The Educational screen (c1922-c1956])

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634 The Educational Screen A Selected and Partially Annotated Bibliography on the \Jse of Visual Aids in Education By Joseph Weber Part II — Magazine Articles Abrams, A. W. : Collection and Organization of Pictures. Educational Screen, 3:45-49, February 1924. Of practical value to directors of visual instruction bureaus. How to Use Pictures. Educational Screen, 2:330-334, September 1923. Gives in detail a better way to use pictures in which the experiences of the children are utilized. Several illustrations. Organization and work of the Visual Instruc tion Division of the New York State Education Department. Educational Screen, 3:8-12, January 1924. Gives a detailed description of the work of the bureau — administration, production, organization, distribution, and instruction in visual methods. Illustrated. State Service in Slides and Photographic Prints. Educational Screen, 3:90-92, March 1924. Of interest chiefly to the administrator. What is Visualization? Educational Screen, 3:258-260, September 1924. A psychological masterpiece, and one of Mr. Abrams' most valuable contributions in the field of visual instruction. Adams, F. J.: The Motion Picture and Vocational Guidance. Educational Screen, 3:135-137, April 1924. Anderson, Eula Lee: Motion Pictures in the Toledo Museum of Art. Visual Education, 1:1415, September-October 1920. Ankeneyt J« V.: The A B C of Graphing. Visual Education, 5:190-191, July 1924; 5:238-239, August 1924. Chart-Making for Agricultural Teachers. Moving Picture Age, 5:9-10, 24, May 1922. Some Arbitrary Standards for the Judging of Educational Films. Visual Education 5:446-447, December 1924. The formulation of a score card which requires judgments on titles, subject-matter, photography, graphs, and cartoons. Auerbach, H. B., and Chiles, G. S. : The Art of Visual Presentation. Visual Education, 2:18-21, September, 2:18-22, October 1921. Discussion of photographic illustrations and the graphic method. Averill, L. A.: Educational Possibilities of the Motion Pictures. Educational Review, 50:392-398, June-December 1915. Balcom, A. G.: The Film as a Medium of Instruction. Journal of the National Education Association, 13:331-332, December 1924. Preparation of Teachers in the Use of Visual Aids. Educational Screen, 3:260-263, September 1924. The Use of Visual Aids in Teaching. Educational Screen, 3:381-384, December 1924; 4:9-11, 80-83, 148-149, 215-216, January, February, March, April 1925. Discusses the following topics: (1) the ttereopticon and slide, (2) the stereograph and its use, (3) the film— its possibilities and limitations, (4) the care and use of films, and (5) the motion picture projector. An instructive series of articles. Banks, E. J.: Educational Bible Films. Educational Screen, 1 .249-252, October 1922. Barnes, B. A.: Making Visual Aids. Educational Screen, 3:92-94, March 1924. The probable future of cartoons as visual aids. Use of Cartoons in Visual Education. Visual Education, 5:99-100, April 1924. Belfield, L. M.: The Visual Idea Functioning through Museums. Visual Education, 2:6-14, September 1921. Birch, J. J.: The Menace of the Movies. Educational Screen, 3:334-346, November 1924. Influence of pictures and posters upon conduct of children. Cites results from Burgess experiment. Boden, C. H.: The Stereopticon in the Classroom. Educational Screen, 2:434-436, November 1923. How slides are best used in the recitation, the development, and the review lesson; also in project work. Burgess, May Ayers: Motion Pictures in the Public Schools. Elementary School Journal, 23: 676-682, May 1923. Discusses production, distribution, and use of educational motion pictures, and gives pointers on remedying difficulties. Burrall, Jessie L.: Sight-Seeing in School; Taking Twenty Million Children on a Picture Tour of the World. National Geographic Magazine, 35:489503, June 1919. (To be continued in January issue)