The Educational screen (c1922-c1956])

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A series of eight motion pictures on FRACTIONS For Elementary Reviews For Remedial Work For Teacher Training Delightful animated curriculum films which correlate closely with classroom work. Introduction to Fractions How to Add Fractions How to Subtract Fractions How to Change Fractions How to Multiply Fractions How to Divide Fractions • Decimals • Percentage Each one reel in length Color $85.00 Black & White $45.00 1133 North Highland Ave. Hollywood 38, Calif. TO USE PROJECTORS Instant S-second threading! From strip film to slides — and back — immediately! Show your strip film and slides at their nltra-brilliant best with optically perfect Viewlex projectors. Exclusive Aspheric Condenser system provides greatest light concentration and uniform screen illumi nation. Tests prove Viewlex 150 watt projector gives greater screen brightness than other 300 watt projectors. Result: More economy and less heat, protecting slides and film. Order Viewlex, the fines projectors and best value obtainable! MODEL APlC— Combination all-purpose slide and strip film projector ! Complete, self-contained ! Case, built-in slide carrier, slide file, and screen, $77.00 MODEL AP-2C — Deluxe combination all-purpose slide and strip film projector. Built-in slide carrier, elevating mechanism. Luxtar 5"Anastigmat lens. $67.00 MODEL AP-3 — Standard •i" focal length slide projector with 5" Luxtar colorcorrected Anastigmat lens, complete $39.50 Written by Graham T. Horton, famous authority, this superb little booklet gives you fascinating secrets of better projection. Shows you how to get the most from visual material ! Mail postcard for your FREE copy! Dcpt. ES-2 35-01 QUEENS BLVD., LONG ISLAND CITY State Audio-Visual Directors Organize — In Indiana {Continued from page 87) and procedures for audio-visual education programs in Indiana. Each person, according' to his stated preference, was assigned to one of seven groups. The groups and their chairman were : Goals, M. McCabe Day, Huntington Public Schools ; Materials, Frederick G. Neel, Canterbury College ; Utilization, Catherine Broderick, Fort Wayne Public Schools ; Equipment and Housing, Wes Felmlee, Elkhart Public Schools; Administration and Finance, Ernest Tiemann, AudioVisual Center, Indiana University ; Production, Henry W. Schulze, LaPorte Public Schools ; and Statewide Program, Garret Weathers, South Bend Public Schools. The reports of the group were read at the summary session of the conference. The organization approved the reports and appointed an editorial board, consisting of the chairmen of the respective committees and the Secretary-Treasurer, to prepare final copy for the handbook, which will be distributed free of charge to all schools administrators in the state and offered for sale to others interested. These reports, developed by the conference and representing the group thinking of leaders in the field in Indiana, contain a number of basic statements concerning audio-visual education. Some Suggestions Some of the more important suggestions incorporated in committee reports that will serve as bases for future recommendations are as follows : 1. In order to maintain a viiniiiiuin audio-visual program, schools should plan for annual expenditure of $50 per teacher for material and equipment. For a desirable program, this expenditure should be increased to $150. 2. With state financial support to the school's audiovisual program, moneys should be allocated to the local school corporation on a pre-teacher basis, in order to enable local school officials to develop an audio-visual program which will meet best the needs of that school system. 3. For the effective direction and administration of an audio-visual program, Indiana schools should plan for the equivalent of one audio-visual staff member of professional status, plus the needed clerical and technical assistance, for each fifty teachers ; a half-time professional staff member, plus assistance, for the twenty-five-teacher system or school ; and a fourth-time professional staff' member, plus assistance, for the ten-teacher system or school. 4. To provide for competent direction of the audiovisual program, it is proposed that the State Department of Education should prescribe a certificate for the position of Director of AudioVisual Materials, with the following requirements : (a) three years of successful experience as an educational administrator, supervisor, or teacher; (b) qualifications for a first-grade elementary or secondary teacher's certificate; and 90 Educational Screen