(toss LTR i g I ) Book ^£> u Copyright}] tq^( CQRtRIGHT DEPOSm THE BOSTON WAY PLANS for the DEVELOPMENT of the INDIVIDUAL CHILD Compiled and revised by the SPECIAL CLASS TEACHERS of Boston Business Agent: Katherine C. Coveney George T. Angell School Boston 19, Mass. the rumford press concord, n. h. 1 C5. 7/a-/-3 to VIA Copyright, 1917 Copyright, 1921 5y THE SPECIAL CLASS TEACHERS' CLUB Boston, Mass. Second Edition APR 24 1922 g)C!.A659730 FOREWORD. The supreme need of one who would teach or train a little child is the power to put oneself in his place — to go as far as the actual point of meeting with his actual need. What avails it that the teacher is strong, learned, skilled, if she cannot link her strength to her pupil's weakness, her knowl- edge to his ignorance, her skill to his lack of skill? This book is the united work of the Special Class teachers of Boston, an outline of their united experience, and is sent out in the hope that it may aid teachers and mothers everywhere, when facing a child's need, to "come where he is." CONTENTS. Page Arithmetic 53 Bead Work 104 Bibliography 140 Brush Making 125 Cardboard Construction 92 Chair Caning 107 Cobbling 124 Crocheting 134 Domestic Science 70 Drawing 63 Farm Work 73 Folk Dancing 28 Games 21 Gardens 73 Geography 57 History '58 Hygiene 59 Information Lessons 11 Kindergarten Bead Work 102 Knitting 131 Language 45 Leather Work 119 Manners 50 Millinery 129 Modeling 68 Motor Training 14 Music 32 Object Lessons 11 Paper Work 82 Penmanship 52 Physical Training 17 Printing 137 Programs 139 Raffia Work 116 Reading 34 Reed Work 110 Seat Work 74 Sense Training 5 Sewing 127 Social Reactions 50 Spelling 43 Weaving 97 Woodwork 121 SENSE TRAINING. SENSE TRAINING. "The senses are the avenues to the brain," therefore we must arouse the brain through the senses. Through sense training the child becomes more alert, and his attention and interest are quickened. The more backward the child, the more striking should be the sensations. If very undeveloped, flash a large red cloth in front of him; let him hear a loud noise; smell a strong odor; taste a strong flavor. Naming the sensation is not necessary at first. It is enough that his brain has recognized it, and he may be lead through simple to more difficult discriminations, his faculties thus being brought, through special sense training, to their greatest ability. 1. Sight Training. a. Color Discrimination. Let the child sort large pieces of red and yellow cloth, or other materials, gradually adding other colors and smaller pieces, until he can sort all six colors of small squares, pegs, pieces of cloth, worsted, or paper. Then add tints and shades. Have boxes divided into eight compartments, the base of each painted a different color, using the six standard colors, and black and white. Have small pieces of corresponding colors, and let the child place them in the right compartments. "The Embossing Company's Color Cubes" (faces different colors). Let the child turn all the blocks so that the yellow, or any given color, will be on top. The teacher forms a design, using two colors; later more than two. The child copies. Let him copy designs shown on the cover of the box. Show a large piece of cloth or paper of a given color. Tell a child to run lightly around the room and see if he can touch five objects of that same color. Have three children stand in front of the class, and place on the head of each a cap of colored paper. The other children observe for a moment, then cover their eyes. Teacher calls on some one to name each child and the color of his cap. Place a row of pupils in the front of the room. Give each one a colored worsted kindergarten ball. Children in seats look long and carefully. At a signal from the teacher the balls should be concealed while the pupils change places in the line. Select a pupil to name the color belonging to each child. Place color boards in a row on the blackboard ledge. Let the teacher give the order, "Touch red, white, blue and yellow." The child chosen runs and touches the indicated colors, in order, as he finds them on the color boards. Get large spools from a factory. Color with Lane's water color paints, and use. "Shepherd and Sheep." Choose two shepherds. Select a number of 6 THE BOSTON WAY. sheep for each one. At a given signal the sheep all gather in the front of the room. Each shepherd is to recognize his own sheep, and separate them from the sheep of the other shepherd. The one who succeeds in doing this first, wins. Teach the ready recognition of autumn flowers and fruits. Arrange flowers or vegetables in a row on a table, and have them named from left to right and from right to left. Change the arrangement, and have them named. Have the children close their eyes. The teacher changes the arrangement, and has a child replace them as they were originally. Repeat this a number of times in order that the children may quickly detect any change made. Increase number of flowers and fruit as children grow in power. Place a peach, pear and plum in a row on the table. Have them named from right to left, and from left to right. "Which is in the middle?" "Name the one at the right." "Name the one at the left." Change the position of the fruit, and question in a similar way. While the children close their eyes, the teacher changes the arrangement and calls upon a child to replace it. Vary the articles used. Have several cards with squares, triangles and circles drawn in different order and colored. Give each child the forms, a box of paper, and a box of crayons. Show one of the cards to the class and let them reproduce it. Teach the names of the leaves by hunting for the various kinds on walks and naming them as they are found. b. Form and Size Discrimination. Let the child sort large and solid forms, using two contrasting forms first, as cube and ball. Later add other solid forms: cylinder, cone and pyra- mid. Have two of each form, and let him place them in pairs. Increase the difficulty by adding color. Do the same with plane forms: circle, square, oblong, triangle, diamond, oval, egg-shape, pentagon, and hexagon. Draw forms on the board, and let the child match cardboard forms to them. Increase the difficulty by having forms of different sizes. Have a series of cubes graduating from one to ten inches. Let the child arrange them consecutively. Use plane forms in the same way. Use the Seguin inset boards. Have boxes divided into twenty-seven compartments. Have the letters of the alphabet pasted on the bottom of each in order. Give child a box of letters printed on cardboard, and let him place each one in its own compart- ment. These letters may also be used in building words. Use picture puzzles. Cut out pictures. c. Correct Observation. Have several objects on a table. Let the child look at them while the teacher counts three, turn away, and tell what he saw. Let the child look at a picture, turn away, and tell what he saw. Have the child describe, draw, and model objects seen. Paste on cards six by nine inches, parquetry squares, circles, oblongs and triangles of different colors. Have different numbers of them, and in different positions on each card. Give the children the tablet forms to draw around. Hold one of the cards an instant before the class; put it away, and have the children color it from memory. SENSE TRAINING. Have several objects on the table. Have a child touch one object, and another onland so on, til! nine or ten objects are touched .n order by nine "XtfS chddren stand at the front of the room. The other children Sa Havttire g or'.our children hold mounted cards of animals. The others from left to right. Also tell where a certain animal was.-between what ^MonTd pictures of trees, flowers, and fruits may be used in the same " Hold uo a card with two or three colors. Children look closely, while JS ZltTli Kemove card from sight. A chosen ehiid names the Pace three pup chMren at seats look closely while teacher SSFtfto or five The children in the row place the balls behind hi A n sen child rises, and goes up to them, speaking to each on e „ „Cs: "Good morning, Mary Red," "Good morning *£«*£*; If the color is correct, the child answers the salutation. Carry the game ^SvSw^at^^lethecJmdbm.damseyes^e onfawayThave him open his eyes and tell which one is gone. Take two or more and have him tell which ones are gone. Let LchM leave the room, and have the children guess which one ,s g0 rhil,lren leave the room. Place colored ball in plain sight. Let the chMren c^eli: and have each one take his seat when be has seen the ball. d. Aim. Ten pins, bean bag game, ring toss game, etc. Take a hard rubber ball and place on X on floor at end of ™£j££ two circles at other end of room. Put five balls in each circk. Have s des. First one side rolls the ball, trying to hit the ball on X, then the other. Count three or four for side every time ball is hit. 2. Auditory Training. Have a box of different instruments, such as whistle, horn bell, clappers, slefghbeUs automobile horn, rattle, and cow-bell. Begin witfc two sounds Bhndfold tbe child, and let him hear first one sound ^™™^ o Gradually let him hear other sounds, and have him name them. Also point in the direction from which a sound comes. P Blow two blasts on a whistle, tap a bell twice and sing four ^oi^e scale. At the close, select a child to imitate, being careful that number, sound and order are carefully reproduced. ,.,,-, u sound, ana oiuei j hild descn b e Play or sing a succession ot tones. Aiier edtu uuc ™ 8 THE BOSTON WAY. let a third walk across the floor. Children at seats should close their eyes, and listen to the simultaneous sounds. Select a child to tell how many and what sounds were heard. Four chosen pupils stand in front. The other pupils lay their heads on their desks, and listen carefully. The ones in front walk, one at a time, in a direction indicated by the teacher. As soon as the footsteps cease, the listening pupils are allowed to tell the direction in which each child went. At first have some child tell the direction as soon as each pupil takes his turn. After it becomes easy to tell the direction through sound, begin with three children; have them walk, one after another, and call upon some pupil to tell the three directions in correct order. The children close their eyes, and the teacher rolls a hard rubber ball, a soft rubber ball, or a wooden sphere. The children guess which one is rolled. Send three children into the dressing-room, and have them sing in turn. Have the class guess who is singing. Children at seats close their eyes. Choose one pupil who runs about the room and stops in a desired place, and asks, "Where am I?" One child is chosen to answer the question. Use kindergarten game of "Bell Ringer," in the Reed Book. One child is blindfolded, and another rings a bell. The blindfolded child points in the direction of the sound, and then chases the child, who continues to ring the bell, until caught. "Hide the Thimble." One player is sent from the room. One of those left hides a thimble. When the object is hidden, the absent player is re- called and proceeds to hunt. "Magic Music." A child hides his face, while another hides a ball. At a given signal the child hunts, while the teacher plays on the piano, softly when away from the ball, and louder when he draws nearer, the tone of the piano leading him to the ball. "Bell the Cat" is played by having several blindfolded children chasing the child with the bell at the same time. "Coo-Coo Game." One child hides, and says "Coo, coo," while another child follows the sound to find him. Game of "Pussy." Put a block under a towel and call it a pussy. When one child is out of the room, another takes "Pussy" from under the towel, goes back to his seat, and mews like a cat. When the first child comes back and finds "Pussy" gone, he listens for her, and tries to find her by following the sound. Have children listen to music, and do as it indicates, march, run, skip, fly, creep, etc. Have child blindfolded and guess other children by the sound of their voices. One child is blindfolded and says, "Where art thou Rachel (Reuben)?" Another answers, "Here I am." First child tries to catch him by following the sound of his voice. "Telephone Game." One child stands behind a screen or sits down behind the teacher's desk. All the others stand. One, indicated by the teacher, calls, "Hello, Central," and if able to recognize the voice, Cen- tral replies "Hello," and calls the child by name, and that child sits down. When all have had a chance to call up, a new Central is chosen. SENSE TRAINING. 9 "Look-at-me Game." Children in a large circle. One blindfolded in the center. First one, and then another calls out "Oo-hoo (child's name) look at me." The blindfolded child turns quickly to face the direction from which the sound came. Have child listen to simple commands, and then perform them. Example : Shut the door and open the window. Gradually increase the number of commands. Have child repeat numbers after you, also sentences. Play simple music, and have child sing it. "The Puppy's Bone." One child sits on a low stool and covers his eyes. His " bone " is on the floor a foot or more behind him . Some child indicated tries to creep up and steal the bone without making a sound. If he hears the least sound of footsteps on the floor, the "Puppy" says, "Bow-wow," and the other must return to his seat. When some one is successful in getting the "bone," the class claps, and that child is the "Puppy." 3. Tactile Training. Have a wonder-bag attractive in color. Put in one object such as a cup. Let the child, blindfolded, put in his hand, and try to tell what it is by feel- ing of it. Add another object, and ask him to find the cup. Increase the difficulty of finding the cup by adding more objects. Vary this work by having the bag full of objects and allowing the child to take out the different things, naming them as he does so. Let the child feel of many different objects while blindfolded, and tell if they are rough, smooth, hard, soft, wet, dry, hot or cold. Let the child go about the room blindfolded, another child leading him, and name the objects he touches, telling you their characteristics, that is, if they are smooth, rough, hard, etc. Have child lift different objects, telling if they are heavy or light. Have a miniature set of weights, and allow him to arrange them accord- ing to weight. Vary this experiment by having him begin with the lightest and go down to the heaviest, and vice versa. Let the child handle the tools for manual training and gardening and learn those easiest to lift and those hardest. Also those which are blunt, and those which are sharp. Have boxes of same size, but different weights and have child arrange them consecutively. Have celluloid and rubber toys, as well as the heavier mechanical toys, so that in play, the child can learn their weight distinction. Make with a child a scrap book of common wrapping paper and help him put in it bits of silk, velvet, linen, cotton, wool, etc. When he learns these textiles have him name them blindfolded, by touching. Have him feel clothing of his mates and tell you nature of cloth. Have him feel in a huge box and while his eyes are shut name the textile he removes. Let another child put them back feeling each and naming it. Let child draw around objects with pencil and crayon, then let him use his finger to trace around same; finally place an object in his hands which are behind him, and have him name by feeling around it. Blindfold him, place object in his hands in front of him, and have him name. Later let him draw, describe and name object. Work this into a team game. One child hand object, another feel and name, etc. Do this work with cut 10 THE BOSTON WAY. letters and have pictures of flowers with the name of the flower cut out under it. Give child box of wooden letters and let him fill in name while blindfolded. Vary this with animals, birds, fishes, etc. 4. Gustatory Training. Have in a box small bottles of molasses, ginger, cinnamon, sugar, clove, cayenne, vinegar, salt, black pepper, mustard, alum, quinine, Jamaica ginger, tea, water, cocoa. Begin with two contrasting tastes, such as vin- egar and sugar, and have a blindfolded child tell how they taste; add others and let him name them. Let child taste and tell flavor of candy, such as peppermint, sassafras, chocolate, wintergreen, lime, lemon, clove. Let child taste different fruits and tell their names. 5. Olfactory Training. Have in a box bottles of vanilla, iodoform, pennyroyal, lemon, pepper- mint, lavender, spearmint, wintergreen, vinegar, water, coffee, kerosene, ammonia, camphor. Begin with two contrasting odors and have a blind- folded child tell how they smell. Add others and finally advance to having him name them. Use small bottles which are large at the top with glass stoppers. Have the different food odors established, such as tea, coffee, butter, lard, etc., so that impurity in food values may be detected quickly. Allow child to relate the pleasing odors smelled on a journey through the woods; try this at all four seasons of the year. Take children to gar- dens, if possible, and allow the fragrant odors to be drunk in and gradually distinguished. Blindfold child and have him name flowers from their fragrance. Teach the odor of gas and heat so that child may protect himself through sense of smell. Any druggist will fill out cases of oils, spices, perfumes, etc., and if in- formed of their use, very reasonably. If this work is done more as a game than a lesson results are very striking and headway very rapid. A stand to hold the bottles can easily be made of wood, 15 x 8 x 1| inches. Three rows of holes, five in a row, can be made with an extension bit. Title. Bird Songs Games, Seat Work, and Sense Training Language Games Plan Book Spring Summer Autumn Winter One Hundred Games for Aim Timely Games and Songs for Kindergarten Twenty-five Bird Songs Bibliography. Author. L. Murphy Holton, Kimball Myra King Marion George Clare Sawyer Reed Publisher. Longmans A. Flanagan Educational Hammett J. Hammett Schirmer OBJECT AND INFORMATION LESSONS. 11 OBJECT AND INFORMATION LESSONS. Aim. 1. To open the eyes of the children to the world around them. 2. To cultivate the senses, and the power of observation. 3. To cultivate language ability. Suggestions. Children should see, touch, taste, listen and handle for themselves. They should examine many specimens and make their own classifications. The same lesson can be adapted to different mental ages. An abundance of material is a necessity. Each animal lesson where the animal itself cannot be presented demands a large picture, accurately drawn and colored. Provide a form book for each child. Allow him to cut and paste the forms studied. Let the children cut from magazines and mount collections of pictures, as, with lesson on transportation, pictures of all kinds of vehicles, trains, boats, etc. Form Lessons. Ball, cube, cylinder. Circle, square, oblong. Square, blunt, sharp corners. Straight, curved, broken lines, straight lines standing, leaning, lying down. Surface — inner, outer, face, edge. Angles — right, acute, obtuse. Lines — vertical, oblique, horizontal. Triangle, pentagon, hexagon. Solid, plane-figure, fine. Circle — circumference, diameter, radius. As soon as terms are learned apply them to former figures. Children classify forms themselves after having finished the course. Quality Lessons. Children should perform many experiments before generalizing. Most children can compare and discriminate. Choose lessons adapted to ability of the children. Hard, soft. Sweet, sour. Thick, thin. Rough, smooth. Brittle. Porous. Absorbent. Combustible. Inflammable. Transparent, opaque. Flexible. Elastic. Odorous, inodorous. Fragrant. Natural, manufactured, artificial. Specimen Lesson. Brittle. Things that break easily are called brittle. "Drop this chalk and see what happens." "It breaks." 12 THE BOSTON WAY. "Drop this piece of glass and see what happens." "It breaks." "Drop this piece of wood." "It doesn't break." "See if you can break tins piece of iron." "It doesn't break." "Here is a thick piece of wood. Can you break this?" (Child after effort does so.) "Try this piece of glass." (Child breaks it.) "If you had to break many pieces of this wood and many pieces of this chalk, which would you rather do?" "Break the chalk." "Why?" "Because it breaks easier." "When anything breaks easily like the chalk and glass we say it is brittle." "Tell me something at home that you have to handle very carefully so they will not break." "Dishes." "What may we say about china dishes?" "They are brittle." "Tell me all the things you can think of that are brittle." "China, glass, chalk, some candies, break easily and are called brittle." Common Objects. Parts and uses and how made: bell, cap, pin, needle, chair, fork. Sun, moon, stars. Direction: over, under, between. Have child tell how he reaches home. Means of telling time. Parts, uses, growth of: apple, orange, tree, flower. Vegetables, fruits. Forms of water. Uses of water. Parts of a house. Kinds of buildings. Locomotion: natural, man, beasts, birds, fish. Transportation: auto, carriage, donkey, horse, camel, elephant, boat, train, freight and passenger. On trail, path, street, sidwalk. Communication: U. S. mail, newspaper, book, telephone, telegraph, wireless. Occupations in general: plumbing, fireman, policeman, mines and mining, bricklaying, laundering, farmers and farming, tools, etc. Races of men. Musical instruments. Fabrics: cotton, flax, wool, silk, linen. Foods: wheat, nuts, spices, sugar, meat, salt. Coal, iron, steel, paper. Coins, postage stamps. Relationships. Have child tell the story of his day. Name objects seen on way to school. Have child pass by many objects and name those he can remember. Animal Lessons. Cat. Tiger. Leopard. Lion. Dog. Fox. Cow. Sheep. Horse. Zebra. Donkey. Pig. Elephant. Camel. Giraffe. Hippopotamus. Kangaroo. Squirrel. Mouse. Monkey. OBJECT AND INFORMATION LESSONS. 13 Ostrich. Alligator. Turtle. Hens. Ducks. Geese. Frogs. Toads. Bees. Common Birds. Wading Birds. Whale. Seal. Walrus. Winter homes of birds and insects. Canned and dried fish. Cod. Salmon, Herring. Sardines. Pack animals. Coverings of animals. Noises of animals. Sponge. Coral. Nests. Eggs. 14 THE BOSTON WAY. MOTOR TRAINING. (With Special Reference to the Needs of the Weaker or More Helpless Children.) "Without motion the elements which go to form new tissue can never be brought to perform their function. The organic purpose of the atoms would be defeated without motion." The working of a muscle may be passive, active or resistive. A weak or partially paralyzed muscle should be given these three kinds of exercise. Example: A child's arm may be flexed and extended by the teacher; he may himself make these motions; and finally make them pulling and pushing against a resisting force. Leg Movements. Walking a chalk line. Add interest by having the line form some design, as, during the valentine season, a huge heart drawn on the floor. Ladder. Stepping on each round. Stepping in each space. Skipping one round, then two. Skipping spaces. Walking on side. Walking on the side and then on a round. Lifting the knee. Place two or three bushel boxes on the floor one yard apart. Children march around the room and step in each box, being care- ful not to touch the side. Boxes as above, but with open side next the floor. Children march and step up on each box. Platform (8" or lower). Child steps up, turns and steps down, a given number of times. The two or three steps leading into portable buildings afford a good place for practice to children who would be frightened or fatigued by a full flight of stairs. Balancing. Carry basin or cup full of water. Balance beam. (See Physical Exercises.) Arm, Wrist and Hand Movements. Place wand in child's hands. Drop wand into child's hands. Toss wand to child. Slapping hand game. Children stand in a circle holding out their hands. A child in the center holds a ten-inch disk of heavy cardboard and tries to slap the extended hands before they can be drawn back. If he succeeds he changes places with the child hit. MOTOR TRAINING. 15 Throwing. Blackboard target with a snow-man or other object of interest drawn in the center. Throw wet balls to aid in exact scoring. Throw bean-bags into a box. Raising arms. Children seated. They pass rulers over their heads from front to back, then from back to front of row. Children standing in a row. They pass a medicine ball over their heads up the row, then turn quickly ready to receive it as it comes down the row again. Pulling. Two children hold large wooden rings and pull against each other. Same as above with wands. Game — Tug of War. Game — Bull in the Ring. Red elastic tape 1 inch wide, 15 inches long. Child holds the two ends, pulls it to a given length (30 inches or 1 yard) and holds it while all count to 20. Tape as above and a similar piece of blue. Two contestants strive to see which can pull to the greater length. (In the above and many of the following exercises the introduction of color makes them more stimulating and adds to the spirit of pleasant rivalry and play.) Two large strong bottles. Press the corks in very tightly. Two children see which can first pull out the cork. Wringing, Twisting, Spinning and Twirling Motions. Cloth wet with warm water. Child tries to wring out as much water as possible. Child takes cover from Mason jar or candy jar when screwed on firmly. Child twirls button mold tops. Picking-up motions. In all these, dictate the use of right hand, left hand or both hands. Throw a quantity of small pieces of paper on a platform or large table. Children see who can first pick up one hundred pieces one at a time. Throw a quart of colored pegs as above. Children pick up one at a time, go to seats and count them, laying them out by tens. * Pour out a quantity of shoe buttons as above. Each child has a small paper cup to fill. Eight milk stoppers in a row on each desk. Upper side colored or deco- rated. Children turn them over to plain side, then turn back. Use college colors or pictures of birds (they fly away, then come back) or snow stars (they melt, then form again) . Cutting Motions. Cutting newspapers for practice. Cutting rags. Placing. Pick up soft lentils with a toothpick until it is full. Design drawn on cloth and stretched on frame. Outline with pins. Peg board designs. Outline pictures on thin wood. Holes for pegs about one-half inch apart. Fill with pegs. 16 THE BOSTON WAY. Outline pictures on cover or bottom of plain shallow pasteboard box. Holes for pegs made with scratch awl. Two large pin cubes. Enough red pins to fill one side of one. Blue pins for the other. Two contestants remove the pins one at a time, then replace. Two children see which can build the highest tower with two inch cubes or other blocks. Bead-stringing. Race for the longest string in a given time. Exercises of Practical Use. Lacing stick. Top of a shoe nailed to a round stick of wood. Lace. Braiding strips of red, white and blue cambric. Tying a bow-knot. Buttoning. Strips of heavy cloth with buttons and button-holes. Winding. Two large spools. Three yards of red yarn or silkateen tied to three yards of blue and one end tied to each spool. Wind from one spool to the other. Wind the Germantown used in school. Wind the graphophone. Raising and lowering windows and curtains. Opening and closing doors. Dusting erasers. Cleaning blackboards. Cleaning shoes. Carrying parcels or messages. Approved by William H. Devine, Director of Medical Inspection, Boston Public Schools. PHYSICAL TRAINING. 17 PHYSICAL TRAINING. I. Introduction. Children should be encouraged to assume a good position for carriage of the body at all times — sitting, standing, walking, running, or in plays and games. Grace and ease should be sought and rigid unnatural attitudes avoided. Open windows for all exercises. When a class is dull, restless or inattentive, a lively exercise, an active game or a few breathing movements will quickly refresh mind and. body, II. Formal Gymnastics. Outlines of these exercises may be found in any regular grade course of study; in manuals of military drill, or books describing Swedish system of gymnastics. III. Breathing Exercises. Most important in the gymnastic lesson. In general, the best practice for school and gymnasium work is to inhale through the nose and exhale through the mouth. A. Inspiration. Let the lungs be slowly filled with air, meanwhile forcing the stomach (abdomen) well forward, so that the lower part of the lungs is first filled. B. Expiration. Expel the air forcibly by pressing the stomach (abdomen) inward and up- ward against the lower part of the lungs. 1. Make outward circles with arms, breathing deeply, imitating birds in motion. 2. Let children play they are blowing into a paper bag, then burst it (clap hands). 3. Let children make-believe they are sawing wood and must blow away sawdust. 4. Inhale slowly and whistle while exhaling. IV. Marching. A. Simple marches, single file, in time to music. B. Grand march, by l's, 2's, 4's, 8's — 4's, 2's, l's — and figures. C. March with imaginary drums, guns, trumpets, etc. Wands may be used. For older girls, something decorative may be carried. Long reeds, twined with pink paper roses, and held arch-wise over the head, are a help with self-conscious pupils. D. Count aloud eight times and march, skip, run, hop, fly, walk. E. March, then stop music suddenly. Change music for running, creep- ing, hopping, walking, skipping, high-stepping, flying and finally, march to seats. The children should not be told what to do, except by the music. Suitable music for above may be found in: "School and Gymnasium Marches," the Half Dollar Music Series (Oliver Ditson Co). 2 18 THE BOSTON WAY. V. Setting-up Drill. Music: "In the Park" (Oliver Ditson Collection). A. Start with arms extended, palms up. Pupils count aloud, 8 counts for each movement. 1. Arms forward fling, back to position. 2. Arms upward fling, back to position. 3. Arms upward fling, clapping hands over head and downward fling, clapping sides. 4. Arms upward fling, clapping overhead, and arms backward fling, clapping in back. 5. Head forward and backward bend. 6. Head to right and left bend. 7. Trunk sideways bend, alternating right and left. 8. Head twist, alternating right and left. 9. Trunk twist, alternating right and left. 10. Knees bend, downward, with hips firm. 11. Knees bend, upward, alternating right and left, with hips firm. 12. Leg raise, stiff knee, alternating right and left, with hips firm. 13. Trunk bend, with arms extended, alternating right and left. (Wind mill exercise). 14. Arms upward fling, trunk forward bend, until fingers touch floor. 15. Stride jump. 16. Deep breathing. Arms forward and upward fling, sideways down- ward sink. VI. Balance Beam Exercises. A. Single Beam. 1. Walk the length of the beam forward, arms extended, head erect, Repeat same, backward. 2. Forward, dip, then step. Same, backward. 3. Forward, balancing book on head. Same, backward. 4. Forward, balancing book on head, and one on each hand. Same, backward. 5. Forward, raising knee before stepping. 6. Forward, bending knee between steps. 7. Forward, with arms folded. Same, backward. B. Double Beams. Two parallel beams and two lines of children, playing as partners. 1. Walk to slow march time. Music: "Rally Round the Flag." 2. Touch forward and step, march time. "Dixie." 3. Touch forward twice and step, slow waltz time. " Blue Danube." 4. Touch forward, backward, forward and step, march time, or fast waltz time. "Our Director." 5. Dip, and step, fast waltz time. "Till We Meet Again." VII. Ball Drill. Material: Hard rubber balls, 2 inch size. Music : ' ' Cecile Waltz . ' ' 1. Outward circle, right, and toss. Count 1-2. 2. Outward circle, left, and toss. Count 1-2. PHYSICAL TRAINING. 19 3. Alternate with 1 and 2. 4. Double outward circle and toss. Count 1-2. 5. Outward circle right, pointing right toe at side; toss, bringing right foot to position. Count 1-2. 6. Inward circle, right, and bounce. 7. Inward circle, left, and bounce. 8. Alternate 6 and 7. 9. Double inward circles and bounce. 10. Double outward circles and toss, stepping forward; bring backward foot up to forward on the toss. Count 1-2. 11. Double inward circle, stepping back, and bounce; bring forward foot back to the other foot. Count 1-2. 12. Right arm out at side, overhead, out at side, and toss ball over to left hand. Count 1, 2, 3, 4. 13. Same as 12, pointing right foot at side, across, behind, at side, and back to position. 14. Outward circle right; arm out at side; arm over head and bounce ball from left shoulder, catching ball with left hand. Count 1, 2, 3, 4. 15. With double outward circle, lunge diagonally -forward; toss and return to position. Count 1-2. 16. Alternate outward circle, right, and toss; inward circle, right and bounce. Count 1, 2, 3, 4. VIII. Dumb-bell Drill. Music: "Glow Worm." 1. Stretch dumb-bells forward from chest, 4 counts. 2. Stretch sideways from chest, 4 counts. 3. Stretch upwards from chest, 4 counts. 4. Stretch downward from chest, 4 counts. 5. Fling forward, upward, and sideways, downward, 4 counts. 6. Fling forward, upward, rise on toes, sink, 4 counts. 7. Fling forward to shoulder level and knees, deep bend, 8 counts. 8. Fling forward and upward; touch floor with bells, knees stiff; raise, position, 4 counts. 9. Circle outward from chest. 10. Circle inward from chest. 11. Strike bells together overhead and in back. 12. Strike bells together in front and in back, below waist-line. Note — With 11 and 12 play "Anvil Chorus." IX. Wand Drill. Music: "Till We Meet Again," or "Bubbles." Each movement to be done 4 times. 1. Wand forward and down. Count 1-2. 2. Wand forward, upward and down. Count 1-2. 3. Wand forward and up, forward and down. Count 1, 2, 3, 4. 4. Wand at chest, stretch forward, at chest, over head, behind shoul- ders, over head, chest and down. Count 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8. 5. Same as 1 or 2 with foot placing forward and back to position. 6. Same as 1 or 2 with foot placing sideways and back to position. 7. Same as 3 with foot placing forward and back. 20 THE BOSTON WAY. 8. Same as 3 with foot placing sideways. 9. Same as 4 with foot placing forward, sideways, backward and in position. 10. Same as 5, adding heel raising and sinking while wand is held in front. 11. Same as 2 with heel raising. 12. Wand forward, upward, with feet placed sideways; wand back of shoulders; trunk bending forward and up twice; wand over head; position. Eight counts. 13. Wand back of shoulders; knees bending upward, forward. Sixteen counts. 14. Wand back of shoulders; with a jump, place feet sideways; bend or twist trunk. 15. Arms forward with foot pointing sideways; arms over head with lunge sideways. 16. Arms forward, upward, with foot placing sideways; bend or twist trunk. 17. Wands back of shoulders; stride jump. 18. Wands forward, raise and downward sink, with deep breathing. X. Indian Clubs. Music: "Blue Danube." 1. Outward arm circle. Inward arm circle Parallel arm circle. 2. Outward arm circle; high dip. Inward arm circle; high dip. 3. Same as 2, with low dip. 4. Pendulum swing. 5. Outward arm and shoulder circle. Inward same. Parallel same. 6. Combination. Parallel arm and shoulder circles three times; foot placing forward, right. Three hand circles; arms extended. XL Stunts. 1. Cartwheels, and hand-springs. 2. Somersaults. 3. Jumping over rope held by two children. See who can jump highest. 4. Jump-rope exercises. 5. Any activities done by Camp Fire Girls, Girl Scouts, Boy Scouts. XII. Bibliography. "A Provisional Course in Physical Education," School Document No. 10, Boston Printing Department. "The Daily Dozen," by Walter Camp. Reprinted from Collier's Weekly, New York. See also books listed under "Games" and "Folk Dancing." GAMES. 21 GAMES. "Play is the greatest agent of unity and totalization of body and soul." G. Stanley Hall. I. Suggestions. 1. Always insist upon fair play. 2. Never let children play to the point of excitement or exhaustion. 3. There must be freedom, but never license. 4. Comment on good play as well as poor play. 5. Name winning side whenever possible. 6. Teach children to love play for its own sake, for its value in training soul, mind and body. II. Ball Games. 1. Hit or Miss. Teacher uses a basket-ball or some soft ball and throws in rapid succession to children in different parts of the room. If any child is not alert every minute, he will be hit. 2. Circle Tag Ball. Players in circle. "It" in center. Pass or toss ball around in circle while "it" tries to get it. If "it" tags the ball in someone's hand, that child must be "it." 3. Guess Ball. One player turns back to others and they pass the ball from one to another. Finally, one player hits "it" who tries to guess who was guilty. 4. Call up Ball. Players in circle. One in center calls the name of a child as he tosses up the ball. That child must catch it. Two names may be called at once, or the children may be numbered, and two numbers called at once. 5. Dodge Ball. Players in circle, also a group inside of the circle. Those in circle roll the ball, trying to hit the others, who jump to dodge it. 6. Clap Ball. Players in line, facing a teacher who throws the ball. Each claps once before catching, then twice, three times, etc. If one fails to clap the correct number of times, he must go to the end of the line. 7. Pass Ball. Player in center tries to pass ball between the separated feet of those in the ring, who bend over and bat it out with their hands only. If the ball goes through, player must leave the circle. 8. Arch Ball. Players arranged in two vertical lines. Number one in each row has a ball, which he passes over his head at a given signal. Each child passes it over his head until it reaches the last child, who runs to the front and passes it back. The game continues until number one of either line is back in place, then his row has won. 9. Straddle Ball. Like arch ball, but the ball is passed between sepa- rated feet. III. Circle Games. 1. Drop the Handkerchief . Players in circle. " It " walks around out- side of circle and drops handkerchief behind some child who must chase "it" and try to catch him before he reaches vacant place. Bean bags or other objects may be substituted. 22 THE BOSTON WAY. 2. Herr Slap Jack. Like No. 1, but the one tagged runs in the opposite direction. When they meet, they must bow or do various gymnastic stunts before passing, then see who reaches vacant place first. 3. Cat and Rat. Players form a circle with a rat inside and a cat out- side. With hands joined they must keep the cat from the rat. The cat tries to get under the joined hands. If he is successful in getting the rat, choose a new one. Finally, have two cats after one rat. 4. See Saw. Children in circle in groups of three. One has arms raised, while two and three stand at each side, two on tiptoe and three with knees bent. Rise and sink to music, one going up as the other goes down. 5. Swing Game. Song. "How do you like to go up in a swing?" (Red Jenks). Children stand in circle in groups of three. Two join hands to make swing, other swings to music. Every eighth count he goes under swing and runs to next group to play there. 6. Parcel Post. The players stand in a circle, with "it" in the center. Each player represents a city. "It" says: "A parcel is going from to " and names two cities. The players named for these cities change places, while "it" tries to secure one of the places. The one left is then "it." IV. Guessing Games. 1. Hunt the Key. Players form a circle. Pass a key back and forth, keeping hands in motion. Player in center must discover who has the key. 2. Button, Button, Who has the Button? Played like No. 1, but those in ring ask this question, while "it" says, "John has the button." If correct, they change places. 3. Hide the Thimble. Chalk or any object may be used, and it is espe- cially interesting if peanuts or kisses are hidden. One child blinds while object is hidden. Teacher plays soft music, then louder as child nears the hidden object, or children say, "Cold, freezing, warm, warmer, hot and burning." Every child may blind, then all look.together for hidden objects. 4. Children in seats. One child blinds while two or several children change seats. Guess who? 5. Cuckoo. One child blinds while another hides and calls, "Cuckoo." The blinded child must find the cuckoo, tracing the sound. 6. Bell Game. Children in circle. Child blinded in center. Another rings bell some distance away, high or low. One in center must point in direction of bell. Variation. Children in seats. One child hides, while another puts the bell in his desk and rings it. Hidden child must return and guess who, from the direction of the sound, or appearances of children. 7. Who Art Thou? Player blinded in center. Others move about in circle until signal is given to halt. Blinded player touches someone whom he must recognize by the feeling of his clothing. If unsuccessful, he asks, "Who art thou?" Player answers, "I" in natural voice. If recognized, they must change places. 8. Blind Man. Like No. 7, but the player stands behind blinded one and says, "Good morning, Joseph." The blinded one may have a wand and point to some child who takes it and says, "Good morning." 9. French Blind Man's Buff. All players are numbered. One blinded in center calls two numbers, and as those two change places, he tries to catch them. If successful one takes his place in center. GAMES. 23 10. Have You Seen My Sheep? Players in circle. One outside is called the shepherd. He walks around, touches someone and says, "Have you seen my sheep?" Player touched replies, "How was he dressed?" Shepherd describes the clothing of some player, whereupon that player recognizing his description, runs around and tries to reach his place again before the shepherd catches him. If caught, he is shepherd. 11. I Saw. Teacher says, " I saw — ." Then she imitates a flying bird. Children answer, "A bird." Every child flies like a bird. Let children suggest things to imitate, as an automobile, a prancing horse, a leaping rabbit, a soldier marching, etc. 12. Quiet Guessing Game. All children in seats. One says, "I am thinking of something in this room which begins with b." Children guess what it is: book, ball, basket, banner, bracelet, and other objects. The child who guesses may have the next turn. It may lead on to things out- side of the room, even classifying as, round things, colored things, beautiful or ugly things, buildings, trades, countries, etc. It may be used as a spell- ng lesson or a geography lesson. V. Outdoor Games. 1. Many of the games are adapted for out-door use, especially the ball games, including baseball, basket-ball, football and medicine ball games. The relay races are of even greater value when played out-doors. 2. Jump the Shot. Players form a circle. One player in center, swings a long rope to which is attached a bag of sawdust or something fairly heavy, at the end. This bag must be swung from the rope so that it will come under the children's feet (low). The players must jump the bag as it comes to them, for if they are hit by the bag they must leave the circle and may only rejoin it when two more players have been removed. The speed and height of the rope may be gradually increased. Children may jump on one foot with arms at sides or on hips. 3. Boo. All children on given line. One child "it" some distance away. "It" turns back and calls, " 1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9-1 0-Boo," and turns quickly. While he is counting other players move quickly toward his goal, but they must stop before he turns, for if he catches them moving they must return to the line. The first player to reach goal may be "it." 4. New York Trade. Two captains choose equal numbers of players for sides A and B. One side decides upon a trade and how to represent it. A's side walks to a line where they meet B's side. A's side says, "Here we come." B's side asks, "Where from?" A's side answers, "New York." B's side asks, "What's your trade?" A's side acts out a trade for B's side to guess. If B's side cannot guess, A's has another trial. If B's side guesses, A's side runs quickly toward their line <3r house, while B's side pursues and tries to catch some of A's men. If successful the men caught must stay with B's side and help him next time to catch the remainder of A's men. 5. Hill Dill. Children are arranged in two parallel lines about twenty- five feet apart. "It" stands between them and calls, "Hill Dill, come over the hill, or else I'll catch you standing still." The players on both sides run to opposite sides. "It" tries to tag them before they are safe on their fine. If he tags any, those players must help when he calls again, and so on, until every player is tagged. 24 THE BOSTON WAY. 6. Fish and Net. Like Hill Dill, but one side is called the fish, the other the net. End men of net try to join hands around fish instead of just tagging. 7. The Miller is Without. Like Hill Dill, but the player in center is called the miller; there is also a watchman for each goal. The miller ad- dresses the watchmen from the center, "Hello, hello!" Watchmen answer, "Who is there?" Miller replies, "The miller." Watchmen ask, "What do you want?" Miller answers, "A sackful of children." Watchmen say, "Then catch them!" Here the children escape to other goal. If the mil- ler tags one, that one becomes miller; the miller becomes watchman of the goal, and the watchman joins the players. VI. Seat Games. 1. Like Jerusalem Chairs. If there are fifteen children and fifteen desks and chairs, one chair is marked to be unoccupied. The children march until music stops, then they try to get one of the fourteen seats. One child is left out of the game. Each time one chair more is to be vacant, until there are but two children marching for the same chair. 2. Seat Race. Considering that there are fifteen children in the room in three rows of five each; number rows crosswise (1-2-3-4-5) making three children with the same number. Each child must remember the number of his row. A chalk mark is made in the aisle at the front of each row. Teacher calls the number and the three children must run and touch the line and return to their seat. If a child in the middle row wins, one is scored for him. The game is ten. Each child must be in perfect position when not racing. 3. Tenpins. Arrange tenpins in group on a given line. Roll ball and score as many as are knocked down. Tenpins may be numbered 2-4-5-10 and others, so that there will be a chance for bigger scores and also for adding. 4. Basket Game. Place waste basket at front of room. Stand on a given line. Score five for each time that a ball is thrown into the basket. 5. Blackboard Game. Make a circle on the board with many numbers written inside. Children stand on a given line and aim soft ball at num- bers. Score. 6. Simon Says. Children may stand or sit. Teacher says, "Simon says, 'Thumbs up.'" Children hold up thumbs. Teacher says, "Simon says, 'Thumbs down.'" Children put them down. Teacher must always say, "Simon says," if children are to obey command. If she says, "I say, 'Thumbs down,'" and the children obey command, they are out of the game, as they must do only what Simon says. 7. Statues. Beautiful or Grotesque. Children stand with arms out- stretched, at seats. One child walks up and down the aisles vigorously twisting the arms and bodies of the children, who pose as beautiful or gro- tesque statues. The one who is most beautifully or grotesquely posed may do modelling next time. 8. Cross and Recross. Two rows with an equal number of players sitting at their desks. When "it" claps his hands the players in adjoining rows of seats cross to opposite rows. If "it" does not succeed in taking a seat while players are changing, he claps his hands, and all recross to their own seats. The player who loses his seat is "it." GAMES. 25 9. Vis-a-Vis. Players stand in couples around the room. Whenever "it" calls, "Face to face," two in each couple face each other. When "it" calls, "Back to back," they turn their backs. When he calls, "Vis-a-Vis," they must all change partners. "It" now tries to secure a partner. Player left alone is now "it." 10. Follow My Leader. One child is leader and does various stunts with hands or other parts of body. Others must imitate. If unable to imitate they are out of the game. 11. Indian Club Game. Make two equal lines of players. A child stands at head of each line about four feet away from No. 1, holding an Indian club in a slanting position, with the head toward the player. Player tries to get a rope ring on the club. If successful it scores five. He runs to rear of line and the game continues until he is in place again. This may be played with the left hand, scoring ten instead of five. 12. Skewer Game. Pile some skewers, pencils, toothpicks, or some such objects on a table. Each child in turn tries to remove one without touching or moving another. If he touches, he forfeits his turn. 13. Pony. In an open space in the room place the balance beam with one end up in a pupil's chair, and the other on the floor. Children run, trot, and gallop like ponies, jumping over this beam when they come to it. The slanting position makes it possible for each child to jump and clear the beam easily. 14. Jack-in-the-Box. Children standing. Teacher's arm held up as the box cover. She lowers it, and all stoop low between desks. She lifts it suddenly, and all spring up. VII. Races. 1. Relay. Players in equal groups behind each other. No. 1 runs to a given point; comes back and tags the hand of No. 2; then goes to end of line. No. 2 tags goal, returns and tags No. 3's hand, and runs to end of line behind No. 1 . This continues until No. 1 is back in place. Wherever No. 1 is in place first, that row wins. Variations. Players may hop, skip, fly, walk stiff-legged, or even walk on "all fours." Use erasers, chalk, potatoes, dumb-bells, clothespins, or other objects placed a few feet apart, and an equal number before each row. No. 1 must put first one, then another and so on, one by one, into a box, which is on the goal. Returning he must tag No. 2 who runs and replaces objects from box, one by one. No. 3 returns them to the box and so on, until No. 1 is back in place. Chop Sticks Relay. Player must carry a ball between two sticks. If he drops the ball, he must pick it up, thus delaying his team. 2. Chariot Race. Have two groups of four boys each, who lock arms and imitate horses. Have a driver for each group. He holds the reins which are around the four. Place two boxes about twenty-five feet away. Horses must run around these boxes. VIII. Tag Games. 1. Hand Tag. Players in circle raise hands, turning palms upward. "It" tries to tag some hand while those in circle lower it when "it" ap- proaches. One tagged must be "it." 26 THE BOSTON WAY. 2. Double Tag. Players in couples, having one couple "it." Do not separate couples. Tag only couples. 3. Shadow Tag. "It" steps on the shadow of someone, who is then "it." 4. Squat Tag. Anyone not in a squatting position will be "it," if tagged. 5. Token Tag. Players in seats; hands behind backs. "It" runs around and places a token in someone's hands. The receiver runs after "it" and tries to catch him before he reaches the vacant seat. 6. Fox and Cheese. Players in line with arms held tightly around the waist of the one in front. First child holds arms out straight and swings around. Fox tries to tag child on the end. 7. Beater Goes Round. Players in circle; hands behind. Beater goes around with a stiff piece of cloth and hits someone's hands. One hit runs after him, trying to catch him before he reaches the vacant place. 8. Boston. Players in circle; "it" in center. Boys are numbered odd and girls even. "It" calls an odd and an even number. These change places while "it" tries to tag one. "It" sometimes calls, "Boston," and all change. 9. Three Deep. Players in a double circle — "two deep." There are one player who is "it" and an extra child. The extra runs in front of a "two," making "three deep." "It" tries to tag the end or back one of this group of three, but this back one immediately runs to the front of another group, making three there. The back one in this group runs to the front of another, and so on. If tagged as the third one in the third group, player must be "it." Avoid being the third one in a group. IX. Bean Bag Games. 1. Children put heads on desks. "It" walks around and drops a bag on some desk. That child must pursue, walking, and try to catch "it" before he reaches vacant seat. 2. Players arranged in two parallel lines. Number one in each row passes bag over his head at signal. Each player passes bag in this way until it reaches last child, who runs to front and passes it as before. Game is won by number one, of either line, who reaches original place first. 3. Players seated, in three rows of five each. At signal, number one places bag on desk behind, and bag is thus passed until it reaches number five who runs to front seat, upon which children in that row change to seat behind. Game continues until players in any row return to original seats, and are thus the winners. 4. Players seated, in three rows of five each. Three goal points indi- cated by chalk line two feet beyond front desks, directly opposite aisles. Number one in each row leaves seat on right side at signal, places bag on goal, returns on left side, tags second player and is seated. Game continues until all have played. X. Bibliography. Games for Playground, Home, School and Gymnasium. Jessie H. Bancroft. Games and Exercises for Mental Defectives. Hilda A. Wrightson. One Hundred and Fifty Gymnastic Games. G. A. Ellis. GAMES. 27 A Provisional Course in Physical Education for Elementary Schools. Boston Printing Department, 1909-1910. One Hundred and Fifty Gymnastic Games. Compiled by Alumni of Boston Normal School of Gymnastics. Community Service, 1 Madison Ave., N. Y., will furnish a wealth of material on application. 28 THE BOSTON WAY. FOLK DANCING. "The dance seems to fulfill every requisite of an ideal exercise — the practical use of all the muscles, the acme of pleasurable emotion, and the satisfaction of the esthetic sense." I. Introduction. Folk dances are valuable in that they make for the development of a child morally, socially and physically, resulting in deeper concentration, interest, confidence, self expression, play of the social instincts of courtesy and grace, skill, endurance, alertness, and the subordination of the indi- vidual to the co-operation of the group. These dances are often correlated with the literature. Fairy Tales: "Shoemaker" and "Hansel and Gretel" Dances. Poetry: "Snowstorm," "The Swing." Mother Goose: "Hey Diddle Diddle," "Jack and Jill." Mythology: "May Dances" (Druid and Roman customs). Traditional: "King of France." Arabian Nights: "Away to India." In folk dances are expressed the feelings of a people, as in the war dances of the Indians; seasons and weather; birth, marriage and death; greeting and farewell; rejoicing and mourning; trades and occupations. We recom- mend these dances chiefly for their simplicity of comprehension and execu- tion, their physiological value in bringing most of the larger muscles into play, and their general character of moral and social uplift. The rhythms may suggest others — dependent on the seasons, history, geography or language lessons, or the several holidays during the year. II. Suggestions. Ability to dance gracefully comes only through regular and patient muscle training and development. Pupils must not expect to plunge at once into some difficult co-ordination. Where music is used choose good selections with marked rhythm and appropriate to dances taught. If teachers do not play, a victrola may be used with a great variety of suitable records. III. Preliminary Work. A. In ring — to music. 1. Teach group to walk — placing ball of foot on floor before heel. 2. Teach group to march. 3. Teach group to run — heels off floor entirely. 4. Teach group to skip. 5. Teach group to side gallop and forward gallop. 6. Teach group stamping — left, right, left. 7. Work for lightness on toes — idea of feathers. FOLK DANCING. 29 8. Begin work on time and place for bows (for the boys), and curtsies (for the girls); shaking hands; turning around in place, etc. B. Rhythmical exercises — for balance and keeping time to music — especially good for undeveloped children. 1. Distinguish between different rhythms — waltz, two-step, polka, schottische — by clapping. 2. Raise arms forward, upward, pause, lower. 3. Sway body and move arms. 4. Simple foot pointings with arm and trunk motions. 5. Imitate movements of birds, butterflies, etc. 6. Do various movements used in dances; fan movements of Japanese dance; pulling movements of Shoemaker's dance; jumping movements of Indian dance, etc. 7. Suggestive rhythms — good for class groups: The Rocking Horse. One foot in front; rock forward and back holding reins in hands. Waltz rhythm f . The Fairies. Run lightly, arms moving gracefully for wings; flit in and out; gather in small circles. Waltz or | rhythm. The Dwarfs. Eccentric positions of children, each present- ing his own idea of a dwarf, all "scrunched up" and hob- bling around in time to eccentric music. Dolls in Arms. (Make believe.) Rock in time to singing of lullaby "Sweet and Low" or "Rock-a-bye Baby." The Swing. Partners join hands and swing in time to music of any swing song — one movement to each measure. Music: "How Do You Like to Go up in a Swing?" Ringing Christmas Bells. Ring big bell in the belfry, using both arms and swaying body forward and backward with rope movement. Music: "Jingle Bells." Galloping Ponies. Hold reins tightly and gallop. Music: "Yankee Doodle." Train on Track. Imitate train — fast or slow movements following music played, which may be any f rhythm. Formal rhythm work with wands, bounding-balls, dumb- bells, etc., may be done with music. (See Physical Exercises.) 8. National Rhythm Work: Indians paddling canoes or scouting through forest. Dutch children clattering along in wooden shoes. Italians playing hurdy-gurdy or using tambourine. Japanese in the garden running with short steps. Spanish using castanets. IV. Simple Steps and How to Teach Them. A. Touch Step: 1. Raise the left foot forward and touch the floor with the toes. 2. Place the left foot on the floor. 3. Place the right foot beside the left. Continue with the right foot. Music: "Blowing Bubbles." 30 THE BOSTON WAY. B. Change Step: 1. Step forward with the left foot. 2. Bring the right toe up to the left heel. 3. Step forward with the left foot. Con- tinue with the right foot. Music: "Coming thro' the Rye." C. Polka Step: Touch heel in front and toe in back, then 1-2-3 step ("heel, toe, left, right, left"). Continue with the right foot. Music: "Marching thro' Georgia." V. Singing and Ring Dance Games. 1. Peas Porridge Hot. 2. Looby Loo. 3. King of France. 4. Away to India. 5. Oats, Peas, Beans. VI. Folk Dances. The following list is one which has been used successfully with Special Class children : How Do You Do, My Partner? Swedish Ring Dance. Chimes of Dunkirk. Ace of Diamonds. Danish Dance of Greeting. Hopp Mor Annika. Hey Diddle Diddle. Sailor's Hornpipe. Children's Polka. Highland Fling. Shoemaker's Dance. Norwegian Mountain March. I See You. Minuet. The Carrousel. Irish Jig and Irish Lilt. German Clap Dance. Csardas. Hansel and Gretel Dance. Swedish Klapdans. Pixie Polka. Flag Dance. Reap the Flax. English dances, including: Black Nag. Butterfly. Gathering Peas Pods. Sellinger's Round. Row Well, Ye Mariners. Jennie Pluck Pears. We Won't Go Home Till Morning. Pop Goes the Weasel. VII. Social Dances. Social dancing has its place and should not be allowed in playgrounds, school-yards or streets. We follow this line with girls — especially those who frequent or live near dance-halls, and who may have a wrong impression of social dancing. Waltz. Polka. One-step. Duchess. Two-step. Virginia Reel. Fox Trot. Quadrille. FOLK DANCING. 31 VIII. Original Type Lessons. A. Dance of the Brownies (for small children). Music: "Dance of the Brownies," Oliver Ditson Co. 1. Couples join inside hands. Polka forward (heel, toe, step, step, step) four times, beginning with outside foot. Finish by facing partner. 2. Take half -stooping (or squatting) position. Clap hands once on knees; then once together; then high above heads three times, maintaining strict rhythmical 1, 2, 1 2 3. Dance this figure twice. IX. Bibliography. The Folk Dance Book C. Ward-Crampton, M.D. Children's Singing Games Mari R. Hofer Folk Dances Elizabeth Burchenal Indian Dances Thomas Charles Co., N. Y. Folk Dances Mrs. James J. Storrow The Healthful Art of Dancing Luther H. Gulick, M.D. Folk Dances for Young People Cecilia Van Cleve Dance Songs of the Nations Oscar Duryea Gymnastic Dancing Mary Wood Hinman Popular Games and Dances for Little Children Mari R. Hofer Dances, Drills and Story-Plays Nina B. Lamkin Old Swedish Folk Dances Nils Bergquist Old Familiar Dances with Figures C. Gott The Festival Book Jennette E. C. Lincoln Games and Dance Figures Community Service, Chicago 32 THE BOSTON WAY. MUSIC. Aim. To create a love for music. To develop a sense of rhythm and pitch. To secure a pleasing singing tone, sweet and full, not harsh and loud. (This requires drill and practice.) To develop a taste for the best music. Suggestions. For more advanced pupils the beginnings of notation and of sight read- ing are very desirable. Part singing is a means of developing harmony and leads toward con- cert singing. It has been used in Special Classes with considerable success. Use piano and graphophone for rhythmic work. Song Material. A suggestive list of books and songs is given in the bibliography. Method. Give brief vocal exercises for good tone production — short exercises for the softening of the voice, emphasizing various degrees of tone. Give much rhythmic drill — the beating of time to music, clapping, marching, etc. When clapping is used the children should emphasize the first beat in each measure. (See Rhythm under Physical Exercises.) Teach songs by rote. After a very brief introduction to arouse interest and give the setting or the feeling of a new song, present both words and music, singing through one stanza. After this sing one phrase only and teach the children that phrase, then a second and so on, using the words until the music is memorized. Then give drill on the words alone if needed. Proceed in the same way with other stanzas. Give special attention to children whose sense of pitch and time is defec- tive. Allow them to sing with the others, at times asking them to listen and then try again. Bibliography. The Congdon Music Primer. C. H. Congdon, New York. The One Hundred and One Best Songs. Published by The Cable Co., Cable Bldg., Chicago. Songs and Games for Little Ones. Jenks. The Songs of Father Goose. Geo. M. Hill Co., Chicago and New York. Fifty Songs for Rote Singing. Davison and Surette. Art Song Cycles (Books I and II). Published by Otto Miessner, Silver, Burdett & Co. Songs of Happiness. Words by Carolyn Bailey, music by Mary Behr- mann. Published by Milton Bradley Co. (Especially valuable, as talking machine records of these songs may be obtained.) MUSIC. 33 The Victrola. In the modern school a Victrola is a part of the equipment. It is espe- cially valuable in the Special Class room. Through careful selection of records the child may learn to know and ap- preciate the best that there is in music. Besides its aesthetic value it is of much practical help in the teaching of dancing, physical exercises, marching and drills. As a means of ear-training it is invaluable. Pupils may learn to distin- guish the various musical instruments whether played singly or in combina- tions. The quality of the singing voice and the number of persons singing,, whether solo, duet, trio, quartette or chorus, may also be determined. Memorization of songs and poems is greatly aided by the use of records. Story-telling records afford much pleasure and help to foster the art of story- telling. The "Bubble Books'' (Columbia records) published by Harper and Brothers are especially fine for use in the lower classes. 34 THE BOSTON WAY. READING Aim. Intelligent interpretation of the printed page. Pleasure in reading. Knowledge of the technic of reading. Correct habits of study and recitation. Means. Experiences, social life, familiarity with poems, pictures, songs, and nature, reproduction and dramatization to form a foundation upon which reading may be built. Study of phonics. Word study. Phrase recognition. Exercises to gain distinct enunciation. Exercises to gain good expression. Aids to Good Reading — Oral or Silent. Reproduction. Dramatization. Picture study preparatory to reading the text. Stories and poems read and told by the teacher. Supplementary reading by the pupil. Thought at first should be the essential requirement; technic, subordi- nate. It should be gained by conversation with the teacher, her questions, a rhyme, or a story. As time advances, technic calls for greater considera- tion. Phonics. There are many ways of teaching phonics. The Aldine Method is very well planned and clearly explained in the teacher's manual, "Learning to Read." The Gordon Method is excellent and accompanied by useful cards and charts. Another very attractive and complete method is the "See and Say Series." The latter carries the child through the first four grades with material that builds a firm foundation for the reading and spelling for these and the following grades. Rhyming and matching sounds aid ear training. Vocal training follows ear training. The drills in phonics should consist almost invariably of individual recitations, as concert work covers many habits of careless pronunciation. Good articulation and independent power to call new words are the ends gained by a logical study of phonics. The following is a plan which may be followed after the consonants, short and long vowels and their equivalents, have been learned. Study simple words that are short vowels followed by one consonant. Examples: "on," "it," "at." Short vowels followed by and preceded by one consonant. Examples: "sad," "hat," "can." Short vowels followed by two and pre- READING. 35 ceded by one consonant. Examples: "hand," "mill," "doll." Short vowels followed by a one consonant blend. Examples: "lash," "wish," "gasp." Short vowels preceded by a two or three consonant blend. Examples: "glad," "scrub," "thrill." Words having long vowels. Study the use of the final "e" (changing short to long vowels) "cap," "cape," "can," "cane." Equivalents of long vowels. Examples: "oa," "ue," "ea." Digraphs. Examples: "oi," "oy." Suffixes "less," "es," "est," "ous," "ly," "ness." The following phonograms require constant "ion drill. ou ow oi oy au alk th wh ch ew eu er ir or ur ar shr aw scr augh spl ough thr The consonants are first taught in a short interesting story. The pupils reproduce the simple story thus giving back the sound. A variety of drills and games aid in memorizing. Many of the devices for word drill may be well adapted to the phonic drills and vice versa. Drills should be given daily. In case of letters having more than one sound (g hard and soft) teach first exclusively that which will occur most frequently in the child's reading. Phonic Devices. Special class children are often phonetically deaf and are frequently speech defectives. The following is a plan used with children of this character. The nine- teen elementary sounds are put on the board in circles. These sounds are recited every morning. The consonant sounds are taught in the usual way. 36 THE BOSTON WAY. Drill: Let us push out our circles with "sh"; smoke them out with "p,'' etc. Let us smoke them out with "p" and shut them off with "t." Question: Did any child hear a word?" Write it down. Use Aldine Phonic Chart. Find the circle the vowel sound goes in and push out and close off. Even the larger children enjoy this as a game. Other Devices. Print and write a sound-symbol on a four-inch square. On the back have the key to the sound. If the children have learned that "m" is the first sound of moon (as in the See and Say Series) have a picture of the moon on the back of the square. When a child finds it difficult to remember the sound, show him the picture of the moon. Arrange phonic cards (Gordon's) along the blackboard ledge. Have a child pick out "s" or "e" and hold the card as a reward. Have the printed capital and small letter on one side of a card and the script form on the other side, that the teacher may turn to either form when there is difficulty. Have each child whisper the sound in the teacher's ear as he reads it from a card, that the teacher may correct any errors of pronunciation. Hold the cards in plain sight, sound-symbol facing the class. Take cards rapidly, one at a time from the pack, and hold for an instant at the right of the pack, that every pupil may prepare an answer; when the card is placed quickly on the front of the pack, all sound together. One chosen child may answer or different children. All drills should be rapid and snappy, that the result may be automatic. Say to the group, "I am thinking of the first sound in moon. What is it? " Say to the group, "I am thinking of a sound at the beginning of one of today's new words. What do you think it is?" Let a child act as teacher, having individual children name the sounds as he holds the cards before them. Ask children to make from a given paragraph, a list of words which begin with the "new" sound, end with it, contain it. With alphabet tablets have children make lists of simple sounds and phonograms they know. Let children tell a number of words beginning with a given sound, write them on the board, and have each child pronounce the words. Ask the pupils to tell all the sounds they have learned. The teacher writes them on the board. Put in lists in order of number of letters they require. Examples: "b," "g," "h," "cl," "fr," "sc," "str," "thr," "spl," etc. This drill aids in ear training and eye training. Sound a list of words having the children spell the first letter, (r oom) the first two letters, (sm all) the first three letters, (scr atch), etc. Have them spell the final letter (ca t); the last two letters (warm er); the last three (look ing). Draw outlines of houses on the board — one for each child in the group; put sound or "family " name on the door. Children write words belonging to that family, as "names of the children inside." Examples: "ar" family with "star," "scar," etc., for the children's names. From a row of phonic cards on the blackboard ledge child selects cards to place in front of families written on the board. READING. 37 From a pack of phonic cards let a child select sounds, which, when put together, will make a variety of words. Let pupils make as many familiar words as possible out of several sounds including phonograms, written on the board. Give each child a white card on which is printed or written the required number of sounds and phonograms. Let them take the cards home to mother to recite 'them to her. This is an opportunity for the children to get pleasant drill at home. Enlarge the list as new sounds are learned. Methods of Teaching Reading. There are many excellent methods of teaching reading; each has its particular advantages. It is best to select that which each method offers to meet a particular difficulty or need. It is helpful to follow somewhat the order of some popular primer because the primer guides the teacher in the selection of words. It also paves the way for the reading from books. Select new words as they appear in the primer you intend to use. As soon as the child has sufficient power to master new words begin to read from books. Be sure to have the unfamiliar words studied long before you take up a reading lesson from the books. Also have a definite preparation to overcome the obstacles of the lesson, that the reading may be as uncon- scious as possible. Methods of Teaching Reading to Children Who Cannot Apply Phonics. I. Select a primer. From the first ten pages make a list of object words. Print these words on cards 5X9. Keep a box of objects illustrating these words. From the same pages make a list of sight words. Print these on cards and a printed list on the blackboard. Lesson I. Select three of these words, as: ball, book, doll. Place a ball on the chalk tray. Place the card, "ball" beside it. Have the child spell and pronounce the word many times. Take the card away. Place a book near the ball. Place the card, "book," beside the book. Have the child spell and pronounce book many times. Take the card away and place cards, "ball" and "book" on the table. Ask the child to put the card, "book" near the book, etc. Place doll on the chalk tray and proceed as with "book" and "ball." Add new words in following lessons, but always review previous lessons. When about twenty object words have been taught, teach a few sight words. Examples: "I," "and," "the," "a," "see," "have," "is," "are." Print "I see a" on the lower part of the blackboard. Have child place cards under the words until he knows them. Hold doll before the group. What do you see? "I see a doll." Have the printed cards ready and make a sentence with them under the sentence on the blackboard. Allow the child to place the cards until he can make the sentence. Make many sentences with the cards using "I see a" and the objects words in the list. Later teach "I have a" in the same way. Print these sentences on long cards and allow the children to read them and pass them to other children. The group is now ready to read the first part of the primer. 38 THE BOSTON WAY. II. Select a picture — for example, a picture of a baby. "What is this? " "A baby." This answer is given by every child to the question, "Can you say "baby?" I will make the chalk say "Baby." The printed word is placed on the board using capital letter "B" and small letter "b." Drill: "Who can see baby?" "I can see baby" develops "I can see." Other words like "mamma," "kitty," "papa," etc., are developed and taught, being substituted in the subject for "I," as "Mamma can see," "Baby can see," "Baby can see mamma." All combinations are taught by the use of pictures when possible. A list of studied words and combina- tions is kept on the board for frequent drill. Difficult and new combina- tions and words are printed in colored chalk, or starred. Word drills in the form of games are given frequently for short periods until there is no further need. Then cards or slips with printed sentences containing the words, or combinations, such as, "I have," "I like," "I want," etc., are given out for quick drill. Flash cards with the words or parts of sentences, or combina- tions, have been found very good . From board and card reading the work proceeds to the primer, and is continued in the same manner up to the Second Reader. Aids to Good Reading. To help children keep their places in reading, have each child read one word, one line, or, until he comers to some mark of punctuation. Frequent drills of this sort bring the class to more careful attention to the reading matter. One child reads a paragraph and another asks him a question to get one idea or the central thought from the paragraph. Children illustrate a paragraph or a story by original or copied drawings. Write sentences contained in day's lesson on slips of paper. Let different children read their slips and then exchange. Another time let a child keep as many as he earns by reading. Before oral reading have a silent study of the sentence or paragraph to be read, unless the lesson is for sight reading alone. In time the children can give the sentences from memory and gain expression. Ask for an account of the story at the end of the lesson. Bring out the more difficult words just learned and try to use them as well as to have the child use the words in his seat work. Read certain paragraphs that children may imitate you for expression. Observe rules of hygiene to keep pupils alert. Let a child who has been reading stop at the end of a sentence and call another. Have several children read the same paragraph to see who makes the fewest mistakes. Let all the boys read a sentence together — all the girls. Mount interesting clippings, poems or stories on cards and let the pupils read these as an incentive. Occasionally allow the best readers to correct the poorer ones. Let the good readers give individual help to the poorer ones in the dressing room. The benefit is mutual. Have children copy a story they like from their readers. To have children read until they fail aids in careful reading. Those who persistently lose their places in reading benefit by cardboard slips which they place under each sentence as it is studied. READING. 39 On a card have a picture of a scene, an animal or other object. Write a simple interesting story below. The attractive picture with the accom- panying story gains attention from the pupils. Dramatic readers are very helpful. Frequent drills on selections chosen for oral expression are valuable. The quick child enjoys the greater freedom of silent reading while the slower child enjoys the privilege of such reading. The ethical gain in silent reading must not be overlooked, for order and quiet are fine habits to acquire. Word Study. 1. Easy recognition of words composed of simple phonetic elements. 2. Discovery of new words by applying phonetic principles. 3. Common though difficult sight words. 4. Regular drills on common difficult words confused. Devices for W t ord Study. Draw a ladder and on each rung write a word. Let children climb the ladder. Have two race with pointers to see who climbs to the top first. A failure means a fall and being out of the race. Place word cards in a circle on the floor, a word for each child; have the children march around the circle; at a given signal the children stand and read the words in front of them. Cut fruit from paper and after writing a word on each piece, select a child to sell them. For difficult sight words the following is especially helpful. Give a red card to those children who have mastered a certain number of words. Give a white card when another set has been learned. To those who know the required number, give the final honor— a blue card. A list of words (perhaps twenty-five) is on the board. "A" closes his eyes while "B" points to a word. When "A" opens his eyes he asks, "Is it mamma?" The children of the group or "B" answer, "No, it is not mamma." Or, "Yes, it is mamma." When "A" guesses correctly he takes "B's" place. Have a set of pictures which have been used in teaching difficult or new words. Give out the pictures and ask the pupils to place them under the words they represent. On a good-sized card print all familiar words in squares. Place small squares containing one word, each on top of a similar word on the large square. Ask a group of children to read the first sentence or paragraph of the day's lesson and write the difficult words on paper. Write the words in lists on the board and see how many the rest of the group know. Have the children read the words from the board as in a spelling match; he who fails sits down or goes to the end of the fine. Children make the words at their seats with the alphabet tablets and put them into sentences they originate. Give each child on a piece of paper a difficult word as his own. At times when these words become obstacles in the reading period, let "John" tell his own word, or "Ruth" hers. Let children take supplementary readers and make lists of familiar words they find. L^se them in simple sentences. 40 THE BOSTON WAY. Be careful not to use childish devices for the children who, though know- ing very few words, yet are older in years and dislike to be treated as little children. The following may help such pupils: Keep a chart on which to paste "hard" words found at home, each word belonging to the pupil who brought and told it. Allow two children, one having a red crayon, the other blue, to study together the morning paper underlining words they know or searching for a given word of current interest (Boston, navy, flag). Babb's Word Builder No. 1 and No. 2 are good aids in word drill. Phrase Recognition. The drills on unfamiliar phrases should aim to gain quick association of form and sound, and quick interpretation of meaning. The drills should be attractive, interesting, and have a definite purpose. The following phrases require constant drill. Use many of the devices of word drill. there are — is of course there was — were once upon a time as long as as well as they are — were at last how many Picture Study. Aim: To aid the pupil in interpreting the text. To satisfy the child's natural interest in pictures. To stimulate the child that he may wish to read the text. To overcome "losing the place" in a lesson because of attention being drawn from the text to the unstudied picture. To appeal to the imagination and aid in reproduction. The teacher at first must guide the pupil's interpretation of the picture from the recitation of isolated details to the intelligent correlation of the details of the picture with the central thought. Silent Reading. Silent reading should occupy at least one hour a week. There should be definite periods for it as well as brief moments of such reading during each lesson. Unless this period be for pleasure alone, the amount of reading should be no more than one paragraph -at a time until sufficient practice has made it easy for the child to interpret a complete page. The teacher should aim to bring out the central idea of the subject matter by her guiding questions or suggestion. Write commands or requests on the board or give out cards bearing the same. The children read silently and obey. Oral Reading. Oral reading calls for an intelligent interpretation of the subject matter, clear enunciation and distinct articulation. Vital parts of the story should be read by the best readers in order that the interest may guide the children to appreciate the main thought of the lesson. Picture Reading. We read not only printed matter, but expressions on faces, pictures, nature, etc. Before teaching formal reading we should give an abundance READING. 41 of training in picture reading. Children should draw pictures and interpret them. They should paint and model with plasticene and interpret their efforts. They should have plenty of opportunity for interpretation through various mediums. Thoughts come through experience. Reproduction. A reproduction of the central thought in a lesson may be procured by informal conversation between the teacher and the class or by formal topics. There should be definite periods for this part of the reading, as it is one of the best aids to good reading. Dramatization. Dramatization is not mere play, but it is an important factor in the teaching of reading, because it is agreeable and healthful as an exercise of the mind and body. It is complete, realistic reading. It is natural to children, but requires thoughtful preparation. It calls for tactful help and suggestion from the teacher who must lose herself and become one of the players as she shares her enthusiasm in the dramatizing. Its advantages are: it enables the child to feel as well as to understand the words and ideas he gains in the reading; it prepares the child to read the text with expression. It should not be carried on or presented as a finished product. Such would spoil the entire spirit of the helpful play, and would shut out the retiring child. Supplementary Reading. The use of supplementary primers or readers aids silent reading greatly. A library collection suitable for the class should be in every schoolroom to be used at regular periods or at odd moments when a child has finished his work before the others. Such reading does a great deal toward cultivating a love for books. Suggestions. Teachers should remember that some children learn to read just by reading; some learn after words have been told them repeatedly; and there are a rare few who actually never master reading. A teacher should never give up a child as being unable to read until she has used every device and method she knows with resulting failure. " Much easy reading makes read- ing easy." • Those children who fail to become readers find great comfort and pleasure in looking at picture books with large print. Some such children are able to pick out a word here and a word there enough to make up a story for themselves. The teacher should do her part toward helping by providing an interesting collection of picture books. Especially Good Readers and Sets for Grades I, II, III. Progressive Road to Reading. Silver Burdett & Co. Story Hour Readers. Coe and Christie. Free and Treadwell. Row, Peterson and Co. Tommy Tinker's Book. 42 . THE BOSTON WAY. Merry Animal Tales. Cherry Tree Children. Wide Awake. Buckwalter Third. Robert Louis Stevenson. Twilight Town. The Art Literature Series. The Aldine System. See and Say Series. Blaisdell's Child Life. Primer, I, II, III. Carroll and Brooks. Primer, I, II, III. Lewis. Story Method of Teaching Reading. To Read for Pleasure. Pilgrim Stories. Pumphrey. Fables from Afar. Bryce. Tales of the Ancient Hebrews. Herbet. Jack the Giant Killer. Lang. The First Book of Stories. Coe. For the Children's Hour. Bailey. The Strange Adventures of Billy Trill. Cheevin. English Fairy Tales. Jacobs. The Wide World. Lane. Heart of Oak Books (Book III). Chas. E. Norton. East o' the Sun and West o' the Moon. G. Thomsen. A History Reader for Elementary Schools. L. L. W. Wilson. Fables and Folk Stories. Horace Scudder. Chinese Fables and Folk Stories, Davis & Chow Leung. Cinderella. Lang. Short Stories for Little Folks. Bryce. That's Why Stories. Bryce. Sunbonnet Babies. Grover. Overall Boys. Grover. Fairy Stories and Fables. Baldwin. Mother Goose Village. Bigham. Mother West Wind Stories. Burgess. SPELLING. 43 SPELLING. It is best to follow in the main the authorized list provided for the regular grades, making such additions as are demanded by the individual class, When these lists are not obtainable the teacher makes her own list. The fol- lowing types of words are suggested for use in such a case : Phonic Words — These are quickly learned. Social Words — Words pertaining to the child's home and school life. Personal Words — Words relating to the child's body and personal appearance. Current Words — Words occurring in " Current Events." Nature Words — Words suggested by the trees, birds, bees, grains, flowers, etc. Holiday Words — Words concerning the holidays and festive days of the year. Manual Words — Names of tools and materials make a list of special interest. The best results are obtained by having the children work at the black- board. Placing the spelling words in short live sentences and teaching them as " part of a whole " is an excellent foundation for language work. In teaching beginners to spell the object or action should be associated with every new word. For study and drill : Trace words from copies onto paper. Trace words found about room. Make words in sand with pebbles, shells, acorns, etc. Match words from box. Find similiar words to sample given, in primer, newspaper, etc. Perforate copies of words with pin or nail. Name words, by spelling, from objects, pictures and signs.. Make boats and have spelling words printed on the sails. Print words with the "Easy Sign Marker" (obtainable at J. E. Ham- mett's, Boston, Mass.) Copy. Spell each word a given number of times. Write words in the air with finger. Trace words on the desk with finger. Erase from a list one word at a time and spell the missing word. Erase all the words of a list and rewrite the list as completely as possible. Guess a word from the studied list. "I am thinking of a word. Guess." "Is it f-o-u-r?" One of a class of objects. "Guess which tool I was using." "Was it the p-1-a-n-e? " "I have a new hair ribbon. Guess the color." "Isitb-1-u-e?" A word acted by some child. Others guess by spelling as above 44 THE BOSTON WAY. Make words with letters. Use given words in sentences. First and last letters of words on the board. Children fill in missing letters, as B .... n, for Boston. Contest. Race with cut letters, — to complete a given list in the shortest time, — to make the most words in a given time. Two lists on the board, words the same, order not the same. Two children race with pointers to find words pronounced or spelled by the teacher. Lists on cardboard strips on the desks. Children race to cover with pegs the words given by the teacher. Fill blanks in sentences. Spelling match. Alphabet Games. 1. Players are divided into two groups. Groups form lines on either side of room. Two sets of the alphabet are used. Mark the letters with ink or crayons on cards; have one set in black, and one in another color, easily distinguished. The leader calls a word. Each side builds the word at the end of its line. Those who have the letter for that word run and stand in place! The side spelling the word first gets a point. Play five or ten minutes and give a score. 2. Take several words written on cards, and cut them up into leaders. Number each word, and have that number on each letter of that word. Distribute a letter to each child. Give them 5 or 10 minutes to find their word and to get ready to act it out for the rest to guess. Intensive teaching of a few words daily accompanied by many devices for drill and review is suggested as a successful means of teaching spelling. Helpful Spellers. Champion Spelling Book, Part one and Part two. Warren E. Hicks. One Hundred Per Cent Spelling Book. B. Norman Strong. Dictation Day by Day. First; Second; Third Year. Kate Van Wagenen. LANGUAGE. 45 LANGUAGE. Language is a deep-rooted desire of the human heart and is its greatest means of expression. In teaching little children, oral language is by far the most important form, and the small class offers a special opportunity in this work. With forty it is much less easy to encourage spontaneity and repress garrulous- ness than with half that number. Conversation with the teacher on sub- jects entertaining to the child, and as often as possible introduced by him, offers the best possible occasion for teaching oral language. Effort should be made to cultivate an agreeable quality of voice. The ordinary schoolroom routine such as politeness, given forms of questions and answers, and formulae used in lessons, gives opportunities for such teaching. Memorized selections and stories read to the pupils help to increase the vocabulary and fix correct expressions. Stories used by teacher for repro- duction are more successful if they contain frequent repetition and a well- defined climax. Children do not object to crudity, but they demand interest. Correction of errors should be reduced to the minimum, especially with the very young or young-minded. Imitation is a helpful corrector of errors. It is best to have conversation so informal that its purpose as a language lesson is completely hidden from the pupil. Written language may be argued as unnecessary for the very immature child, but it is so much a part of the life with one's fellows and so greatly adds to self-respect, that it should be encouraged. As a matter of safety, a child should early write his own name and address. In teaching composition the blackboard is of great assistance. A sen- tence well formed by the pupil orally, and then written in full view of the class is doubly fixed in the author's mind and makes some impression on the class. In beginning story-writing with immature pupils, remove all difficulties possible by previous class work on sentence formation, and by having lists of words needed in full view. With many children spelling is the greatest stumbling-block in the way of written expression. Avoid terms with young children. It is easy enough to teach the few forms necessary if we do not require long names with them, e. g., the names of kinds of sentences. The teacher must keep before her the desire to teach clear, simple, orderly expression and let terms and grammatical forms wait till the later intelligence comes to the child's aid. Oral Language. I. Aims. A. Enlargement of thought. B. Ready and exact expression. C. Increase of vocabulary. 46 THE BOSTON WAY. II. Means. A. Informal talks. B. Description of pictures and objects. Material should be : a. Simple. b. Interesting. c. Well known to narrator. C. Narration of experience. D. Reproduction of stories. E. Free dramatization. F. Repetition of selections from memory. G. Games containing much vocal repetition. H. Polite expressions. Written Language. I. Aims. A. Establishment of correct habits of thought and expression. B. Use in after-life. C. Encouragement of self-respect. II. Means. A. Correlating with reading and spelling. B . Blackboard lessons following oral composition. C. Reproduction of stories. 1. Sentence formation. Kinds. 2. Capitalization and punctuation. 3. Correction of common errors. 4. Headings, margins, etc. D. Description of pictures and objects. E. Narration of experience. F. Letter writing. G. Class criticism. H. Copying. I. Dictation. III. Exercises, teaching devices, games. A. For comprehension. 1. Sentences containing blanks to be filled, given to class. List of missing words supplied until pupils can do without. Type: (falling, blue, two, dog, ring) Mary has a dress. A chicken has feet. A has four feet. Did the teacher the bell? The snow is fast. 2. Picture or subject given class. Words needed to write on given subject supplied by pupils and placed on blackboard. Require a given number used in composition. LANGUAGE. 47 Type: My Baby, good brother doll rides pretty cries pink plays sister drinks cheeks carriage little milk brown mamma never blue can loves rattle eyes walk sleeps (Must use 15 words) 3. Set of stiff cards folded in middle. Inside on left paste picture — on right, list of suggestive words. Use like suggestion above. 4. Dissected sentences (with or without pictures). Type: (two, see, basket, I, carrying, can, girls) I can see two girls carrying a basket. 5. Experience Trips — Visits to places of local and national importance; visits to the zoo, the Art Exhibits, the department stores, the Navy Yard, and to a newspaper plant are suggestive of many broadening experiences. 6. Lessons to enlarge the vocabulary. Type — Teacher writes on board all the words suggested to the children by an apple, a bird, etc. 7. Guessing riddles, cartoons, conundrums, etc. 8. Making scrapbooks of little stories that have pleased the children. 9. Keeping a diary on the board of what each week has accomplished in their school-life. For correct expression. 1 . Sentences containing blanks to be filled with forms often confused, e. g., is-are, they-there, good-well, them-those, there-their, etc. Types: (is, are) The boys playing marbles. Mary and Rose not at school. Where my book? The buttercups in bloom. The bird in the nest. 2. 3. the children in the yard? Set of cards containing expressions often contracted. Contractions to be made by pupil. Type: I can not. (I can't.) You are. lam. Etc. Language Games — Written by Myra King. 48 THE BOSTON WAY. COLLECTIONS OF STORIES FOR CHILDREN. Title. Author. Anderson's Fairy Tales Edited by Jane H. Stickney Andrew Lang's Fairy Books Arabella and Araminta Gertrude Smith Black Beauty Sewell Book of Famous Horses Children's Book of Christmas Stories J As ^ ?° n ^ ic ^ nSOn { and Ada M. bkmner Fairy Stories and Fables James Baldwin Fifty Famous Stories Retold James Baldwin Folklore Stories and Proverbs Sarah E. Wiltse Grannie's Wonderful Chair Frances Brown Grimm's Fairy Tales Edited by Sarah E. Wiltse Heidi Johanna Spyri Little Lord Fauntleroy Burnett Merry Animal Tales Madge A. Bigham Moni, the Goat Boy Johanna Spyri More Mother Stories Laura Richards Mother Stories Laura Richards Old Mother West wind Thornton W. Burgess Pilgrim Stories Margaret B. Pumphrey Pinocchio Every Man's Library Roggie and Reggie Gertrude Smith Stories Children Love Charles Welsh Stories of Great Americans for Little Americans . Edward Egleston Tales of Mother Goose Village Madge A. Bigham The Counterpane Fairy Katherine Pyle The First Jungle Book Rudyard Kipling Uncle Remus Joel Chandler Harris When Roggie and Reggie Were Five Gertrude Smith Wizard of Oz Wind and the Willows, The POEMS. Title. Author. America Samuel Smith Bed in Summer Robert L. Stevenson Come Little Leaves George Cooper Daffodils, The William Wordsworth Gingham Dog and the Calico Cat, The Eugene Field Good Night and Good Morning Lord Houghton How the Leaves Came Down Susan Coolidge I Knew Him for a Gentleman I Love Little Pussy Jane Taylor It Isn't Raining Rain Today LANGUAGE. 49 Title. Author. Lamplighter, The Robert L. Stevenson Land of Counterpane, The Robert L. Stevenson Land of Story Books, The Robert L. Stevenson Little Boy Blue Eugene Field Lost Doll, The Charles Kingsley My Shadow Robert L. Stevenson November Alice Cary October O Little Town of Bethlehem Phillips Brooks One, Two, Three H. C. Bunner Our Flag (There are many flags) Owl and the Pussy Cat, The Edward Lear Sandpiper, The Celia Thaxter September Helen Hunt Jackson Sweet and Low Tennyson Swing, The Robert L. Stevenson Thanksgiving Day Lydia Maria Child Three Bells, The John G. Whit-tier Village Blacksmith, The Henry W. Longfellow Visit from St. Nicholas, A Clement C. Moore We Built a Ship Upon the Stairs Robert L. Stevenson Where Go the Boats? Robert L. Stevenson Why Do Bells of Christmas Ring? Eugene Field Wind, The Christina Rossetti Wynken, Blynken, and Nod ... .Eugene Field Year's at the Spring, The Robert Browning Bibliography. Three Years with the Poets Bertha Hazard Robert Louis Stevenson Reader Boyce & Spaulding Heart of Oak Books Charles Eliot Norton 50 THE BOSTON WAV. MANNERS AND SOCIAL REACTIONS. For the Teacher. "Character teaches over our head." "Iron sharpeneth iron; so a man sharpeneth the countenance of his friend . ' ' — Proverbs . True courtesy is evermore a thing of the spirit, to work as leaven, to be gained by inspiration, not to be taught by formal lessons. Let the teacher therefore show unfailing courtesy and a deep and true regard for the per- sonality and possibilities of every child. The keen edge of her sense of fairness and kindness must sharpen these in her pupils. The accepted forms by which courtesy is expressed in society may be taught. For the Child. "Smiles beget smiles." "There's nothing so kingly as kindness." The Golden Rule. Stories of Knighthood. The Story of Echo. Teach or read the following rhyme: Upon love's shining ring we see The golden keys of courtesy, — The fair sweet words that make the way For entrance to a joyous day. "Good morning" throws the portals wide, "Good afternoon" awaits inside. "How do you do?" when friends are seen, "Good-bye" when leaving them again. To favors "Please" will access find, "Thank you" must follow close behind. When by mistake some harm is done, A swifl "Excuse nu" should atone. For accident or hasty deed, "/ heij your -pardon" fits the need. "Good night" shall close the door at last I pon a day in gladness passed, If through its hours we've borne in mind The golden motto, "Be ye kind." MANNERS AND SOCIAL REACTIONS. 51 Device for Impressing the Above. Ring of heavy cardboard gilded and bearing the motto, "Be ye kind." Nine keys about 6" long, also gilded and each one bearing one of the above courteous phrases. Teach the use of these phrases by brief conversational lessons, using the keys to arouse interest and serve as pleasant reminders. Teach the child: To use the name of a person addressed. To look at the person addressed. Care of Doors: Opening. Turn the knob before pushing. Closing. Use the hand which is free on the outer knob and con- trol the door until closed. This needs careful training with little children who, through fear, often seek only to escape the closing door. Opening for someone whose hands are filled. Holding for someone coming behind. To pass others on the right. To pass behind another if convenient. To avoid passing between others and the light by which they are working, or between two people who are conversing. Consideration for others in a crowd : To give preference to women or elderly people — in entering cars or elevators, in seats, in safer part of sidewalk, in being served at table or at a party. To shake hands. To give assistance to a friend, older person or little child in carrying parcels. Signs of respect, standing, or (for boys) lifting cap : To friends in greeting. To ladies. To elders or superiors. To grief or death. To Our Country's flag. To our national song: Star Spangled Banner. (Sing, or stand in silence.) Welcoming visitors: Caring for wraps. Providing a seat. Passing a book or explaining work. The treatment of the mistakes of another. Ignore or give kindly aid. To aid someone unfortunate : a lame or blind person. To pick up anything dropped. Remain quiet if another has started first. To hang up fallen wraps in the dressing room. To return anything found which belongs to another. To pass pencils, pens, scissors, knives or tools. Give the handle. The care of public property, buildings or parks. Conduct at parties, passing refreshments, taking refreshments. Conduct on cars and trains and when sight-seeing. Frequent treats, parties, celebrations and trips, should give social op- portunities to put into practise these teachings. 52 THE BOSTON WAY. PENMANSHIP. Legibility — chief object. Sandpaper letters or patterns may be first used to gain idea of form by feeling. Tracing to fix ideas of form and size. Following the outlines of letters with meat skewer or pencil. Where children have difficulty in learning to write it seems advisable to use any method to obtain results. Good healthful positions should be cultivated, but insistence upon certain positions of pen, pencil and paper must be varied somewhat or even omitted, according to the individual child. Uniformity of movement depends upon the class of children. Many classes cannot work well in concert. When possible, teach to criticise own work. Take and preserve samples of the penmanship of each child every few months that improvement may be noted by child and parent as well as teacher. Teach child — whenever possible — how to write his or her name and address legibly. ARITHMETIC. 53 ARITHMETIC. Methods of teaching arithmetic should vary with the needs of the indi- vidual child. Number work should be related to the child's life and interests. After number facts have been discovered and developed, using concrete materials, daily, brisk, interesting drills, applied to the child's experience, should be a part of the program. Interest is easily held when drills are in the form of games. I. Low Group. The low group is made up of those whose knowledge of number is very limited, faulty or lacking. They are usually the discouraged, neglected ones, who need special attention, stimulation, encouragement, and a variety of materials. A. Recognition of numbers 1-5. 1. Use paper circles (yellow) . Mount. a. One circle — the sun. b. Two — headlights of an automobile. c. Three — tail of a kite. d. Four — custard pies. e Five— suspended from string, Japanese lanterns. B. Recognition of numbers 1-10. 1. Use yellow paper squares. Mount in sequence, affixing figures below on mount. 2. Give oblong cardboard with figures pasted 1-10. Have heavy card- board circles with figures 1-10. Shuffle circles and have children rearrange according to oblong cardboard copy: repeat without the copy. C. Teach visualizing each number to ten as a separate unit; numbers 10-20 as made up of one, ten, and a number of units. D. Counting by 2. 1. Have two-inch cards with numbers, 2, 4, 6, 8 to 20 pasted on. Cards may be shuffled and placed on blackboard ledge in sequence by the pupil. 2. Have figures 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 to 20 on cardboard. Encircle even numbers in ring of gold or blue to emphasize idea. 3. Paste on cardboard, pictures arranged in groups of 2, 4, 6, as: 2 kittens, 4 children, 6 cats, 8 trees. 4. Use magazine advertisements that show number facts. Those that have color and action are best. E. Number facts. Have ten paper or oak tag envelopes made to represent baskets. Glue these on a heavy mount in two rows of five baskets each. On back of each basket glue a small, narrow pocket, in which a narrow numbered cardboard strip may be inserted. 54 THE BOSTON WAY. Have 60 pears, apples or oranges cut from cardboard. Give child num- bered strip and have him put that number of fruit in the basket. Show number 10. Put 10 apples before children. Allow one child to put seven in basket. How many more to make ten? Put answer in oppo- site basket. Teach addition and subtraction facts objectively. F. Written expression of number facts discovered by figures and signs, as soon as there is a good foundation. G. Show three ways of writing a number. § 1 one. H 2 two. H. Work with coins. Days of week. Pint, quart. — I. Number language: large, small, long, short, more, less, half, quarter. J. Drill. Use large cards with question of some number fact on one side and answer on reverse. A child gives answer, and child holding card verifies or cor- rects it. Occupations. Bead stringing with regard to number. Making checkerboard. Making border of pegs, lentils, etc. considering number. II. Middle Group. A. Recognition of numbers 20 to 100 objectively, with bundles of tens* 1. Teach tens. 2. Teach tens and units. 3. Counting by 2-5-10-100 forward and backward, 2-4-6-8, etc., 1-3-5-7, etc., 5-10-15, etc., 6-11-16, etc., 10-20-30, etc., 12-22-32, etc. 4. Odd and even street numbers. B. Writing numbers 20 to 1000. Teach arrangement in hundreds'* tens', and units' columns. C. Operations with numbers. 1. Oral and written work to fix facts. Addition in series: 3+4 = 7 13+4 = 17 to 93+4 = 97 5+5 = 10 15+5=20 to 95+5 = 100 8+7 = 15 18+7 = 25 to 98+7 = 105 Subtraction corresponding to above. Drill: Use model store or having none, make lists of goods with prices on boards or charts. Buying, selling, making change, playing conductor, etc. Six-cent fares, eight-cent checks. Tables 2-5-10-3-4-11-6-8-12-9-7. Drill: Associate tables with concrete objects. Table 2, ears, wings; Table 3, feet one yard; Table 4, legs of chair; Table 5, nickels; Table 6, legs of fly; Table 7, days in week; Table 8, pints in gallon; Table 9, base-ball nine; Table 10, dimes; Table 11, football eleven; Table 12, dozen. Ring toss, keeping score, points counting 2-3, etc. Speed test, time limit. Tables in and out of order. ARITHMETIC. 55 Clock face— starting inside the circle, starting outside the circle. Writing tables. Children write a corresponding table with numbers, Dominoes, one box for each child. Number of dots on one half multiplied by number of dots on the other. Division, exact— with remainder. 2. Written work to test knowledge of facts. Addition, columnal— 3 to 6 figures, increasing to 3 digits. Subtraction— Austrian, including borrowing if learning for the first time. Multiplication— multiplier not over 2 figures; multiplicand not over 3 figures. Division— short division, exact and with remainder. D Application— mental— linear measure in feet and yards. Note. Estimate and compare vertical and horizontal distances, doors, windows, etc. Liquid measures, pints, quarts and gallons. Dry measures, quarts, pecks and bushels. Time, telling of time, month, day and hour. Money, dollar, half-dollar and quarter. Knowledge of \ and \ with objects. Apply in cost of pint, § yard, \ gallon, } hour, 1 hour, \ year, , week, \ working week, half-price sales of goods in store. Games. Throwing bean bags in numbered pockets in a board. Keep scores. Guessing Game. Teacher thinks of number. Child asks, "Is it 4X4=16/ , etc. Fireman. , „. „ Draw ladder. See what child can climb to the top without falling off. Time to see who goes up fastest. Use number facts or single column addition on rungs. Pussy Wants a Conn r. . Number all the children, two having the same number. Child in center calls 4+3. Children having "7" change places. One in center tries to get a corner. Ten Pins. Sides and score. Ring Toss. Sides and score. Selling Papers. Playing Store. Simple problems in buying and selling, making change with toy money. Teacher directs pupil to purchase articles and bring back correct change. Pupils at seats work out problem with toy money. Take turns as store- keeper and cashier. Bill of Fare in a Lunch Room. Milk 3*, sandwich, H, cocoa 4*f, soup 6*, baked beans H, creamed pota- toes U- Select food and figure cost. Make change. 56 THE BOSTON WAY. III. High Group. A. Writing and reading numbers — 1000, etc., U. S. money and Roman numerals. B. Operations. Addition, increasing number and size of addends. Subtraction, increasing number of figures in subtrahend and minuend. Multiplication, increasing number of figures in multiplicand and multi- plier. Long division. When trial division gives correct quotient figure, when trial figure gives quotient figure too large. C. Practical application. All problems to be related to child's present or future needs. Finding cost of various articles used in manual arts: lumber, yarn, cloth and reed. Finding cost of articles made. Teach j, J and § profit. Number of articles that can be made from a certain amount of material. Gives recipes (domestic science) to find total cost. Cost of equipping work-bench — wood working room. Cost of equipping garden — tools, soil, etc. Profit and loss in garden vegetables. Model store — using real money, sales slips, carbon copies, charge slips, making out bills. Thermometer: Tell temperature of room. Learn freezing and boiling points and temperature of body. Problem: At five in the morning the temperature was 60°, by 4.00 p. m. it had fallen to 47°. How many degrees difference? When it is 68° in room and 38° outdoors, how much colder is it outdoors? Bibliography. Number by Development. Gray. First Journeys in Numberland. Waldo. Educative Seat Work. Worst and Keith. Hammett's Improved Number Cards No. 1, 2, 3, 7 and 8. The Stone-Millis Arithmetic (Primary) by B. H. Sanborn Co. (Sheets of Examples) Thompson's Minimum Essentials by Ginn & Co. Maxson's Self-Keyed Fundamental Number Work. GEOGRAPHY. 57 GEOGRAPHY. Outdoor lessons on soils, erosion, simple land forms and water forms. Near-by geography, streets, railroads, important buildings, natural features of special interest. For location in the city, address envelopes to public buildings, wharves, railroad stations, etc. Children tell how to get to these places. Stories of different countries. Dramatize. Use plasticene or papier- mache for modeling animals, objects or people. Postage stamps of dif- ferent countries. Use plasticene or papier mache for modeling type forms and for making relief maps. See under Modeling. Sand table. Product lessons. Product maps. Drawing. Collection of pictures. Geography quiz. One child stands before the class and invites the others to ask him questions. When he fails to answer, the questioner takes his place provided he can answer his own question. Cards with well-known geographical names. Give one to each pupil competing. If he can tell of what his card contains the name ("Paris is a city," "Merrimac is a river") he retains the card and receives another. If he cannot tell, he is told and must recite from the same card the next time around. The pupil keeping the most cards wins. Geography tipover. Alphabet cards plain on one side. Each pupil in turn draws a card without seeing the letter, tells of what it is the name (river, city, street, state), then turns the letter up in full view of all. The pupil who can first name street, state or whatever was asked, beginning with that letter, wins the card. 58 THE BOSTON WAY. HISTORY. Talk about current events — history in the making. Dramatize stories for each of the following days or monlhs: October Columbus November Pilgrims December Christmas January : . . . . Eskimos February Washington and Lincoln March Evacuation April Patriots' Day May Memorial Day June Bunker Hill Make booklets with decorated covers illustrating stories. Write short compositions. Collect pictures. Have in the schoolroom a collection of History stories to which the children may have free access. Suggested books: A History Reader For Elementary Schools. Wilson. Pilgrim Stories. Pumphrey. Stories of Early American History. Gordy. Stories of American Discoverers for Little Americans. Rose Lucia. Lads and Lassie of Other Days. Price. America's Story for America's Children. Pratt. HYGIENE. HYGIENE. "Plenty of sunlight every day, Plenty of exercise in play, Plenty of air that's fresh and sweet, Plenty of wholesome food to eat, Plenty of water and plenty of sleep, Healthy and strong my body will keep." Write the above on the board. Underline important words with colored crayon. Pupils read, talk of the meaning, and memorize. A Health Creed. To be well I must keep my body, my clothes and my house clean. I must have plenty of fresh air and sunshine. I must eat good food and chew it slowly and brush my teeth often. I must drink a lot of water, milk and cocoa, but no tea or coffee. I must sit straight and stand straight so as to breath deep and grow up straight and strong. Early to bed and a long night's sleep will rest my mind and body and keep me from being nervous. Make charts using the above sentences as headings. Illustrate each with magazine advertisement pictures. This makes a helpful and interesting exercise. Give simple and practical talks on: Breathing and ventilation. Clothing and bathing. Sleep and exercise. Food and drink. Smoking and other hurtful habits. Care of ears, eyes, skin, hair, teeth and nails. Treatment of simple cuts, bruises and burns. Removal of sliver. Removal of a particle from the eye. Danger of neglected adenoids and tonsils. Value of sunlight. Stress the importance of use of milk, buttermilk, bonnyclabber, malted milk, cocoa and fruit juices in place of even mild stimulants. Stress the importance of nasal breathing. The effort to hold a slip of thin paper between the lips for a few moments will help some mouth breathers. Stress the importance of the following habits as having a direct bearing on health: Wash hands before meals. Clean teeth before going to bed. Put handkerchief before face when sneezing or coughing. Keep hands away from nose, mouth and eyes. 60 THE BOSTON WAY. Change wet shoes and stockings. Chew food slowly and thoroughly. Wash raw fruit before eating. Do not exchange partly eaten food or gum. Do not drink from a common cup. Go to bed early. Sit, stand, and walk correctly. Read with the light at the side or back. Read only with a good light. Avoid putting money into mouth. Keep food and milk bottles away from flies, especially the baby's bottle. Work for a low, pleasing tone of voice. Avoid habits of whining and fault finding. Physiology. Talk of man and how he differs from other animals: Physically; in upright position and development of the hand (use of thumb). Mentally; in development of the reasoning powers and use of articulate speech. Parts of body: Head, trunk and limbs. Parts of head: Crown, forehead, nose, chin, two ears, two temples, two eyes, and two cheeks. Parts of trunk: Two shoulders, two sides, two hips, back, chest, and abdomen. Parts of upper limbs: Arm, forearm, wrist, hand (back, palm, fingers). Parts of lower limbs: Thigh, leg, foot (instep, sole, heel, toe, ball). Teach eyebrows, eyelashes, "bridge" of nose, number and kinds of teeth. Teach use and care of bones. Speak of deformation caused by bad postures. Teach use and care of muscles. Teach position and importance of the heart, liver, lungs, stomach, intestines — all as parts of the "House Beautiful" with its "windows," "telephones," "kitchen," "chimney," laundry," "engine," "pipes," and "drains." Valuable booklets on "Health" may be obtained by writing to Dr. Frankel, Metropolitan Life Insurance Building, New York, N. Y. ELEMENTARY LETTERING COPYRIGHT I9IJ BY E.tDELlA SELDI& MARGARET D. STONE • • • • •• ••• II III III III ll) II III III l) * * «' III >l l> . ill. 1 '. 1 VERTICAL UNITS. f 1 T • T 9 • • T III • 1 i 1 1 1*1 1 • • 1 T t • m ^— — • = ^ 1— • HORIZONTAL uniTs. — — "TT ^a ~T ~t~~ • . ^U»" ■■• "~" ' — - . — -==• _^- •. ,; ■ ■;,. - as. . ;==» Ct=^C^=*> VERTICAL BORDERS. ■I n iV 9 o . o o . o o . o ) . o . d HORUOtiTAV. QORDERS. I"" T, I i r ^ ^ **" surface: patterns. I \./ jL V I rosettes. PLATE II. DRAWING. 63 DRAWING Drawing should be treated as a natural method of self-expression. Many ideas which we try to express by speech and by writing can be much better expressed more definitely and more clearly, by drawing and painting. Many special class pupils, because of their vivid mental pictures show great facility in drawing. Such pupils should be encouraged to use every opportunity to exercise this talent without adverse criticism. It will be the duty of the teacher to suggest the subjects to be thought about and described; to help the pupils in the comparison, criticism and judgment of their own performances; and, finally, to grade the work done. In suggesting subjects to be thought about and described by the pupils, the teacher must be specific and particular; definite images suggested before the pupils proceed to draw and color the subject. If they are drawing pictures let each one be held up and discussed by the class. In what respects is it a true picture? What mistakes, if any, have been made? What changes or corrections should be made? Has anything been left out that is natural and proper to the picture as a whole? When the pictures have been considered and criticised, they should be put up to be considered together, with a view to making a comparison and selecting the best. The children must be encouraged to make comparisons and pass judgments. The teacher should assist them, declaring her own judgment at the end of the lesson. It is always the best that gives the standard. It is important that the children should see a great many photographs and pictures, for by this means their visual experience and knowledge may be definitely increased, particularly if they make drawings from the pictures that interest and please them. Pupils should be shown examples of good design in drawings and paint- ings, in textiles, pottery and porcelain, in wood or stone carvings and in metal work. The subject of drawing divides itself into headings: Representation and Design. Representation. Aim. — To develop power of telling true stories by means of pictures. To increase the child's facility of expression in terms of lines and colors. Means. — Making pictures in color to illustrate experiences and interests of the children. Suggestions. — Letter name of picture and name of child on back of each paper. Draw free hand frame line allowing margin on each paper. Lessons. Draw people. — Plate IV. Study shape of head, position of eyes, nose, mouth, ears, hair, etc. Draw men, women, girls, boys and babies. Com- pare heights and kinds of dress, color of clothes, hats, etc. Draw people 64 THE BOSTON WAY. 5^ AA o A v/k, ~z(3&£k. BALANGED, 5TQRT" "ft lUNC. UNITS 5UGCf5TlNG HOLIDAY CARDS , HEADINGS FOR PAPER$,BQOK COVERS NOT COIR ABLE. cooking 1 LE5SON5. WF Sfr ( ^%\?cf^ ] EA5TE.K J trttfK t- CltAVdO. APRIL.:: I?17 plate: TDu DRAWING. 65 OVAL OF HEAO SUCCESTINC ^^-L-'' -^' Posmoru or v\" x |"). Peg board. (Outlines of animals on board. Use automatic drill.) 122 THE BOSTON WAY. Meat board (elliptical, 14§" x 8§"). Cake board (12" x 6"). Order board (9J" x 5J" x I"). Elliptical bread board (11J" x 8^"). Round bread board (10" x |"). Number board for United States money (made of a barrel head. Draw on head a large star; at each point put in a small hook and beside it write different denominations of United States money). 6. Boxes: For colors (9£" x 6" x 6|"). For cards (7" x 4" x 4|"). For balls (12" x 5|" x 4f"). 7. Toys: Simple toys, such as: guns, swords, and daggers. Coping-saw work (beaver-board, three ply wood, cigar boxes). Animals: Simple animals. Animals on platforms with wheels. Assembled animals. Rules. To square to dimensions when stock is not of the desired thickness. (Unless Otherwise Directed) : 1. Statement. — Plane better side. Mark it I. Direction (examine stock for size and soundness) : If warped, ob- serve grain and plane convex side, smooth and flat. On thin, warped pieces it will be found advisable to observe grain and first plane concave side near enough flat to rest firmly on bench. Then again observe grain and plane convex side as above. Test. — For flatness, with back of try-square, straight edge and winding sticks. 2. Statement. — Plane better edge. Mark it II. Direction. — Observe grain and plane edge smooth, straight and square with marked side. Test. — For straightness, with straight edge. For squareness, with try-square in at least three places, testing from marked side. 3. Statement. — Gage width and plane. Direction. — Gage from marked edge on both sides. Observe grain, saw if necessary and plane to the lines. Test. — For flatness, if necessary with back of try-square. 4. Statement. — Gage thickness and plane. Direction. — Gage from marked side on both edges (and on ends if necessary). Observe grain and plane to the gage lines. Test. — For flatness, with back of try-square. 5. Statement. — Square better end. Direction. — Score knife line around near end, squaring from marked surfaces only. Saw close to outside of line and plane to the line. Test. — For flatness, if necessary with back of try-square. For squareness, with try-square from marked surfaces only. 6. Statement. — Lay off length and square the other end. Direction. — Lay off from finished end, score knife line around, squar- WOOD WORK. 123 ing from marked surfaces only. Saw close to outside of line, and plane to the line. Test. — For flatness, if necessary with back of try-square. For squareness, with try-square from marked surfaces only. 1. Suggested models: Hat rack (18" x 2\" x f"). Key board (15" x 2" x §"). Towel rack, sleeve board (with or without standards), blotters, lap boards (a flat piece of white wood curved to fit child. Use \" wood. 2. Boxes for various purposes: Knife, fork and spoon box. (H5" x 9" x 2|". f" stock except ends which are j S ". Sides 2\" high, center 10|" long.) Match box or toothpick holders, stationery holders, scholar's com- panion. 3. Window ventilators. 4. Simple pieces of furniture: Stools, ottomans, taborets, magazine stands, campstools, bookrack, bean bag board, kitchen rack. References. Shoe Rack. Industrial Arts Magazine, Aug., 1919. Sconce. Industrial Arts Magazine, Oct., 1918. Footstool. Industrial Arts Magazine, June, 1918. Loom. Industrial Arts Magazine, April, 1916. Industrial Arts Magazine, Dec, 1918, Feb., 1919; April, 1919, May, 1919, Dowel-Doll; Dec, 1917, Tumbler-man; July, 1920, Kiddie Kanter. "Manual Training Toys." By Moore. Toys. Manual Arts Magazine, Jan., 1918, Nov. 1918, Doll-Bed; Nov., 1919, Nov. 1920, Dec, 1920. Coping-saw work. Ben W. Johnson. When Mother Lets Us Make Toys. C. Elling Wood Rich. Campstool. Industrial Arts Magazine, Nov., 1916. Footstool. Manual Arts Magazine, Sept., 1920. Simple Furniture. "Problems in Woodworking," By M. W. Murray. Furniture Design for Schools and Shops. By Grawshaw. Bookrack. Industrial Arts Magazine, Oct., 1915. Sleeve Board. Industrial Arts Magazine, Nov., 1916. Bean Bag Board. Industrial Arts Magazine, Oct., 1915. Kitchen Rack. Manual Arts Magazine, Sept., 1920. Rope-winder. Manual Arts Magazine, Aug. 1920. Match Box. Industrial Arts Magazine, Dec, 1918. 124 THE BOSTON WAY. COBBLING. Materials. 1. A supply of medium weight sole leather. Order by pound. (About 1 pound to square foot.) 2. Nails. Improved iron cobblers' nails f inch for soles and f inch for heels. 3. Very sharp thin knife. 4. Iron standard with three or more lasts of different sizes. 5. Hammer — ordinary one will do. 6. After the children gain some skill, burnishing fluid and burnishing iron may be added. Lesson I. 1. Choose boot with hole in sole (not on edge). 2. Cut piece of sole leather with diameter about one inch greater than hole. 3. Bevel leather on wrong side to a thin edge and with awl mark for nails. (About f inch from edge and | inch apart.) 4. Nail in position. Lesson II. Choose shoe with hole extending to edge of sole. Proceed as before but do not bevel the edge of patch which is to come on edge of sole. Lesson III. Half Soles. Prepare shoe. With scoring awl or screwdriver and strong pinchers tear off to the shank the outer sole, leaving the inner one to which the top is sewed. Shave thin the part of sole left in shank to which the new sole is to be attached. Make pattern and cut the leather slightly larger. Bevel the edge on wrong side. (At the shank only.) Soak leather in hot water till pliable. Hammer the middle surface to make it slightly cup-shaped. Nail to shoe with two nails, one at toe and one at shank. Make path for nails and with awl (pointing slightly toward the center of shoe) make holes in which to plant the nails. Nails to be placed about § inch apart, beginning at shank. Trim, file and sandpaper edge. Use burnishing fluid and hot burnishing iron. BRUSH MAKING. 125 BRUSH MAKING. A brush is an implement composed of a solid back or base, in which are set bristles or fibres. These bristles or fibres are fastened in the back by- means of wire or cement. The best method is to fasten by means of wire. The wire is concealed by a piece of wood which is glued over it. The best bristles come from Russia, China and France. They are very expensive and are not used in cheap brushes. America also produces bristles. They are very short, fine and flexible. They are used for paint brushes and are the cheapest bristles on the market. Fibres, made to imitate bristles, are used in cheap brushes. These fibres are Palmyra, Tampico and Palmetto. Tampico comes from the leaves and stems of the century plant. Palmyra comes from Africa and Palmetto from South America. They are made from decayed matter from trees. The United States has some fifteen hundred establishments for the mak- ing of brushes. Brushes are used for a great variety of purposes, such as scrubbing, dusting, smoothing, polishing and laying on of color, or coating a surface as with varnish, paint or whitewash. These brushes are made in many shapes. The directions which follow are for shoe brushes, scrub and hand brushes. Materials. Wood, copper or steel wire, screws, white Tampico for hair brushes,. Tampico with horsehair for shoe brushes, Palmyra for scrub brushes. Wire, Tampico and Palmyra are sold by the pound. Parts of a brush: Top, brush back, bristles. Method of Work. Brush backs. Choose and fashion shape desired, using soft wood for hairbrushes and hard wood for scrub brushes. Mark wood for holes. The holes should be staggered. 1 Bore holes with a German or Reamer bit, using a wooden stop 2 (which the children can make) on the bit. With a backsaw, make on the back of the brush back, grooves connecting each line of holes, just deep enough to allow the wire to be flush with the surface of the wood. Sandpaper the brush back. Drawing in of brush. Wind enough wire for brush around a small piece of dowel. Place the dowel in a vise to remain there until the work is finished. In working, keep the brush back free to hold in the hand, as by pulling the brush back away from the dowel the wire will tighten. Make a free loop with end of wire. Slip this loop through the end hole 1 Staggered — alternate. 2 How to make a stop. Place bit in the bit stock. Measure the length of bit pro- truding from the stock. Find thickness of piece of wood used for brush back. Subtract the thickness of wood, in inches, from the length of bit, in inches. Saw a piece of f or J inch wood to the length found, making about f inch wide. Bore a hole down through the length of wood with the bit. The bit should extend beyond this piece of wood, just a little less than the thickness of the piece of wood to be used for the brush back, so that the point, only, will penetrate through, making a tapering hole. 126 THE BOSTON WAY. in the center row; starting from the groove side of brush back. Place a sufficient quantity of hair in the loop of wire. With the brush back in hand, pull the loop containing the hair, until the hair slips, doubled, into the hole. This being the first hole used, the wire must be fastened on the back by twisting the small free end of wire several times around the main wire. Make a new loop in wire at next hole. Slip the loop through the hole, being careful that wire is pulled tight into groove on back of brush. Place in this loop a similar quantity of hairs and pull until hair slips into hole. Repeat process throughout center row. (As each row is finished cut hairs the length desired.) Cross into next row and continue filling the rows with hair until one half of brush is finished. Then cross to first row on other side of center (cut a groove across, to hold wire) and continue work until brush is finished. Fasten the last loop of wire by twisting the end of wire several times around main stretch of wire. If wire breaks at any time, fasten as if brush were finished and start again as when first beginning. Making top of brush. Trace around finished brush back for pattern for top (as children's work has probably varied from the original pattern). Use T Vinch wood. Cut out top — mark and countersink for screws. Glue top to back. Place in clamps until glue hardens (overnight). Fasten with screws. Sandpaper and shellac finished brush. Shoe brushes. In making a shoe brush proceed as above for main part of brush, and fasten on the top of brush. Then make a dauber in same man- ner, but without a top, and fasten to the front of brush with glue and screws, or nails. Make a handle and fasten to body of brush with screws. Bibliography. Scientific American Supplement, Jan. 17, 1903, No. 1411. How Hair- brushes Are Made. The Standard Reference Work. The World Book. SEWING. 127 SEWING. Low Grade Children. 1. Kindergarten sewing cards. Child may make his own cards, punch- ing the holes with any large needle. Sew with bright worsteds. 2. Cross-stitch on j-inch or 5-inch check gingham. Diagonals of the dark blocks is the easiest stitch. Diagonals of all blocks. Diagonals and diameters of each block make a more complicated pattern. Use Dexter cotton for first work. Colored silkateens are pretty for more complicated patterns. Teach neatness of the wrong side of the work. 3. Sew on buttons starting with two-hole. 4. Pincushion. Cut rectangle 4 by 8 inches. Double. Sew on two sides. Stuff with woolen rags. Sew up last side. 5. Squares for pillow or quilt. Six-inch squares of unbleached cotton cloth. Draw designs on the squares. Outline in color. Piece together. 6. Baby's bib. Oblong piece of material. Cut out curve for neck. Hem all around. Outline in color some simple picture or design at the bottom. Tapes at neck. 7. Bed socks. Stocking foot for pattern. Cut from outing flannel. Middle Grade. 1. Teach fundamental stitches as needed, on a strip of muslin, using col- ored thread. 2. Teach hemming of doll's sheets and pillowcases. Explain that full- width sheeting has selvage on both edges. 3. Make doll's pillow. 4. Hem dish towels, dusters and simple tea aprons. 5. Make a bag. Hem side opposite selvage. Sew up the two sides overhand stitch. Allow spaces for tapes. Insert tapes to draw up from opposite sides. Decorate with cross-stitch. 6. Dust caps. Twenty-seven-inch circle of gingham or muslin. Face with bias seam tape and insert elastic. 7. Kitchen aprons. 8. Simple bloomers. 9. Teach button hole stitch with raffia on brass curtain rings. 10. Rings for ring toss. Buttonhole with roving over three or four heavy reeds. Reeds should be bound tightly into a ring before beginning. 11. Straight, gathered petticoat of outing flannel or long cloth. 12. Towels. Huckaback. Hem and work patterns through the raised stitches with colored thread. Following a simple diagonal is easiest at first. Later, vertical and horizontal lines to form Grecian border patterns may be successful. 13. Table covers. Fringe a piece of burlap on four sides. Overcast. Cross stitch border in colors. Table runners may be made in same way. 14. Teach catch, chain, feather, outline and blanket stitches. Use as a decoration for underwear. 128 THE BOSTON WAY. 15. Quilts of patchwork — light and dark pieces. Finish by feather stitching. 16. Teach sewing on of hooks and eyes, snap fasteners. 17. Hemstitching on burlap or very coarse linen. High Grade. 1. Fine hemstitching. 2. Hem damask napkins and tablecloth. 3. Darn tears. 4. Darn stockings. 5. Cut, baste, make and trim, combinations, envelopes, camisoles,, nightdresses. 6. Patch striped, plaid, plain materials. 7. Ruffles set upon skirt finished by bias seam tapes. 8. Cutting and making of blouses, skirts, dresses. Patterns obtained: from style book. Bibliography. School Needlework. Teacher's edition. Olive C. Hapgood. Constructive Sewing, Book I. Mary E. Fuller. The Sewing Book. Annie L. Jessup. Progressive Lessons in Needlework. Catherine F. Johnson. Elementary Embroidery. Mary Symonds. MILLINERY. 129 MILLINERY. I. Tools. Pliers — for cutting and bending wire. Scissors — long narrow blades. Needles — millinery No. 5-10 for making, millinery No. 3-4 for trimming. Thread — Kerr's lustre, D for making, A for fine work in place of silk. Pins — No. 3 slender steel. II. Frames. Types — mushroom, flat sailor, turban. All others are modifications of these three types. Materials — buckram and French willow for hats of piece material, rice net for straw and ribbon hats. III. Stitches. Wire stitch — to fasten wire to any material. Millinery backstitch — used largely for foundation work where strength is required. Slip stitch — a small stitch concealed in folded edges which it joins. Hemming — used in foundation work to hold an unfinished edge flat to frame. Millinery catch stitch, an invisible stitch. Used for fastening a flat hem and for making folds. Running — for gathering and hand tucking. IV. Fitted Covers of Piece Materials. Mushroom brim — upper cover. Nap runs from head size to edge of brim. Cut center front on bias so nap will be diagonal. Pin carefully. Be very careful in velvet about placing pins and leaving them in. Pin first on one side of center front and then on the other, stitching material across and around. Pin headsize as you go along. Having completed circumference, pin together at center back. Be sure to get straight seam line directly over center back. Allowance for seam f" for firm material, \" for others. Slip stitch seam. Trade workrooms use millinery glue to fasten edge of upper brim covering. Hemming stitch may be used instead of paste. Under cover. Place center front on bias with the nap, running from the headsize to edge. Stretch and pin the same as in the upper cover, being careful not to stretch material away from frame. Close seam as in upper cover. Pin very carefully so edges exactly meet. Turn a little below re- quired edge. There is stretch enough in material to bring it to required line. When pinned, slip stitch the two edges together. Fasten at head- size \" above headsize line with millinery backstitch. Flat sailor — upper cover. Place bias at center front. Pin. Draw material back smoothly and pin at center back. Begin cutting headsize line at center. Cut on diameter from headsize to center. Cut out part 9 130 THE BOSTON WAV. away from center. Fit headsize line first. Cut to collar or grain beyond until material fits down easily. Pin circumference edge, beginning with center front. Put pins 2" or 3" apart, then fill in when necessary. Under cover fitted same as mushroom, but without seam. Crown. Nap of side crown must correspond with brim. Draw pattern of crown tip, allowing seam. Place bias at center front, cut by paper pattern, nap running toward center back. Pin tip and side crown together at center front, center back, and sides. Backstitch. Slip velvet crown over crown of frame — turn \" inside and hem. Fit crown to brim. Slip stitch around crown, coming through frame at center back, front and sides. Trim hat and line. French linings are slip stitched into hat. Standard linings are wire stitched. V. Edge Finishes. Slip stitch edges together. Wire at edge of covers. 1. Wire fitted just below edge in under cover. Used on drooping models or turbans. 2. Wire in under cover fitted beyond edge of brim. Effect of piping. Used on sailor or slight variations. 3. Snap binding — used largely on transparent brims. VI. Fitted Upper Cover op Straw — Under Cover Piece Material. Brim. Allow edge of straw braid to extend beyond edge of brim, and pin. Cut off, leaving a generous amount for seam. Sew second row directly in line with circumference wire and complete sewing. Braid is sewed at upper edge lapping §" to \" . Put on under cover, fastening over edge of upper brim and slip stitch edge of braid on under side. Crown. Edge of crown is bound with braid or silk. Start straw at center back turning first row under. Sew row after row, outer edge down, and sew on the lower edge. Lap rows more at center of tip. When center is reached wind end of straw and turn under. Press. VII. Handmade Flowers. Many delightful flowers may be made of scraps of soft piece materials, wool and chenille. Wild rose. Cut five If" squares. Fold through center. Fold diag- onally. Gather raw edges. Attach petals. Make center of French knots, or use ready-made center. Leaves are folded same way, flat side up. Gather. Rosebud. Satin cut on straight of material \\" x 1". Make a small loop in end of spool wire. Fold satin lengthwise through the center, fasten- ing over loop of spool wire. Gather long edge loosely and wind about wire. Fasten firmly. Sew up open end of satin. Wind stem with wool or chenille. Rubber stemming may be used. KNITTING. 131 KNITTING. Toy Knitting. (a) Necklace of Dexter cotton No. 6 or coarser. Ten-inch piece tied together with 4-inch piece sewed into circle or oval for pendant. (b) Mats. Colored Germantown sewed into circle of any size. (c) Reins of colored carpet warp. (d) Hot plate mats of Dexter cotton No. 6 or coarser. ■ Make 3-inch circle; around this attach rows of smaller circles until it is large enough. Simple Knitting. Teach plain knitting on medium-sized short needles. Meat skewers sandpapered, shellacked, with a sealing wax knob, make good beginning needles. 1. Reins of colored Germantown. Cast on 8 stitches. Knit desired length. Knit 10-inch strip for breast piece and sew on it 3 bells. 2. Face cloth. No. 8 needles, No. 5 Dexter cotton. Colored border gives variety. Knit 10-inch square. Crochet shell edge; 5 d. c, skip 1, 1 s. c, skip 1, repeat. 3. Guest towel. Cast on 60 to 75 stitches, and knit in pattern to match face cloth. 4. Bath towel. Cast on 100 stitches, and knit in pattern to match face cloth. 5. Wash glove — good for baby's bath. No. 5 Dexter cotton. Knit rectangle 10 inches by 8 inches. Fold and sew to make bag 5 inches by 8 inches. Older pupils can pick up stitches on three needles and knit a purled wrist. 6. Neck piece for winter. Medium needles. Germantown. Cast on 25 stitches. Knit rectangle 18 inches long. Sew on a pearl button. Crochet a chain and attach for buttonhole. 7. Winter scarf of Germantown. Cast on 25 to 30 stitches. Knit 1 yard. Colored borders give opportunity for great variety and relieve mo- notony. Add fringe, also pockets or a belt. A thread or two of silkateen of a contrasting color works in well with the wool for decorative borders. 8. Baby's ball of colored Germantown. Knit rectangle 5 inches by 8 inches. Sew 5-inch ends together. Fill with cotton wrapped around a sleigh bell. Gather both ends tightly and sew firmly. 9. Boy's cap. No. 7 needles. Scotch yarn. Cast on 40 to 50 stitches. Knit 60 ribs. Sew ends together. Fold up 1^ to 2 inches, on one side, for border. Sew other side together very tightly and add close tassel. If two colors are used, cast on 30 to 40 stitches and proceed as before. Knit 2-inch strip large enough to sew around and turn up as border. 10. Afghan. Seven-inch squares sewed together in pleasing combina- tion. 132 THE BOSTON WAY. 11. Bedroom slippers of Germantown. Knit 2j-inch strip until the length plus the width is the distance around a lamb's wool sole. Sew width to beginning of length. Knit 1-inch strip a little shorter than the distance around the top. Stretch and sew to top of slipper, then sew lower edge to slipper and put in an elastic. 12. Doll's sweater of Germantown. Cast on 24 stitches. Knit de- sired length for back and roll at bottom. Add 18 stitches for one sleeve. Knit across and add 18 stitches for other sleeve. When sleeve is half wide enough knit 24, bind off 12 for neck, knit 24. Next row, knit 24, cast on 12, knit 24. Knit second half of sleeve. Cast off 18 stitches at each end and continue until back is same length as front. Sew up under arm and sleeve. 13. Bathroom rug. Very large wooden or bone needles. Three-fourths inch strips of outing flannel. Knit plain. Three-fourths by 1 yard is a practical size. 14. Round rug may be made of the above material, enlarging upon directions for round penwiper. 15. Pincushion. Cast on 30 stitches. Knit 20, turn. Knit 10, turn. Knit 10, turn. Knit 12, turn. Continue thus until all stitches have been knit. Change color. 16. Penwiper. Single Germantown. No. 16 needles. Cast on 15 or 18 stitches. Knit 3, and back. Knit 6, and back. Knit 9, and back. Knit 12, and back. Knit row, and seam back. This makes one gore. 17. Baby's mittens, knitted on two needles. No. 12 steel needles. Cast on 36 stitches. Knit 2, pearl 2; repeat across and continue ribbing for H inches. Next row — (knit 2, over, narrow) 9 times; knit back plain. Knit 3 ridges (6 rows) plain. Knit 17, increase 1 stitch in each of next 2 stitches by knitting first the front and then the back of the stitch, knit 17; knit back plain. Knit 17, increase 1, knit 2, increase 1, knit 17; knit back plain. Knit 17, increase 1, Knit 4, increase 1, knit 17; knit back plain. Continue, knitting 2 more stitches each time between increases, until there are 48 stitches on the needle, then one row without increase. Knit 31, turn, knit back and forth on 14 stitches for thumb for 11 rows, then narrow every 2 stitches for 2 rows. Break off length of wool, thread through the remain- ing stitches and sew up thumb. Join wool again to ball, and, beginning with the needle containing the 17 knitted stitches, knit 2 stitches at side of thumb and work across other needle. Knit 40 rows (20 ribs) from wrist, then, to shape top: First row — knit 4, narrow; repeat across; knit back plain. Third row — knit 3, narrow; repeat across; knit back plain. Fifth row — knit 2, narrow; repeat across; knit back plain. Seventh row — knit 1, narrow; repeat across; knit back plain. Finish like top of thumb, sew up seam and run ribbon through holes at the wrist. Thumbless mittens for an infant may be made from the above directions by omitting the widening for thumb and the thumb stitches. 18. Mittens for a well-grown child may be made by casting on 72 stitches, and doubling the directions for baby mittens. 19. Teapot cozy in blocks. Two steel needles No. 16. Two colors of fourfold Germantown. Cast on 45 stitches with the dark color. Knit 10 ribs (20 rows) plain. Knit 10 stitches with the dark color, 5 with the light, 5 with dark, 5 with light, 5 with dark, 5 with light, 10 dark. Next row the same. Keep threads on wrong side, so that all long threads will come on KNITTING. 133 the same side of the work. Continue until there are 5 ribs. When chang- ing colors, bring the new thread up under the old one. Next row — knit 15 dark, 5 light, 5 dark, 5 light, 5 dark until there are 5 ribs. Change colors. Repeat until there are 5 rows of blocks. Ten ribs plain with the dark color. Crochet an edge with light color. Join outer corners of outside blocks on the wrong side with chains of 7 or 8 stitches. 20. Sweater for an eleven-year-old. Cast on 72 stitches. Knit 2, purl 2 for 3 inches. Knit plain for 15 more inches. Knit 24 stitches. Cast off 24 stitches. Knit 24 stitches. Put 24 of these stitches on a safety pin. With the other 24 stitches, knit 4 ribs. Do the same for the other shoulder. Cast on 12 stitches on the neck ends of each side and knit for 20 ribs. Join and knit as many inches as are required to match the back. For sleeve, cast on 30 stitches. Knit 2, purl 2 for 2J inches. Knit as long as the child's arm. 21. Leggings for a six-year-old. Cast on 78 stitches. Knit 2, purl 2 for 6 inches. Knit plain for 22 rows. Knit 7 rows plain except for narrow- ing by knitting two stitches as one, just after the first and before the last stitch in each row. Knit 14 rows plain. Knit 2, purl 2 for 8 inches. Du- plicate the above. Sew halves together. Strap of elastic sewed under the foot part. Run cord in top. 22. Purled cap. Cast on 96 stitches (32 on each of 3 needles). Knit 2, purl 2 for 35 rows. Knit 6 and purl 2 for 22 rows. Narrow at second stitch on each end of needle until 4 stitches remain on each needle. Thread end of wool into large-eyed needle. Buttonhole around the 8 stitches left, leaving a small opening on top of cap. An accurate way to estimate size of an article is to knit a small square sampler with the required needles and yarn. Count the number of stitches to the inch in both length and width. Finished work is about one-third wider than it appears when the stitches are cast on. Bright children can be taught to purl and so make almost anything that can be knit. Bibliography. Fleisher Knitting and Crochet Manuals. S. B. & B. M. Fleisher. Phila- delphia, Pa. Stitches and articles of wool. Golden Fleece Yarn Book. Especially good for illustrating crochet stitches. Utopia Yarn Book. Published by Manufacturers of Utopia Yarns. Stitches, sweaters, and small woolen articles. Clark's ONT Wool-Saver Knitting and Crochet Book No. 4. Men's knitted articles. Corticelli Lessons in Crochet. Corticelli Silk Mills, Florence, Mass. Yokes, scarf ends, etc., in filet. Royal Society Crochet Books. Set of four books. Illustrates crocheted articles, largely in thread. 134 THE BOSTON WAY. CROCHETING, Crocheting is far more difficult than knitting. Children enjoy finger crocheting and get the idea of hooking the thread through the loop, but the change to a hook is usually very hard. At first the teacher may manage the difficult tension with her own left hand while the pupil struggles with the new position of the right hand. Then the child may work with the left hand while the teacher works with the right. After this practice there is little difficulty for the child in work- ing with both hands. Teach chain, single and double crochet stitch, with large bone hook and bright colored Germantown or macrame cord. First chains may be used as cords for dolls' muffs and for bags. Afghan stitch is helpful for dull children. At first, teacher may take up all the stitches and child take them off. Filet patterns are invaluable: a. There is great progression of difficulty. b. Inaccuracies show and cannot be covered. c. Children can make first patterns for themselves on squared paper. d. Certain "always" must be mastered: 1. Always use d. c. stitch. 2. Always chain 5 to turn. 3. Always chain 2, skip 2, for open space. 4. Always make stitch in exact top of stitch in row below. 5. Closed meshes are always multiples of 3 plus 1. Germantown. Dolls' clothes — Tam-o-shanter, sleeveless jacket, muff, petticoat, sweater, scarf. Chain the desired width; first row, ch. 1, d. c. in 2nd stitch, ch. 1, d. c. in 2nd stitch, repeat for 2nd and all other rows. Ch. 2, d. c. in open- ing, etc. Jute. Jump -rope. With double thread make chain of desired length; make large knots at the ends. Carpet Warp. Book bags. Large rectangle of d. c. folded and edges crocheted together to form edges of bag. Handles, ch. long enough for handle, s. c. to desired width. Pocketbook bags of the prevailing style. Rows of s. c. and d. c. make pleasing effect. Rugs. One and one-half-inch to two-inch strips of cotton crocheted with very large wooden hook make serviceable rugs. Dexter Cotton, Crochet Cotton, Thread. Lingerie cord. Ch. 3, one-half of s. c. in 2nd stitches. Pull next thread through both loops left on needle. Put hook in left hand loop just slipped CROCHETING. 135 from needle and make one-half s. c. Pull next thread through loops. Make desired length. Round hot plate mats. Useful in learning to widen so as to keep flat. Shell edge of 5 d. c, skip 1,1s. c., skip 1, repeat. Tie. Ch. 8, s. c. in 7th chain and all the way across for all the rows, until tie is long enough. Finish with tassels made of the thread. Buttonhole over ivory ring for a slide. Skirt hanger. Make 17 s. c. over ivory ring. Turn thread over needle, pull a loop through 1st stitch, thread over needle and pull through all three loops at once. Repeat in every stitch for 24 rows, then crochet the same over safety pin. Be sure to have open end of pin at bottom. Roses. Made of Germantown to trim hats or of thread to finish lingerie tape or trim dresses. Ch. 5, join. Ch. 4, d. c. in ring, ch. 3, d. c. in ring. Repeat until there are 6 spaces. Fill each space with 1 s. c, 5 d. c, 1 s. c. Ch. 3, fasten through back of 3rd d. c. Repeat all the way around. Fill each space with 1 s. c, 6 d. c, 1 s. c. Lingerie clasps. Ch. 44, turn. Thread over needle 3 times. Put needle into 3rd chain and pull thread through all 4 loops. Ch . 2. Do this in every 3rd stitch with 2 ch. to turn. Make 3 rows. For the last row ch. 2, s. c. in space, ch. 2, s. c. in space to the end of row. Sew on small snap fasteners at ends and add a rose. Napkin ring. Make of plain or designed filet. Simple scallop for edge. Finish with snap fasteners. A crocheted or ribbon rose adds to its attrac- tiveness. Bedroom slippers. Bone crochet hook, Germantown, and a pair of soles. Alternating colors may be used. Take up all stitches on the single back thread to form ribs. Chain 10. One single in each of 9 stitches. Second row— ch. 1. One single in each stitch until center is reached. Three singles in center stitch. One single in each of the remaining stitches. This forms a rib. Continue making 14 ribs for the vamp. To make the side of the slipper — 1 single in each of the first 14 stitches. Twenty eight ribs around slipper. Join on wrong side and finish with a scalloped edge. Run elastic around the top. Baby socks. Germantown. Ch. 36. Turn. Skip 1. One s. c. in each stitch. All stitches are taken up on the back thread to form a rib. Make 6 ribs. To form ankle— 1 single in the first 15 stitches. Continue until 14 ribs are made. Join on the inside. To make bottom of foot— 1 single in each stitch all around twice. Third row of foot— skip 1 stitch at each corner of the toe each time around for 7 rows. Join on the wrong side, center of the foot. Finish with scalloped top and ribbon. Roman stripe bag. Ch. 5, join. Eight singles in the ring. Make entire bag of rows of singles, adding or skipping stitches as widening or narrowing is desired for shaping. Various colored silkateens worked in stripes of varying widths give pleasing results. Odds and ends of silkateens may be used for "hit or miss" pattern. A tassel at the bottom and a draw string at the top finish the bag. Watch or powder-puff case. Colored silkateen. Crochet 2 separate disks, 2\ or 3 inches in diameter, using plain chain stitches. Join disks to form a bag, leaving opening at the top to be finished with shell edge. Line with silk and embroider spray on face of case in French knots. 136 THE BOSTON WAY. Simple Edges. Plain filet edge. Ch. 17. Turn. Double crochet in 7th stitch from hook. Ch. 2, double in the third. Repeat until there are 4 holes. Ch. 5 and turn. Make lace of the desired length. Add any simple shell edge. Mile a minute lace. Ch. 7, join, ch. 3, turn in loop, ch. 3, turn in loop, ch. 3, turn in loop, ch. 3, turn in loop, ch. 5, turn. Turn in 2nd space, ch. 3, turn in same space. Repeat until there are 4 turns. Ch. 5, turn and repeat ad. lib. Pyramid edge. Ch. 10, join, make 10 s. c. in loop. Ch. 10, join to last s. c. Make 5 s. c. in loop, ch. 5, join to middle of 1st loop, 10 s. c. in loop, 5 s. c. in 2nd loop. Repeat from beginning. PRINTING. 137 PRINTING. Printing as a trade or as an art is far too difficult for the average Special Class boy. However, printing, with all the processes involved, offers an opportunity of real educational, occupational and social value, especially to the higher grade boys of fifteen or sixteen. Besides interesting this particular group, some of the processes are well adapted to sense training for the lower grade boys. In fact the processes involved, printing, setting up and distribution of type and the sorting of spaces, leads and furniture require such varying degrees of intelligence and skill that they give oppor- tunity for entire class activity. Materials, Minimum Amount. Small hand press, one font of twelve or fourteen point type, one font of spaces the same size, one composing stick, two or three pounds of leads (assorted sizes), one small box of furniture, benzine, a can of printer's ink and a pair of quoins. Technic. Training in the technic of printing is most advisable. However, where such training is impossible either of the books in the bibliography given below covers the basic requirements. Suggestions for Correlation with Other Subjects. Arithmetic. Much raw mathematical material is available. Problems may be given to estimate the cost and profit in a given job or to calculate the number of sheets of paper necessary to cut cards to a given size. Learn- ing the spaces may be made a problem in fractions and the necessity for accurate measuring is a valuable exercise. Language. The conscious attention to form and punctuation in type- setting leads to close observation of printed forms and results in greater accuracy. Short studied dictation may be reproduced in type. Capital- ization, indentation and punctuation may be emphasized practically. Proof reading by the class is a valuable exercise in both spelling and language. Drawing. Printing problems are art problems. Proportion and bal- ance may be taught in very simple composition. Designs and letters may be cut in leather or cork, then mounted and printed. Geography, industrial and agricultural. Studies in vegetable materials and the manufacture of paper. History of printing, materials used, clay, stone, wax, papyrus, parchment, vellum, paper. Suggestions for Printed Material. Printing done in school should be dominated by the social, not the com- mercial motive. The Special Class boy, with his anti-social tendencies, needs to be trained to work together for a common good, and printing offers just this opportunity. The following are a few suggestions with this 138 THE BOSTON WAY. aim in view. Spelling cards, arithmetic score cards, school stationery and record cards, games, valentines, holiday and gift cards (cuts may be bought at any type company), language cards, mottoes, poems and class songs. Bibliography. "Printing." By Frank S. Henry. "Vocational Printing." By Ralph W. Polk. NOTE. Macreme Work, Hammockmaking and Cement Work are valuable forms of hand work which have been successfully used in many Special Classes. PROGRAMS. 139 PROGRAMS. No one program can serve as a model for all classes. Groups doing departmental work need a program more carefully made and more strictly followed than single classes. Older pupils can bear long periods for manual work. Older and brighter pupils can continue academic work for longer periods than younger and duller ones. Young and less intelligent pupils need short periods interspersed with physical exercise, manual training, games or singing. In a class where the range of ages is wide, an older group may study during two recitations of a younger group. Ample allowance should be made in all programs for general exercises, story-telling and games. In making a program, decide on the proportion of time to be given to the different subjects according to the needs of the class. Fit the studies into the day's program and as far as possible have the days alike. Regularity makes for seriousness. 140 THE BOSTON WAY. BIBLIOGRAPHY. Mental Deficiency. Ayers, Leonard P. Laggards in Our Schools. Russell Sage Foundation, New York, 1909. Bronner, Augusta F. A Psychology of Special Abilities and Disabilities. Little, Brown & Co. Doll, Edgar A. Clinical Studies in Feeblemindedness. Richard G. Badger, 1917, Boston. Goddard, Henry H. Psychology of the Normal and Subnormal. Dodd, Mead & Co., 1919, New York. Hollingsworth, Leta A. Psychology of Special Disability in Spelling. Mac- millan Co., 1918. 105 pages. Psychology of Subnormal Children. Macmillan Co., 1920. Bibliog- raphies at the end of each chapter. Tregold, A. F. Mental Deficiency. William Wood & Co., New York. New edition. A primer of feeblemindedness. Woodson, Herbert. Brightness and Dullness in Children. J. P. Lippin- cott. Educational Guides, 1919. Testing. Mitchell, David and Ruger, Georgie J. Bibliography of Psychological Tests. The Bureau of Educational Experiments, 16 West Eighth Street, New York City, 1918. Revised and classified bibliography. Monroe, W. S. Measuring the Results of Teaching. Houghton, Mifflin Co., 1918. A handbook for the use of standardized educational tests. Pintner and Patterson. A Scale of Performance Tests. D. Appleton & Co., 1917. Tests for measuring general intelligence independent of language ability. Pintner, Rudolph. Mental Survey. D. Appleton & Co., 1918. Contains directions for giving a series of tests to groups, norms, and discussion of tests. Terman, Lewis M. The Measurement of Intelligence. Houghton, Mif- flin Co., 1916. Bibliography. An explanation of and a complete guide for the use of the Stanford revision and extension of the Binet- Simon Intelligence Scale. Terman, Lewis M. The Intelligence of School Children. Houghton, Mifflin Co. Delinquency. Healy, William. The Individual Delinquent. Little, Brown & Co., 1915. Bibliography. Healy, William. Mental Conflicts and Misconduct. Little, Brown & Co., 1917. BIBLIOGRAPHY. 141 Helpful and Inspirational Books. Gesell, Arnold L. The Child and Primary Education. Ginn & Co., Boston. Guyer, Michael. Being Well-Born. The Bobbs Merrill Co., 1916, Indianapolis. Lee, Joseph. Play in Education. Macmillan Co., 1915. MacMurchy, Dr. Helen. The Almosts. Houghton, Mifflin Co., 1920. Smith, William Hawley. All the Children of All the People. Macmillan Co., New York, 1913. Books, Magazines and Pamphlets. Especially Useful to the Special Class Teacher. Anderson, Meta L. Education of Defectives in the Public Schools. World Book Co., Yonkers-on-Hudson, N. Y. Bridie, Marion F. An Introduction to Special Class Work. Longmans, Green & Co., 1917. Fernald, W. E. Pamphlets. To be obtained at Massachusetts State School, Waverly. Healy, William and Bronner, Augusta F. Pamphlets. To be obtained at the Judge Baker Foundation, 40 Court Street, Boston. Journal of Delinquency. Bi-monthly. Whittier State School, California. Journal of Applied Psychology. Published at Clark University, Worcester, Mass. Journal of Educational Psychology. Warwick & York, Baltimore. 600 pages annually. "Mental Hygiene." Quarterly. Published by National Committee, Mental Hygiene, 50 Union Sq., New York. Psychological Clinic. 10 mos. Psycho. Clinic Press, Philadelphia. Survey. Weekly. Survey Associates, Inc., 112 East 19th St., New York City. Training School Bulletin. 10 mos. Training School, Vineland, N. J. Ungraded. 10 mos. in the year by Ungraded Teachers' Assn. of New York City, 17 Lexington Ave., New York. Especially valuable to all teachers in the work. Volta Review. 12 mos. Volta Bureau, Washington, D. C. For the deaf. Publications of National and any State Hygiene Association. Physiology and Mental Hygiene. Cornell,' Walter S. Health and Medical Inspection of School Children. F. A. Davis Co. Philadelphia, 1912. Terman, Lewis M. The Hygiene of the School Child. Houghton, Mif- flin Co., 1914. Selected List of Publications of the Massachusetts Society for Mental Hygiene, 1132 Kimball Building, Boston, Mass. (Sent on request for cost of publication and postage.) Fernald, M.D., Walter E. The Burden of Feeblemindedness. Fernald, M.D., Walter E. What Is Practical in the Way of Prevention of Mental Defect. Abbot, M.D., E. Stanley. Preventable Forms of Mental Disease and How to Prevent Them. 142 THE BOSTON WAY. Fitts, Miss Ada M. How to Fill the Gap Between Special Classes for Mentally Defective Children and Institutions. Stedman, M.D., Henry R. Mental Pitfalls of Adolescence. Burnham, Ph.D., Wm. H. The Scope and Aim of Mental Hygiene. Burnham, Ph.D., Wm. H. Success and Failure as Conditions of Mental Health. Mental Hygiene and Education. (Papers read at the An- nual Conference of the Society, Boston, January, 1919.) How to Keep Our Children Sound in Body, Mind and Character. (Leaflet.) Speech Improvement. Scripture, E. W. Stuttering and Lisping. Macmillan, New York, 1912. Yale, Caroline A. Formation and Development of Elementary English Sounds. Gazette Printing Co., Northampton, Mass.