Visual Education (Jan-Nov 1920)

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12 Visual Education 3OO00O0O7b//s, 20000 000 Tons TQNNQQ€ €NT£K€D QNb CL€fi\£D S0VKQ€3i i. aooi« • tsvi or ComV Touts ^ 67 JO 000 000 Tons *^j^ 1870 Very complicated interrelations are shown to the eye at a glance as here; the rapid rise of London as the world's leading port between 1870 and 1903; the later more rapid rise of Rotterdam, Hamburg, Antwerp and New York; and the final rank of the world's leading ten seaports. began to decrease. Rooms began to make a record of no failures at all during the year. In 1914 the Russell Sage Foundation made a wide study of "failures and promotions" and the Racine schools were recorded as showing an average of 5% of failure. The survey also brought out the fact that in the schools where the new system of visual education was not used the record still stood at 10%. In the 5,000 children in the Racine schools, between the kindergarten and the high school, cutting the failures from 10% to 5% gave promotions to 250 pupils, who