The educational screen (c1922-c1956])

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The Educational Screen Three More Publications by the Educational Screen rse THE Berkeley school system has long published what are known as "Con of Study Monographs/' issued in accordance with the following plan: "The Courses of Study in all the subjects taught in the public schools! are under critical study. As rapidly as the course in any subject can be * rewritten following such study by the committee responsible for the task,B it will be issued in mimeographed form that its plans and recommendations i may be tested through use by all teachers. Upon the completion of the test- I ing process, each course will be revised with the aim of incorporating such modifications and improvements in the course as are suggested by the I teachers who use it. When ready to be issued in more permanent form, j each course is printed as a course of study monograph." The monograph on Visual Instruction is nearly ready for publication aril will be available to the educational public through The Educational Screei within the next two months. We have seen the entire manuscript of this monograph and can assurt our readers that it will constitute one of the most valuable contributions yet made to the literature of the subject. It is actually a manual of procedure ir visual instruction—based on practice, not theory—and will prove invaluable to any and all educators who are actively engaged in developing visual methods elsewhere in the country. THE Greene "Historical Charts of the Literatures"—formerly publishec at Princeton, N. J.—have been widely used by teachers, students, anc general readers for the past ten years. The English Chart appeared in 1912. and was one of the very first visual devices to be developed expressly for the field of literary study. The American Chart appeared in 1913, the German Chart in 1915, and the French Chart in 1918. The Educational Screen has taken over the publication of the series and will reissue the various charts in revised and uniform editions. The 7tr edition of the English Chart, and the 3rd edition of the American Chart an expected to be ready in January, 1923. {See further notice on an advertising page.) v