
to learn what the book contains and to learn how to get the content
of such a book most economically. Time the pupils and compare
records from day to day. Let the pupils determine what questions
the reader of the book should be able to answer. The study ot
reading should assist the composition, particularly in the matter of
planning.
Literary Reading.—Literary selections may be presented both
orally and through silent reading.
Aims: To give familiarity with more of the best pieces; to build up
‘deals of life and of method in dealing with literature; to cultivate
the interpretative imagination; to develop power of organization and
of vocabulary, both in study and in expression; to assist the library
reading.
Materials: Stories, poems, dramatization, and miscellaneous prose
as indicated by the following suggestive lists. These lists are reserved
for this grade but should be freely used in succeeding grades. The
pieces deemed most worthy of permanent familiarity are starred.
Stories
BU euiInGi ho ee ee tee ee Maeterlink
Aaventures of Reddy Fox....... 2... Burgess
Flercates and his Mabors...-. 63. ec - Upton
HO MEMO es es se ee ee « Wagner
maventires ol Ulysses... . ot. irae. was Clarke
dite, Necklacesor (ruthie... ke ek
Pe Oumoumas (Carol. 6. ee es on Dickens
leieias Glodk. 0) fe es de oe Scott
INGESE StOmMeCh ek: ea ee. 2. Coe oe Mabie
The Stagecoach (Tom Brown’s School
DOS ee en Fe eee Hughes
We Wiovace to Lillipute 3 fo. os Swift
Niivs.ol Vood Molle). .55...45.0 eck. We j.-Eonk
ier SuOiny Ol the Beaver... 2.6650. ak - W. DD. Euibert
fie Suma Camp (Beng a, Boy)... 2... - C. D. Waruier
Spring in Kentucky (Kentucky Cardinal) .J. L. Allen
67ee ee ee ELLY rere ny Pe ne ee
pane weet: S65! : ra Ores ere et eee
mae ‘ en) , ey oF aia agi he se Ot rsh oi Re a oi oki A
The Shipwreck (David Copperiicld). 1... Dickens
I'he Peterkins are Obliged to Move...... Luctetia P. Hale
Among the Wreadow, People..........7. Clara Pierson
John Ridd’s Adventure (Lorna Doone) ...Richard Blackmore
Poems.
Breathes heretie Nidan... ae Scott
Whe Bugle Soma... 0 Tennyson
(ihe Daioditswts 5) ee Wordsworth
he NlageG@cecmbyes :) si... H. H. Bennet
Sans one er Proctor
Old. Inensdes) =... ee. J eee a Holmes
Planks Wl ne earl: 0 ns a a ee . Shakespeare
DOU Aen AGhem so... sAtiots wha. | 1. dake Lf eee
A Wonder iul Weaver... ass)... A. George Cooper
AGA mG AI, 2. . eee GA ad. aie. Clarence Cook
Wola Woatemiowl |... 4.0... eso ven ae Bryant
Ene Boyeandvise Aneel... . Robert Browning
Whe sbildlerse. 0 eee 8 ee eine Longfellow |
Concideie ys 9. 0. ee ee ah Rossetti
PlOnauis, 0 oe ee Macaulay
eam Of Noushan Bes, 0.0 .....499 6 Longfellow
iime Roberu Of Sicily... .2. 2. sana: Longfellow
ithe ocr andthe Children. 3... Whittier
ae Shepierd of King Amettis....... a J. B. Lowell
Utes lousekcenen, :. ..) i5.. 2 ee Charles Lamb
Achievement: Sufficient acquaintance with at least ten poems and
ten stories to make possible intelligent preference among them; ability
to recite five of the starred poems from memory; ability to tell what
any of the preferred stories is about and to tell one or more incidents
from it or to dramatize it. This implies the ability to analyze the
general structure of the piece studied so as to see how the whole
has been built up to carry out the author’s purpose.
Suggestions: Wary the attack, letting the pupils assist. Develop the
pictures, build up the associations, challenge the thought, and lead
the pupil to the point where the selection becomes the expression of
his experience, as it was that of the author.
General Reading.—The pupils should read library books—mainly
at home. Encourage a varied selection but know what is being read
and do not permit wasteful or really harmful reading. Make use of
the public library, especially the branch. Let the class meetings
stimulate the pupils to thoughtful reading. Avoid formality; the
pupils will be glad to help plan the library hours. Suggestive lists will
be found in the Appendix.
ORAL COMPO@SETION ROrics
Cycle II—Grades 4 to 6
CENTERS OF INTEREST
Home.
Pets.
Toys and Games.
dinips:
NE
685. Work.
6. Special Days.
7. School.
8. Vacations.
6. Phwriit.
10, Subjective Topics.
11. Street Experiences.
12. Books.
is: se Natire,
rt. Home.
{. Our cuckoo clock.
When I overslept.
The fun of house cleaning.
A visit from the rag buyer.
Getting ready for the party.
6. If I were my mother.
7. An unexpected visitor.
8. My experience with a mouse.
9. Grandfather’s story.
10. Making candy.
11. Playine with fire.
12. The day we moved.
13, Locked out.
14. My lost shoe.
15, “Playing mother.
16. A quiet evening.
17. At the supper table.
18. When I take care of the baby.
19. A well deserved punishment.
20. Taking medicine.
21. My first experience as cook.
22. My most difficult task.
23. Answering the telephone.
24. I didn’t mean to.
25. A burned lunch.
26. Discovering the secret.
27. When mother had company.
28. Decorating the Thanksgiving table.
29. A broken window.
1. Dressing the kittens.
Zo. Our turtles:
3. A chameleon.
4. When my rabbits got away.
5. Tricks I tateht my dog.
6. A horse ) know.
7. A faithiul tmend.
8. How my pet caught a mouse.
0. otrayed, im.
10. Polly as a tattle-tale.
11. Washing the dog.
12. Talking with Polly.
13. Punishing my dog.
69
Sy EG PERT RRL * MN RR TE rr ET Te rare
% : ns SLETraining my pet.
My dog’s tricks,
My cat’s habits.
The cat and our gold fish.
Our canary bird.
Guinea pigs.
My pet alligator.
3. Toys and Games.
The end of the game.
How we got even.
The winner of the race.
A race I won.
My toy balloon.
A magician.
Flying a kite.
The last inning.
My favorite game in summer.
My favorite game in winter.
No fun at all
A. chase.
An indoor pastime.
An experience at the playground.
An exciting game.
Spoiled fun.
The time I have to play.
An electric village.
My new game.
The funniest game I ever played.
A canoe race.
How I won a prize.
Playing pirate.
Digging a cave.
My electric set.
A chemical set.
Fun with an erector.
Dolls I have loved and lost.
An instructive toy.
ihe stalled: carr.
An hour at the Boston Store.
A gipsy camp.
A night on the ocean.
A queer ride.
An auto trip I shall remember.
Lost in a department store.
Mending a tire.
A good sleigh ride.
My first visit to Lincoln Park.
An Indian reservation.
The .sand dunes.
A. forest preserve.
On the top of the bus.
On the “Whaleback.”
705. Work.
1
Z:
3:
4.
ay
6.
SE RRS ROIS EE a
Delivering papers.
When I grow up.
When I lost my job.
When scout training proved valuable.
My paper route.
Cleaning the basement.
6. Special Days.
7. S@nool:
bt pet
Ne SOV aN or ON
How I lost my belief in Santa Claus.
How I spent my holiday.
The holiday I like best.
My Hallowe’en stunt.
A pleasant Christmas.
Fun on the fourth of July.
A Christmas surprise.
What not to do on Hallowe’en.
Childish beliefs about Easter rabbit.
An egg hunt.
Dyeing eggs.
An April Fool trick.
Mother’s birthday.
The valentine box in our room.
In a strange school.
A bluff.
My favorite study.
The Pilgrim play.
A joke on me.
Why everyone laughed.
A punishment I deserved.
How I built a bird house.
A funny incident.
How I made an igloo.
Showing off.
My first day at school.
Story telling hour.
A great relief.
Given another chance.
Serving me right.
Too smart.
What ended my fun.
A big mistake.
How I explained my tardiness to the principal.
AN thee Ghat
An unexpected holiday.
Waiting for the dismissal bell.
My first tardiness. e
Visitors at school.
How I explained my absence.
My report card.
In the gymnasium.
Facing the music.30.
Syl:
om
JO;
34.
How I was broken of a bad habit.
Care of corridors and stairways.
Our printing room.
Care of shrubbery.
Scattering paper on the school ground.
&. Vacations.
i. Thrift.
LO DONT DUR ON
LG
ee
1Z
Sandy “Wienies.”
Nearly on the rocks.
My happiest vacation day.
A muddy bath.
An unlucky moment,
Putting up a tent.
My first swimming lesson,
How to build a camp fire.
Roasting marshmallows.
A scare,
An adventure.
Roasting potatoes.
In a storm at sea.
A hornet’s nest.
Helping the threshers.
In the old barn.
Driving home the cows.
Horseback riding,
What happened at scout camp.
How to track an animal.
First aid.
My first fish.
My biggest fish.
Catching crabs.
Starved Rock. Park.
Boy Scout signals.
Hiking to camp.
A hayrack ride.
A launch ride.
How I earn money.
Flow I save money for Thrift Stamps.
What I do with the pennies.
Why I am saving.
One way of saving money.
How I earned my first money.
How I make my bank account grow.
Watching the penny.
My first attempt at saving.
A lemonade stand.
Selling popcorn.
How my bicycle helps me to earn money.
yro. Feelings.
I
Z
A. disappointment. .
The meanest thing I ever did.
72ee Se ee
3. When I was small.
4. A queer thing I used to believe.
5 ‘The silliest thing I ever did.
6. Caught in the act.
7, A strange dream.
8. My mistake.
9. Waiting in the dentist’s office.
10. Sitting for my picture.
11. Never again.
12. A wish that came true.
13. Practicing my music lesson.
14. A surprise on me.
15. My most embarrassing moment.
16. He learned a lesson.
17. A sad experience.
18. What I fear most.
19, A laugh on me.
20. Why I couldn’t sleep.
21. When a fellow needs a friend.
22. A compliment.
23. When I had the measles.
24. When I was vaccinated.
25. i Wish:
26. Atraid of the rag man.
27. My sensations on report card day.
28. A stitch in time.
29. Don’t count your chickens.
30. Spilled milk.
rz. Street Experiences.
1. A funny peddler.
2. et in time.
3. Lost and found.
4. A package I found.
5, - Saleby: mise.
6. The banana peddler.
7. (GOIne toa fire.
8. A runaway.
Oo. & tragic accident.
10. A bicycle accident.
11. When I lost my pocket book.
12. A Marrow escape.
13. A toy window.
14. A slippery day.
15. Finding some money.
16. How I lost my dollar.
17. How the fire started.
iS, Wy, tall on a busy street.
A 19, rossine the street,
20. The frightened horse.
21. My lucky day.
22. An accident that taught me a lesson.
73
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a ace eae ad iad PB ae ii oy ad oh aoe ee
fy S thd tee death oy tial oa shee
72. Books.
1. An interesting book.
2. Why I like the story of “Pinnochio.”
3. My favorite book.
4. The kind of story I like best.
5. Why I like fairy tales.
6. When we should read books.
7. Our library hour.
8. How my book was torn.
9. Care of books.
Z3.. Nature.
I. The big storm.
2. tats.
3. The first cold day.
4. My favorite bird.
9. My favorite flower.
6. The monkeys at Lincoln Park.
7. The pelican in the bird house.
8. When the lions are being fed.
9. The trained seals in the circus.
10. The trained elephants in the circus.
11. Watching a bird.
12. What I learned from ants.
13. GAL eek DORR S Tr ae ERC Tee Mee nn eee Re - .
, Fete tee ieee , Peon ire TOY er Sy SRR PR COME ae 1
" - . s } aia hice thee poat Si) “bars, nates |The Eighth Grade
Note carefully the suggestions for the entire cycle. Discover whether
the pupils of the eighth grade have the abilities indicated. Develop or
redevelop them as necessary.
LER ACTIGAL ENGHISH
This division of the work comprises speaking, reading, and writing
as involved in the ordinary affairs of life. In some cases it will be well
to devote one of the two semesters of the grade entirely to this phase
of the subject. Where this is not done, ten-week units may be organized.
Either of these plans is better than the attempt to carry on practical
English study two or three days a week, and literary English study
the remainder. Whatever plan is followed, general reading of books and
magazines of various sorts should be continued throughout the year.
A. Composition.—This should include both speaking and writing. By
proper handling of the oral work the difficulty of securing correctness
in the written work may be reduced to a minimum.
1. Aims: To enable the pupils to organize composition on a somewhat
larger scale and with a more effective handling of details than in
previous years. This will require simple outlines, elementary instruc-
tion in paragraphing, practice in manipulating and transforming
sentences for smoothness and accuracy, and definite training in the
selection of words, particularly in the revision of written composition.
2. Materials: From various fields of interest, both actual and imaginary.
The possibilities are suggested by the list of topics at the end of
this cycle.
3. Achievement: Ability to plan and revise both speeches and written
composition so as to approximate the merits of the sample composi-
tions which follow:
STANDARDS OF ORAL COMPOSITIONG
Fatr
The Fishing Trip
While visiting my aunt in Wheeling, Illinois, my friend and I decided
to go on a fishing trip. Being that the river was just across the prairie, we
did not need to take any lunch with us. We took our lines and started off.
When we arrived there, we fixed our lines and threw them into the water.
After a while my line began to move. I drew my line out of the water and
was surprised to see a fish on the end. But I pulled it so hard that the
fish fell back into the water. I felt kind of bad to think I couldn’t catch
it, so I drew my line and went to a different place. In a little while after
my friend had a fish on her line which she got safe in her hand. She went
home happy with a big fish, while I went home sad with nothing. ea
(This is an advance over the standard for seventh grade because it 1s
more interesting. There is an element of feeling which is not shown in
any of the other fair compositions. The last sentence is very good. The
‘These examples are not intended to be used by the children as
models to imitate.
86ee mal
a Pe ee oe
air for the grade because of the incorrect expressions,
sition is only F ae
oe 7 tc., “felt kind of bad,” and because of repetition of
oe ,
“being that the river,” e
“my line.’’)
Good
My First Dollar
When I was about six years old my grandfather gave me my choice
between a dollar bill and one cent, which was lying on the table. If I
chose the penny, I could spend it at my own free will. If 1 chose the
dollar bill, I had to put it in the bank. I looked upon the penny as a
luxury that I could go across the street and spend and looked upon the
dollar bill as nothing but a piece of paper that I would put into the bank
and never see again. I knew that the dollar bill was the most money,
but I wanted the penny.’ When I put my hand toward the penny, my
erandfather would have a sober, dull face, but when I put my hand toward
the dollar he would smile. Therefore I took the dollar bill, which made
my grandfather feel pleased. . ;
(The theme is unusual and interesting. The problem moves steadily
toward a solution, every sentence helping. It has the merit of clearness
and sincerity. The analysis of his own thoughts and those of his grand-
father indicate an advance over the previous grade. )
Excellent
A Close Shave
My cat was in the habit of letting other cats bite and scratch him.
One day he turned over a new leaf and wouldn’t let any cat into our
yard or the neighbor’s tho sometimes the invaders put up a fight first.
This day a brave warrior came across the road from the park only to be
chased back again. My saucy puss was standing in the middle of the road,
hissing and spitting with his back at an enormous height. Along came
Mr. Marshall Field’s delivery wagon! There was a scream from my
mother which brought me flying up the back stairs just in time to see the
wagon run over my beloved cat. To our great relief, when the car had
passed, there stood puss hissing and spitting just as hard but his back and
tail were slightly lowered.
(This has the merit of concreteness gained through the use of well
chosen words. The description is strong and vivid. An amused attitude
is shown by the expressions “brave warrior,’’ “saucy puss,” etc. The last
Sentence is very effective. )
Superior
A Baking Experience
I have always been teased at home about my cooking. Every time I
baked or cooked anything Daddy was going to have his life insured.
One afternoon I was home alone and, as I had nothing to do, I
decided to bake bran muffins. I went into the kitchen, put on a large
apron and began to mix my muffins. How carefully I stirred them and
how carefully I measured the ingredients! As I mixed those muffins I
thought of the big, brown, fluffy muffins I would surprise the family with.
I put them into the oven and busied myself while they baked. Every few
minutes I would look at them. They had been baking fifteen minutes
and had not even begun to rise.
I began to worry. What was the matter with them? I was sure IPT BSc” gain He eee Meee ee Pee, " he og. vate, Oa ee ee ee Vr. ee eee
a al am i oh ee Nl ad AE ale pet aee ys
had put soda in the mixture.
Maybe the oven was not hot enough, so I
turned up the gas.
I waited ten more minutes and still they did not rise.
Maybe they were not supposed to rise. I left them in until I was
sure they must be done. How disappointed I was when I took them from
the oven: They were very hheavy,and when | broke onc open, lo and
behold! it was soggy. I tasted it and it had a queer salty taste. “Then I
knew something was wrong. I knew I had the correct measurements:
so I examined the ingredients. I looked at the flour, then at the milk,
and I found them both perfect. Then I looked at the baking soda. I
looked at the package and to my astonishment “Cream of Tartar” stood
pe ee black letters. So that was it! I had used cream of tartar instead
of soda.
What was I to do with them? I tried to feed them to the dog but
he refused to ruin his health. I wasn’t going to let the family tease me,
so I emptied the dozen of muffins into the garbage can.
I cleaned up the mess in the kitchen, and when mother came home
her kitchen was as she had left it. To this day the family has never found
out about those muffins. Between the dog and myself it will always
remain a secret.
(This relates a familiar experience with humorous and interesting
detail. The speaker presents clearly her expectations, her doubts, the
possible solution of the difficulty, the final solution and her escape from
the consequences.
The composition has a charm of personality. The writer recognizes
the challenge from the family, the joke on herself, and the necessity of
getting out of the difficulty without being detected. The part which the
dog plays is unusually well managed. The variety of sentences and the
richness of vocabulary are more than excellent for eighth grade.)
(See p. 7 for an account of how these standards were derived. )
4. Suggestions: Speaking, writing, reading, writing is a good sequence
to enable the pupils to do all they can for themselves. A few periods
may well be devoted to considering the merits of the standards. These
are not, however, to be used as “models.” Let the pupils start with
their own situations. Occasional blackboard exercises in the trans-
formation of sentences and in selecting among various synonyms the
the best verb or adjective will be found useful in supplementing the
study of the children’s own composition.
B. Mechanics.—For convenience a summary of the items in the
mechanics of written composition of which pupils should attain the
mastery in the elementary school follows. Instruction in any of
these should be given only as the actual needs of individuals, groups, or
the whole class call for it. Examples from the pupils’ own composi-
tions may be supplemented with occasional carefully selected dictation
exercises. The pupils should always understand perfectly the specific
purpose of each such exercise.
1. Capitalization.
Pronoun I and interjection O.
First word of a sentence.
Proper nouns and adjectives.
Important words and titles.
Titles of relationship or vocation prefixed to proper names.
In quotations as required.
88
rho aooPp—__ . Re eee 2
es eT er re tat! aes eee 5 he eeome eve ree AE
SMI sre hasan ae A in eos a See
Foe
Adventures of Reddy Fox
Third Reader
Merry Animal Tales
Around the Lightwood Fire
The Christmas Angel
The Lonesomest Doll
Adventures of Paddy the Beaver
Adventures of Old Mr. Toad
Tommy Tinker’s Book
Bed Time Story Book
House in the Wood—Other Stories
Little Miss Phoebe Gay
Kittyboy’s Christmas
Mother West Wind’s Why Stories
Mrs. Peter Rabbit
Johnny Chuck
Boy Blue and His Friends
Children in Many Lands
Old Mother West Wind
Old Mother West Wind’s Animal Stories
Old Mother West Wind’s Neighbors
Picture Stories from Great Artists
Around the World With the Children
Little Folks of Many Lands
The Brownies; Their Book
Adventures of a Brownie
Through the Looking Glass
Davy and the Goblin
The Little Lame Prince
The Brownies at Home
The Child Housekeeper
Children of the Wilds
Little Brothers of the West
The Tree Dwellers
Robinson Crusoe
New Baby World
Culture Readers Third Book
In Field and Pasture
Third Reader
Great Americans for Little Americans
Old English Nursery Tales
Christmas Stories
Lullaby Land
Braided Straws
Twilight Stories
Book of Cheerful Cats
Adventures of Blackberry Bear
Fairy Tales
Achilles and Hector
Third Reader, New Series
Story of Live Dolls
The Happy Heart Family
131Haaren
Haliburton
Holton-Curry
Holbrook
Heller and Bates
Hopkins
Hopkins
Hoft
Holbrook
Ingelow
Ingelow
Jewett
Johnston
Jackson
Judd
Kipling
Klingensmith
Kipling
Kirby
Lang
Lang
Lang
Lang
Lang
Lang
Lansing
Lansing
Lucia
Lucia
Lucia
Lucia
Lear
Lang
Lang
Lang
Lang
Lang
McMurray
McMurray
Meyer
Mulock
Morley
McDonald
McDonald
Malory
Mulock
Nixon-Roulet
Oswell and Gilbert
* ide, wig Mem xg Nit Bet ie Fae ON See ae 6 thie, Fo ° , We 5 a
Nat AY SO NS Man AS Ir? eel eC en Soe rt A eyes § an Rid Me at. as A Pee
GALT Nee BGO WOE HAL AA See eb Saul Nes ties
—_ eee. ELS ER SES EY PO es eu : eb eg de
Fairy Life
Third Reader
Third Reader
Nature Myths
Little Golden Hood
The Sandman: His Farm Stories
The Sandman: His Ship Stories
Jack the Fire Dog
Hiawatha Primer
Three Fairy Tales
Mopsa the Fairy
Bunny Stories
Book of Plays for Little Actors
Cat Stories
A ©, Gk. Birds
Just-so Stories
Just Stories
Jungle Book
Aunt Martha’s Corner Cupboard
Jack the Giant Killer
Cinderella
Little Red Riding Hood
Prince Darling
Princess on the Glass Hill
The Sleeping Beauty
Rhymes and Stories
A Story Garden for Little Children
Peter and Polly in Autumn
Peter and Polly in Spring
Peter and Polly in Summer
Peter and Polly in Winter
Book of Nonsense
Aladdin and His Wonderful Lamp
Pretty Goldilocks
The Snow Man
The Snow (Queen
Dick Whittingham
Classic Stories for Little Ones
Story of Robinson Crusoe
Outdoor Book
The Little Lame Prince
Seed Babies
Boy Blue and His Friends
Child Life in Many Lands
Story of King Arthur's Knights
The Adventures of a Brownie
Japanese Folk Stories
American School Reader
132Pyle
Pyle
Powers
Perkins
Perkins
Perkins
Pierson
Pyle
Perkins
Pierson
Pierson
Perkins
Price
Peary
Pyle
Pyle
Ruskin
Skinner
Steadman
Summers
Spaulding and Bryce
Smith
Stevenson
Sindelar
Scudder
Sindelar
Skinner
Scudder
Dery
Tarpan
Valentine
Woodward
Anderson
Aanrud
Alexander
Alcott
Alcott
Alden
Abbott
Barrie
Bayliss
Brown
Burgess
Burgess
Burgess
Burgess
Burgess
Burgess
ee rains a ee eS
a
Ree eae hy eet ae
ey oe
The Christmas Angel
Six Little Ducklings
Stories of Famous Pictures
The Snow Baby
The Japanese Twins
The Dutch Twins
Among the Farm People
Careless Jane
The Eskimo Twins
Among the Forest People
Among the Meadow People
The French Twins
Heroes of Myth
Children of the Arctic
As the Goose Flies
The Counterpane Fairy
The King of the Golden River
Merry Tales
Nursery Tales
Third Reader
Aldine. Third Reader
Lovable Tales
Child’s Garden of Verses
Nixy Bunny in Far Away Land
Fables and Folk Stories
Father Thrift and Big Animal Friends
Child’se Own Book :
Arabian Nights
Tales from Far and Near
The Golden Goose
Aunt Loutsa’s Book of Fairy Tales
The Peter’ Pan Picture Book
FOURTH GRADE
Fairy Tales
Lisbeth Longfrock
Child Classics, Fourth
Jack and Jill
Under the Cilacs
Why the Chimes Rang
Boy on a Farm
Peter Pan
Little Cliff Dwellers
The Lonesomest Doll
Mother West Wind’s Animals
Mother West Wind’s Children
Mother West Wind’s Neighbors
Where Stories
When Stories
Why Stories
133Baker and Carpenter
Baker and Thorndike
Baldwin
Baldwin and Bender
Bigham
Blodgett
Baily
Brooks
Bassett
Burnett
Browne
Burnett
Bayliss
Brown
Brown
Bass
Campbell
Craik
Cravens
Carroll
Collodi
Campbell
Campbell
Campbell
Cruikshank
Chamberlain
Collodi
Cook
Chow Leung
Carpenter
Carryl
Crichton
Crack
Dopp
Dopp
Dutton
Dickson
Dickens
Dodge
Eddy
Eggleston
Faulkner
Faulkner
Grimm
Grimm
Ghosh
Harris
Husted
Husted
Hopkins
7 Bee Garr. Ro Le ee _ ee ee 5 aa 7 e - 9 ? — Sat: see Pa
AeA rN I ee TE EEA LM i oak Sa Sa as a ge i ith cS Be de ae ae "
A EM a a A a ie AR er he Ne ee aie ik Wee pie aioe ao 1
Third Reader
Everyday Classics for Fourth Grade
Fifty Famous Stories
Fourth Reader
Fanciful Flower Tales
Fourth Reader
Boys and Girls of Colonial Days
Hansel and Gretel
Story of Lumber
Sarah Crewe
John of the Woods
The Children’s Book
Lolami in Tusayan
Little Miss Phoebe Gay
The Wonderful Chair
Stories of Pioneer Life
Jan, the Dutch Boy
So Fat and Mew-Mew
Story of Lincoln
Alice in Wonderland
Adventures of Pinocchio
Konrad, the Dutch Boy
Metzu, the Japanese Boy
Wah Sing, The Chinese Cousin
Fairy Book
How We Travel
Pinocchio
The Story of Ulysses
Chinese Fables and Folk Stories
How the World is Housed
Davy and the Goblin
Peep in the World
Little Lame Prince
Early Sea People
Early Cave Men
In Field and Pasture
Camp and Trail
Christmas Carol
Hans Brinker
Friends and Helpers _
Stories of Great Americans
Italian Fairy Tales
Russian Fairy Tales
Best Stories
Household Tales
The Wonders of the Jungle
Mrs. Thimblefinger
Indian Chieftains
Indian Children
Sandman Farm Stories
134Se SF eo ee
Ee sat ba UE SS Se
SE he Bada nse pe Ss st Te
Hopkins
Houghton
Hope
Jewett
Kirby
Kipling
Lang
Lang
Lang
Lang
Lang
Lang
Lucas
Lang
Lang
Lucas
Large
Mulock
MacDonald
Miller
May
Morley
Mabie
Miller
Montgomery
Munroe
Nida
O’Shea
Paine
Perkins
Perkins
Perkins
Page
Peary
Peary
Peck
Pierson
Pyle
Pyle
Pyle
Pyle
Pyle
Paine
Scandlin
Schwartz
Segur
Schwartz
Scudder
Scudder *
Sandman Ship Stories
Russian Grandmother Tales
The Bobsey Twins
Bunny Stories
Aunt Martha’s Cupboard
The Jungle Books
Dick Whittington
Aladdin
The Snow Queen
The Nursery Rhymes Book
Pretty Goldilocks
The Snow Man
The Book of Verse
Blue Fairy Book
Yellow Fairy Book
Anne’s Terrible Good Nature
Stories of Pioneer Life
Adventures of a Brownie
Double Story
Little Neighbors
Little Prudy’s Sister Sue
Donkey John of Toy Valley
Legends Every Child Should Know
The First Book of Birds
Billy Whiskers
Snow Shoes and Sledges
Ab, the Cave Man
Old World Wonder Stories
How Mr Rabbit Lost Bis Parl
‘he Tash vw ims
The Eskaine Twins
The French Twins
Tommy Trot’s Visit
Children of the Arctic
Snowland Folk
Adventures of Mabel
Three Little Millers
As the Goose Flies
Christmas Angel
Counterpane Fairy
Story of King Arthur
The Wonderful Clock
How Mr. Dog Got Even
Hans the Eskimo
Wilderness Babies
Story of a Donkey
Five Little Strangers
Book of Fables
Book of Folk Stories
135Scudder
Scudder
Sewell
Starr
Richards
Richards
Tappan
Thorne-Thompson
Walker
Warren
Washburn
Witte
White
Williston
Welsh
Waggaman
White
Wyss
Wesselhoeft
Wiggin
Weedon
Wade
Zwivilgmeyer
Abbott
Anderson
Alden
Alden
Alden
Anderson
Alcott
Bassett
Bassett
Beebe
Blaisdell
Brooks
Brooks
Brooks
Brooks
Browne
Burnett
Baldwin
Brown
Burt
Burton
Burton
Boyeson
Burnett
Baldwin
ES RI EN Re LO Ra et TN es TA
ate UN ee RTE wish LAr es
He SF: SS ATA Sit ate et na ces hs q
The Children’s Book
Arabian Nights
Black Beauty
Mustapa, the Egyptian Boy
The Joyous Story of Toto
Toto’s Merry Winter
Golden Goose
East of the Sun and West of the Moon
Laly Holly-hock
Little Pioneers
Indian Legends
Hansel and Gretel
When Molly was Six
Japanese Fairy Tales Retold
Fairy Tales Children Love
The Ups and Downs of Marjorie
The Magic Forest
Swiss Family Robinson
Jack the Fire Dog
Patsey
From the Grain to the Loaf
In the Shadow of the Great Peril
Johnny Blossom
FIFTH GRADE
A Boy ona Farm
Wonder Stories
The Canoe Clib
Moral Pirates
The Cruise of the Ghost
Fairy Tales
Little Women
Story of Sitk
Story of Leather
Four American Naval Heroes
Short Stories of American History
Benjamin Franklin
Boy settlers
Christopher Columbus
Lafayette
Granny’s Wonderful Chair
Little Lord Fauntleroy
Thirty More Stories
In the Days of the Giants
Eugene Field Book
Four American Patriots
Lafavette
Boyhood in Norway
loretle Princess
Story of Siegfried
136
Pore ee TTS
i Remmeakai Lie 0» ' oo iseBrowning
Boutet
Carter
Carter
Coburn
ete
Crothers
Cerwood
Coffin
Carryl
Carroll
Dodgson
De La Ramee
De la Ramee
Drummond
Dopp
Dopp
Duncan
Dodge
Eddy
Eggleston
Fletcher
Greene
Grimm
Grimm
Gladden
Golding
Gordy
Haris
Hauft
Houghton
Howells
Hall
Hays
Hays
Harris
Harper
Hawthorne
Harris
Ingelow
Jacobs
Judd
Jacobs
Jacobs
Jamison
Jenks
Johnson
Kaler
Kaler
The Pied Piper of Hamlin
Joan of Arc
About Animals
Stories of. Brave Dogs
Little Swedish Cousin
hittle- came - Prince
Miss Muffet’s Christmas Party
Nomads of the North
Boys of ’76
Davy and the Goblin
Thro’ the Looking Glass
Alice’s Adventures
Dog of Flanders
The Nurnberg Stove
The Monkey Who Would Not Kill
Early Cave Men
Later Cave Men
Adventures of Billy Topsail
Hans Brinker
Friends and Helpers
The Hoosier School Boy
Old Settler Stories
Legends of King Arthur
Fairy Tales
German Household Tales
Satta Claus om a lank
The Story of David Livingstone
American Leaders and Heroes
Aaron in the Wildwood
Fairy Tales
Russian Fairy Tales
Christmas Every Day
Viking Tales
Prince Lazybones
Princess Idleways
Mr. Thimblefinger
Outdoor Book for Boys
Wonder Book
Uncle Remus Stories
Mopsa the Fairy
Celtic Fairy Tales
Wigwam Stories
English Fairy Tales
More English Fairy Tales
Toinette’s Philip
The Children of: Ji-Shib
The Oak Tree Fairy Book
Raising the Pearl
Mr. Stubbs Brother
137Kaler
Kaler
Keary
Kingsley
Kipling
Kipling
Kingsley
Kipling
Lang,
Lang,
Lang,
Lang, Xv.
Lang, Jeanie
Lang, Jeanie
Lang, Jeanie
one, W. |].
ome, NV I,
one, VV. <):
>>>
Mabie, H. W.
Mabie. Hl. W.
Macauley
MacDonald
McSpadden
Maeterlinck
Marshall
Marshall
Mowry
Mowry
Maitland
Mansfield
Mansfield
Mansfield
Morley
Noel, M.
Olcott
Paine
Page
Pyle
Pyle
Pyle
Pyle
Pyle
Perry
Richards
Roulet
Roulet
Ruskin
Richards
Roberts
Stone
Segur
PTS iy Gey gaara Be ee ee a i
ie ce Pe AO stk 1 te
eee Ene da A ass RK ie ~ i %
Teddy and Carrots
Toby Tyler
Heroes of Asgard
Water Babies
Just So Stories
Captains Courgeous
Greek Fairy Tales
Jungle Book
Blue Fairy Book
Story. ot Joan of Arc
Trusty John
Yellow Fairy Book
Stories of General Gordon
Story of Robert Bruce
Story of Captain Cook
Lite Srothem tovtie Bear
Secret of the Woods
Ways of Woodfolk
Fairy Tales Every Child Should Know
Norse Stories
Camp Jolly
The Princess and the Goblin
Stories from Robin Hood
The Children’s Bluebird
Stories of Beowulf
Stories of William Tell
Little Mitchell
American Heroes and Heroism
Heroes of Chivalry
Our French Cousin
Our English Cousin
Our Scotch Cousin
Bee People
Buzz, The Life of a Honey Bee
Red Indian Fairy Book
The Arkansas Bear
A Captured Santa Claus
The Garden Behind the Moon
The Wonder Clock
Nancy Rutledge
Merry Adventures of Robin Hood
Twilight Land
Four American Inventors
Captain January
Our Little Alaskan Cousin
Our Little Brazilian Cousin
The King of the Golden River
Five Minute Stories
Hoof and Claw
Everyday Life in the Colonies
Sophie’s Trouble
138Swift
Spyrl
Sewell
Tappan
Taylor
White
Wesselhoeft
Wesselhoeft
Welsh
White
Wiggin
Woolsey
Williams
Wesselhoeft
Wiggin
Wyss
Warren
Williston
Zwilgmeyer
Anderson
Aldrich
Alcott
Asujornsen
Alsher
Alcott
Alcott
Austin
Beard
Beard
Baldwin
Baldwin
Baldwin
Barker
Bennett
Bostock
Brooks
Brooks, N:
Burnett
Brown
Blaisdell
sarbour
Barbour
: — age ee SEN. eae ee
Ce tes pings GaN sek By ee a ee
on ee ae See a
Gulliver’s Travels
Heidi
Black Beauty
Robin Hood
Boys of Other Countries
The Magic Forest
Foxy the Faithful
Hipwing the Spy
Fairy Tales
Pittle Gin
Christmas Carol
Mischief’s Thanksgiving
Choice Literature
Sparrow the Tramp
The Fairy Ring
Swiss Family Robinson
King Arthur and His Knights
Japanese Fairy Tales
Johnny Blossom
SIXTH GRADE
Fairy Tales
Story of a Bad Boy
Little Women
Little Men
Joe’s Boys
Europe
Asia
United States
Fight Cousins
Jack and Jill
Fairy Tales from the Far North
Eyes of the Woods
An Old Fashioned Girl
Spinning-wheel Stories
Uncle Sam’s Secrets
The Jack of All Trades
New Ideas for Out of Doors
The Story of the Golden Age
The Story of Roland
The Story of Siegfried
Wagner Opera Stories
Barneby Lee
The Training of Wild Animals
Century Book
The Boy Emigrants
A Little Princess
The Lucky Stone
Stories from English History
Captain of the Crew
The Halt Back
139Barbour
Barbour
Cumming
Commelin
Crockett
Cooper
Carter
Defoe
Dickens
Du Charu
Du Chaillu
Davis, K. H.
Dodge
Dodge
Dana
Dix
Downes
Du Bois
Dickens
Driggs
Duncan
Ewing
Eggleston
Eggleston
Eggleston
Eggleston
Fabre
Ford
French
Finn
Finn
Finn
Grimm
Greene
Greene
Grinnell
Grinnell
Hawthorne
Harris
Hamp
Hawkes
Houghton
Hughes
Hall
Harding
Hornaday
Hale
Irving
Ingersoll
ina eg eet RL —o Sa daae F ;
! tel etn wie ce ara PS OR cael s tian 1 a date eeehe Oa
Ei tide A) Fl gia Tas vs ea eck di ob a
Wannine Dig: OY
The Crimson Sweater
The Lamp Lighter
Famous Legends
Red Cap Tales
Last of the Mohicans
Stories of Brave Dogs
Robinson Crusoe
Christmas Carol
Stories of the Gorilla County
The Country of the Dwarfs
Gallagher
Hans Brinker
Donald and Dorothy
Two Years Before the Mast
Merry Lips
Fire Fighters and Their Pets
Lass of the Silver Sword
Little Nell. (Abridged from Old Curiosity Shop)
Adventures of Arnold Adair
Billy Topsail
Jan of the Wind Mill
The Big Brother
Last of the Flatboats
Southern Soldier Stories
The Hoosier School Boy
Our Humble Helpers
Horses Nine |
-Greetir the Strong
Tom Playfair
That Foot Ball Game
Best Foot Forward
Fairy Tales
With Spurs of Gold
The Blind Brother
Jack, the Young Trapper
Jack, Among the Indians
Wonder Book
Uncle Remus
The Treasure of Mushroom Rock
Shaggycoat
Russian Grandmother’s Wonder Tales
Tom Browne’s School Days
Men of Old Greece
Story of Greek Gods
American Natural History
Man Without a Country
Rip Van Winkle
Book of the Ocean
140
Bi 3aIngersoll
Inman
Kipling
Kipling
Kaler
Kipling
Kaler
Kaler
Lang
Lang
Lagerhof
Lagerhof
Lamb
Lathrop
London
London
Monroe
MacDonald
MacDonald
Munroe
Munroe
Munroe
Munroe
Munroe
Munroe
Ollivant
Page
Pyle
Pyle
Porter
Porter
Porter
Paine
Perkins
Pyle
Pyle
Rankin
Raspe
Rankin
Rankin
Roosevelt
Rice
Seton
Seton
Seton
Sewell
Stowe
Stevenson
Stoddard
Stoddard
The Ice Queen
The Ranch of the Oxhide
Jungle Book
Second Jungle Book
Wireless Station at Silver Fox Farm
Captains Courageous
Raising the Farm
Toby Tyler, Ten Weeks 1n a Circus
Arabian Knights
Animal Story Book
The Wonderful Adventures of Nils
Further Adventures of Nils
Tales from Shakespeare
Five Little Peppers. (Five books in series)
Call of the Wild
White Fang
Flamingo Feather
At the Back of the North Wind
The Princess and the Goblin
Snow Shoes and Sledges
he Bur. Seals toot
The Arkansas Bear
The Flaming Feather
Campmates
Cavemates
Bob, Son of Battle
Two Little Confederates
Robin Hood
Theodora
Pollyanna
Just David
Freckles
The Arkansas Bear
The Twin Books
Men of Iron
Jack Ballister’s Fortune
Dandelion Cottage
Baron Munch
Adopting of Rosa Marie
Castaways
Stories of the Great West
The Young Forester
Wild Animals I Have Known
Johnny Bear
Biography of a Grizzly
Black Beauty
Uncle Tom’s Cabin
Treasure Island
The Red Mustang
Little Smoke
141Spyri
Swift
‘Twain
Turpin
Trowbridge
Wiggin
Woolsey
Woolsey
White
Wiggen
Warren
Wallace
Wallace
Adams
Adams
Adams
Alcott
Altsheler
Baldwin
Barbour
Boyesen
Brooks
Brown
Brown
Burnet
Cotes
D’Amicis
Deland
Dix
Dixon
DuBois
DuChaillu
Ewing
Eastman
Grinnell
Hagedorn
Jacobs
Jacobs
Jackson
Kneeland
Knipe
Knipe
Lodge and Roosevelt
aMotte-Fouque
Masefield
oe a et ee
aE EY Satin ens ine cs OIL hgh ftp
Heid:
Gulliver’s Travels
Tom Sawyer
Treasure Mountain
The Satin Wood Box
Christmas Carol
What Katy Did at School
What Katy Did Next
The Magic Forest
Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm
King Arthur
Wilderness Castaways
Fur Trail Adventures
SEVENTH GRADE LIST
Log of a Cowboy
Harper’s Indoor Book for Boys
Harper’s Outdoor Book for Boys
Under the Lilacs
The Forest Runners
Book of Golden Deeds
For the Honor of the School
Norseland Tales
Cruise of the Cachelot
The Four Gordons
Two College Girls
Sara Crewe
The Story of Sonny Sahib
Cuore
Oakleigh
Little Captive Lad
Arabian Nights
The Lass of the Silver Sword
Lost in the Jungle
Jackanapes
Wigwam Evenings
Jack in the Rockies
Boys’ Life of Roosevelt
Joan of Juniper Inn
Joan’s Jolly Vacation
Nelly’s Silver Mine
Smugegler’s Island
The Lucky Sixpense
Beatrice of Denwood
Hero Tales from American History
Undine
Jim Davis
142
ae Pe - 3 Pe Se: Sere ey Y
Pe OR ee PO ee rePorter
Pyle
Pyle
Pyle
Seaman
Seawell
Seton
Seton
Stockton
Stockton
Stockton
Stockton
Stoddard
Stoddard
Taylor
Trowbridge
Trowbridge
Vaile
Wesselhoeft
Wiggin
Wiggin
Wiggin
Young
Zollinger
Adams
Andrews
Adams
Alcott
Austin
Alcott
Alcott
Alcott
Altsheler
Altsheler
Ames
Baker
Barber
Baldwin
Bates
Bellew
Bennett
Bolton
Bolton
Bolton
Bolton
Bobstock
Brooks
Pollyanna
King Arthur and His Knights
Otto of the Silver Hand
Jack Ballister’s Fortune
Jacqueline of the Carrier Pigeons
Paul Jones
Lives of the Hunted
Two Little Savages
A Jolly Fellowship
Buccaneers and Pirates
Fanciful Tales
Stories of the Spanish Main
Lost Gold of the Montezumas
Two Arrows
Jon of Iceland
His One Fault
Cudjo’s Cave
The Orcutt Girls
Jack, the Fire Dog
Polly Oliver’s Problem
Mother Carey’s Chickens
New Chronicles of Rebecca
Algonquin Indian Stories
The Widow O’Callaghan’s Boys
EIGHTH GRADE List
Harper’s Machinery Book
The Perfect Tribute
Wells Brothers
Eight Cousins
Betty Alden
Aunt Jo’s Scrap Bag
Jack and Jill
Rose in Bloom
Guns of Shiloh
Scouts of Stonewall
Pete the Cow Puncher
Book of Inventions, I—II
Wagner Opera Stories
Fifty Famous Rides and Riders
Tales of Canterbury Pilgrims
Tales from Tennyson
Master Skylark
Famous American Statesmen
Girls Who Became Famous
Poor Boys Who Became Famous
Famous American Authors
Training of Wild Animals
Historic Girls
143Brooks The Boy Emigrants
Bunyan Pilgrim’s Progress
Burnett Little Lord Fauntleroy
Burnett The Secret Garden
Barbour Behind the Lines
Barbour The Crimson Sweater
Beach An Annapolis First Classman
Brown When Max Came
Catherwood The Story.or Lonty
Cervantes Don Quixote
Chapin Story of the Rhinegold
Churchill Richard Carvel
Churchill ‘he Ciisis
Churchill The Crossing
Clemens Huckleberry Finn
Clemens Prince and Pauper
Clemens Tom Sawyer
Clemens Travels at Home
Clark Child’s Guide to Mythology
Coult Letters from Many Pens
Cody Selection from the World’s Great Oratio
Cooper Last of the Mohicans
Cooper The Deerslayer
Cooper The Pilot
Cooper leo py,
Craik John Haxifax
Crommelin Famous Legends
Custer Boots and Saddles
Custer Following the Guidon
Dana Two Years Before the Mast
Defoe Robinson Crusoe
Dickens A Tale of lwo, Cities
Dickens Christmas Carol
Dickens Cricket on the Hearth
Dickens David Copperfield
Dickens Oliver Twist
Doubleday Stories of Inventors
Duncan Adventures of Billy Topsail
Eastman Indian Boyhood
Eggleston Bale Marked Circle 6
Eggleston Wreck of the Red Bird
Eliot The Mill on the Floss
Franklin Autobiography
French Story Of Roll
French Lance of Kannana
Fox The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come
Garland Son of the Middle Border
Garland The Long Trail
Grimm Hansel and Gretel
Hale Man Without a Country
Hart Colonial Children
144Hart
Hawthorne
Hawthorne
Harper Brothers
Hamp
Homer
Homer
Jenks
Jennes
Jackson
Johnson
Johnston
Ingersoll
King
aa
Kipling
Lamb
Mace
Matthews
Montgomery
Montgomery
Martin
Macleod
Masefield
Moffet
Munroe
Nicolay
Ollivant
Pyle
Pyle
Page
Pendleton
Porter
Porter
Porter
Porter, Jane
Parkman, i. LL.
Parkman, F.
Rice
Rice
Richards
Rolt-Wheeler
Rolt-Wheeler
Seton
Stevenson
Stevenson
Swift
Stowe
Stevenson
How Our Grandfathers Lived
Tanglewood Tales
Wonder Book
Boyhood of Great Men
Dale and Frazer
Iliad
Book of the Odyssey
Boys’ Book of Exploration
The Young Homesteaders
Ramona
Big Brothers
Famous Scouts
Book of the Ocean
Cadet Days
Captains Courageous
Tales from Shakespeare
Lincoln the Man of the People
Poems of American Patriotism
Anne of Avonlea
Anne of Green Gables
Emmy Lou
Shakespeare Story Book
Martin Hyde
Careers of Danger and Daring
White Conquerors
Boy’s Life of Lincoln
Bob, Son of Battle
Men of Iron
Story of Banister’s Fortunes
Red Rock
King Tom and the Runaways
Freckles
Girl of the Limberlost
Laddie
Scottish Chiefs
Fighters for Peace
Tne Orecon’ rail
Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch
Lovely Mary
Florence Nightingale
Boys with the U. S. Foresters
Boys with the U. S. Survey
Trail of the Sand Hill Stag
Kidnapped
David Balfour
Gulliver’s Travels
Uncle Tom’s Cabin
Treasure Island
145Scott
Scott
Thompson, D. P.
Thompson, M.
Thompson, D. P.
Phurston, ft. 1.
Trowbridge
Verne
Waller
Webster
Williams
(ple ch siaaunl AY ea te TRS 2 de tye re Licey cabaret cpa ; ee
ee Bb T e okoke et ik Se PM ra we Sagi echo ade ye pie ee ae Pao
Ivanhoe
The Talisman
Green Mountain Boys
Alice of Old Vincennes
Gold Seeking on the Dalton Trail
The Bishop’s Shadow
Tinkham Brothers’ Tidemill
Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea
A Daughter of the Rich
Daddy Longlegs
Our Short Story Writers
146
Pe ee ee Pl PO Se OR INE ae 7 Te ee eT Yee re ae = i A eee
Ay e oe SM a PEL SY é ‘See oe eee cee enn
APPENDIX F
COLLECTIONS OF STORIES
Brvant. How to Tell Stories to Children. Houghton, Mifflin Co.
Bailey. Stories for Every Holiday. The Abingdon Press.
Partridge. Story-Telling in School and Home. Sturgis and Walton Co.
Esenwein and Stockard. Children’s Stories and How to Tell Them. Home
Correspondence School.