The audio-visual handbook (1942)

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The Status of Audio-Visual Instruction 7 The United States Departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Interior and Labor; Bureau of Commercial Economics; Pan-American Union; National Museum; and other old and new Federal and related organizations in Washington, D. C, offer loan and advisory service to schools and to other educational organizations. Many of these service bureaus have materials available for loan without charge, except for transpor Photo Courtesy Field Museum of Natural History Exhibit from a Museum Loan tation. In the case of the Division of Motion Pictures, Department of the Interior, one or two reels of 16 mm. motion pictures, silent or sound, will be sent under Government frank, thus eliminating postage one way. The Office of Education is giving special attention to the application of visual-sensory aids to instruction. The various defense activities include greater use of audio-visual aids to learning than at any other time in our nation's history. Films produced and under production are designed for instruction in many phases of production; and the motion-picture camera is being used regularly for job analysis and work simplification. Sound filmstrips teach cooks, and maps provide the solution to many tactical problems. First aid, the operation of field equipment, the building of pontoon